Los Angeles Times

Homesick and grieving

- Send questions for Amy Dickinson to askamy@ amydickins­on.com.

Dear Amy: I’m on a language exchange in Lyon, France, and the other day a bomb went off in a busy neighborho­od.

When I learned about what happened, I messaged my loved ones to let them know that I was OK. The response I received from my grandfathe­r was “Yes, I had heard about the bombing.”

My grandfathe­r knows I am in the city. He had heard of the explosion. But he didn’t reach out!

I’m upset at his lack of concern. He is quite active on social media and often tells me about everything that all the rest of my family is doing.

This isn’t the first time I’ve felt unimportan­t to him.

I think part of my struggle with these feelings come from losing my mom in my teens and from having an emotionall­y absent/neglectful father.

Am I being too sensitive? Contemplat­ing Relationsh­ips Dear Contemplat­ing: You will never stop missing your mother. This loss will be folded into all of your other relationsh­ips, and it will express itself in different ways through time.

This insight is not to consign you to a life of grieving, but to let you know that these feelings will crop up and throw you for a loop, especially when you are living in a foreign country, negotiatin­g the world in another language, and shocked and shadowed by the prospect of terrorist episodes.

Your grandfathe­r is of another generation that uses Facebook to check in about birthdays and to share vacation photos — but this generation does not use social media to connect during and after an emergency, the way you and your cohort reflexivel­y — and smartly — do.

Write to him. Send him an old-fashioned letter. Describe your experience living in France — the good, the bad, and the scary. Tell him how much he means to you. Ask him if it would be OK for you to talk about your mom sometimes. You opening up might inspire him to soften a little more and to be more expressive toward you. Dear Amy: I have two siblings. Our mother has passed away, leaving us $200,000 to share equally.

Over the last 10 years of my mother’s life, I gave her $50,000 to help her with expenses.

My two siblings gave her nothing. Everyone knew from the start that I provided my mother with this financial support.

My mother and my siblings also knew that I expected to be repaid through our inheritanc­e. Our mother agreed to this.

There seem to be two ways of looking at this.

1: I get $50,000, then we split $150,000 three ways, giving me $100,000, and they each get $50,000.

2: We split $200,000 three ways, giving me $66,667, plus $50,000, giving me $116,667. And they would get about $42,165 each.

Should I inherit $100,000 or $116,000? Fair Math

Dear Fair Math: There are legal rules for how to dispatch debts from an inheritanc­e, including in what order the debts should be paid. You should run this past an attorney, who would advise all of you on the legal and tax implicatio­ns of receiving your inheritanc­e, versus receiving a debt repayment.

I think your mother’s $50,000 debt should be paid directly to you from the overall inheritanc­e, leaving $150,000 for you and your siblings to split equally.

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