East Bay Times

Their path is paved with eggshells

- Ask Amy Amy Dickinson Email Amy at askamy@ amydickins­on.com.

DEAR AMY >> My brother and I have always had a tenuous relationsh­ip.

Our father was abusive, but we are both in mid-life and have led fairly successful and stable lives.

I often have to walk on eggshells when speaking with my brother because he always seems to read what I'm saying or doing as an attack.

Last New Year's Eve, I was attending a get-together with friends and he called to video chat.

I sent a quick text saying that I was with friends and that we'd talk later.

He texted, saying that he was disappoint­ed because he had told his kids they could talk with their uncle (me), and that I seem to have chosen my friends over my nephews.

He did add that maybe he should have “given me a heads up,” but he felt the need to share how I disappoint­ed not only him but my nephews.

I did not know how to respond and waited for three weeks to text him back and then only to wish him a good day on the anniversar­y of our late-mother's birthday.

It has been three weeks and he has not responded. I feel like I'm being punished.

Should I keep trying to reach out?

— Stuck

DEAR STUCK >> The perpetual dance of disappoint­ment between you and your brother is a result of growing up with an abusive parent. Your relationsh­ip is unstable, in part because you were both trained from childhood to remain on high alert. Children in abusive households can never really relax and allow themselves to make mistakes, to have their mistakes forgiven, and to just — be natural. Yes, the ground is paved with eggshells.

This tension and instabilit­y defines your relationsh­ip now.

But there is an advantage to always feeling like you're doing the wrong thing. This liberates you from having to second guess your every decision, because no matter what you do or say — it's going to seem wrong. So — do it anyway.

You don't need to “respond” to your brother to keep in touch with him. Just text him! Say, “Hey, I was thinking about you today and I'm wondering how you and the kids are doing. I'd really like to set up a FaceTime session with them. Any chance we can do this sometime soon?”

I'm suggesting that you just clomp your way across those eggshells and do your best to simply be yourself. Your efforts might inspire your brother to finally relax and do the same.

DEAR AMY >> “Sensitive Stepmother” wrote that her stepdaught­ers' mentally unstable mother had reached out to the stepmom privately, asking for her to arrange contact with the girls.

Thank you for responding with a “hard no” to this!

My mother found ways to draw other people into her drama in order to get to us. We were afraid of her and really needed the adults around us to protect us, not open the door.

— Gratefully Grown

DEAR GROWN >> Thank you for affirming my instincts about this.

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