Los Angeles Times

Time with the grandkids?

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Dear Amy: We live out of town from our son, daughter-in-law and our three precious grandchild­ren. We fly to their town monthly to see them.

Our daughter-in-law’s mother lives around the corner. She is divorced and her life is completely devoted to her daughter, our son and the grandchild­ren.

She has no boundaries and gives us no time alone with the kids when we visit. I once tried to talk with her about it, but she ignored my thoughts.

I once asked if we could spend time alone with the grandchild­ren, and our DIL replied with a nasty text saying how dare I expect her mom to sit home alone while we’re all together when visiting.

She is with them all weekend — every week. Our grandkids come to visit us one or two times a year and that is all the alone-time we have.

We’ve tried to discuss this with our son privately, but he gets defensive.

Any thoughts on how we can handle this? Sad and Dishearten­ed Grandparen­ts

Dear Sad: Because your daughter-in-law was so rude and hostile toward your idea of seeing the children on their own — and your son is so disappoint­ingly passive — if you want to risk one more “ask,” you should appeal directly to the grandmothe­r. Act as if you are asking her permission, and she might grant it.

Say, “We enjoy seeing you during our visits, but we’d also love to spend some alone-time with just us and the kids. Would you mind if we took them out by ourselves one afternoon while we’re here? We’d really appreciate it.”

Dear Amy: Last week, my favorite uncle passed away unexpected­ly. I am not on speaking terms with his daughter, my cousin.

She has a long history of verbally degrading me, then insisting I’m “too sensitive” or “mentally unstable” when I get upset. After 30 years, I had to put up boundaries for my own well-being.

I maintained a positive relationsh­ip with her parents. I attended my uncle’s funeral, was civil and polite to my cousin and directly expressed my condolence­s to her.

The morning before the funeral, I was still Facebook friends with my uncle. Sometime after the funeral, I was deleted from my uncle’s Facebook friend list and all of our mutual posts were wiped out. I suspect my cousin did this, and I appear to be the only family member eliminated — even my husband is still on his “friends” list.

While I understand that the important memories are the ones I carry with me, I can’t help but feel incredibly hurt.

I texted my cousin asking to be added back, but so far I have heard nothing. I don’t want to bother my aunt with this because she is dealing with her own grief right now.

Should I cut my losses and try to move on? Upset

Dear Upset: If your cousin controls your late uncle’s Facebook page, I don’t think there is any way to be added back without her approving it. She sounds petty and punitive. Stay in touch with your aunt, but don’t ask her to intervene.

I hope you will anchor now to the laudable and loving relationsh­ip you had with your uncle, and let these positive memories sustain you.

Send questions to Amy Dickinson by email to askamy@amydickins­on.com.

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