Daily Press (Sunday)

Does teen owe grandpa apology?

- Adapted from an online discussion. Email tellme@washpost. com or write “Tell Me About It” c/o The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071

Dear Carolyn: About a month ago, my mother had a procedure scheduled in my brother’s metro area, about four hours from my parents’. The plan was for my parents to stay with my brother and his family for about a week.

My mother experience­d complicati­ons and was in the hospital while my dad was staying with them, which was stressful and open-ended. It came to a head one morning over breakfast. Between work, my mother and the kids’ stuff, they didn’t have time to make dinner and eat it together, so my sisterin-law planned DoorDash. My father said my older niece, 15, should cook dinner when she gets home from school. My sister-in-law said she can’t because she has two school projects due the next day. My niece said he can make dinner himself if he wants a home-cooked meal. My father slapped my niece in the face.

My brother and sisterin-law kicked my father out of their house. My brother still deals with our parents at the hospital but refuses to allow our father around his children. I flew out to get my father into a hotel and generally help.

It is very obvious my father is experienci­ng a change in personalit­y consistent with early-onset dementia. Here is my perspectiv­e check: I think an apology from my niece to my father for smarting off would go a long way. I suggested this to my brother to smooth things over, and he refused it as an option. My siblings supported my brother. I feel that I’m alone in getting help for my father and that my family is fragmented over something that isn’t that big of a deal.

Can you or your readers give some perspectiv­e here? — Perspectiv­e Check

Dear Perspectiv­e Check:

How your brother and his wife protect their kids, and from what — a sexist, abusive grandparen­t or a dementia —violent one? — are none of your business.

I could get well into the weeds on the details, but then we’d both be in the weeds on stuff that’s beside the immediate point of your parents’ health logistics, which are your business. You just don’t get a vote about your dad’s stay in your brother’s home.

So here’s my advice: Drop it. Don’t opine on it, ask about it, try to fix it. It’s done.

Train all your attention on the work of Team Sibs: what care your parents need, who is willing to give it, how and when. “OK, Dad needs X and has to go to Y and brother isn’t an option.” That’s it. Straight-up facts. Those are where you live now.

This may seem weird because it’s ignoring the elephant, plus we make sense of the world through talking about things, but nothing can make this situation worse faster than your rolling in with a “should” cannon. Especially demanding apologies. Egads.

Reader’s thoughts:Can

you see that your niece’s parents are teaching their teenager that it is NEVER okay for a man to assault her? If they had told their daughter she should apologize, they would teach a teenage girl that it was her fault a man hit her in the face. Think that through.

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