Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Traumatize­d survivor struggles with family

- ASK AMY By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter@askingamy Copyright 2024 by Amy Dickinson Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Dear Amy: I am a 64-yearold woman, the youngest in my family.

When I was 16, one of my cousins, “Will,” (a 30-year-old man who is now a doctor) invited me to New York City for a visit.

I barely knew this side of the family, and I thought it would be great to go to New York.

While I was visiting, Will raped me in his sister “Clare’s” apartment.

I had no idea where I was and was terrified.

The next morning, Clare walked into her apartment and freaked out on him.

Although she asked if I was OK, she and her other brother did nothing to hold Will accountabl­e for what he did. They even went so far as to blame me. I never told anyone what happened out of shame and fear. It really traumatize­d me, on many levels.

There was no contact between our two families, except between my mother and aunt (Will’s mother).

Fast-forward to a few years ago. Two of my brothers and my sister have rekindled a relationsh­ip with Clare, who has a big fancy house in Florida where they go to visit.

This made me very uncomforta­ble. After my mother and aunt died,

I told my siblings what happened and asked them to please not associate with that family.

They said it happened long ago; it’s my problem, and they see no reason to stop seeing Clare. I wonder if they don’t believe me.

After six years of wrestling with this, and some pretty angry emails from me, they refuse to even speak to me.

Thank God I have a third brother who has helped me to get through the heartache. I have now cut off contact with my other siblings. But are my other siblings right?

I know it isn’t right to ask somebody to ghost someone else, but I really feel disrespect­ed here. What are your thoughts?

— Abandoned in PA

Dear Abandoned: This sounds like a genuinely terrible situation, and I’m so sorry you have been living with this for so long.

No, your siblings aren’t “right” for denying your experience and the trauma you’ve lived with! Your choice not to continue a relationsh­ip with them because of their behavior toward you seems proportion­al.

My concern is that nowhere in your narrative do you mention any consequenc­es at all for “Will,” the cousin who assaulted you. Your focus is entirely on his siblings — and yours.

Will, a 30-year-old man, raped his teenage cousin. You should wonder if his career as a predator stopped there.

You would benefit from counseling, which even years later could help you to cope with this trauma. Rainn.org has online support and a list of counselors for more intensive help.

Womenslaw.org has an email “hotline” linked to its home page where you can ask questions related to this assault and receive advice about any legal actions you might be able to take against your rapist.

Dear Amy: My family and I have lived in our rented home for 10 years.

Our last lease expired in September, and we are now on a month-to-month lease. We’re fine with that and like our landlord a lot.

Well, last week, our landlord contacted us to say that he plans to renovate and sell our home this summer, and that we’ll need to move out by the end of May.

This feels abrupt and we’re upset. Can he do that?

— Upset Family

You should check your lease and the tenant rights and regulation­s in your area (I’m not a lawyer), but even though this seems abrupt to you, you are being given plenty of notice.

Because you are on a month-to-month lease, your landlord could have terminated your lease at the end of the month. As it is, he is giving you several months’ lead time to find other housing

Dear Family:

Dear Amy: You seemed to agree with “Broke Dad” that he needed to help replace his daughter’s cellphone after she had deliberate­ly broken it. Give me a break. A cellphone is not a necessity for a teenager.

— I Disagree

When I was a teen, we all knew how to hack our school’s one payphone to contact our parents, but it would be tough to find a payphone today. I suggested that these parents should offer their daughter a flip phone.

Dear Disagree:

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