Los Angeles Times

Brother’s emails unsettle

- Send questions to Amy Dickinson by email to ask amy@amydickins­on.com.

Dear Amy: I have an older brother who is currently fighting lymphoma and Stage 4 liver cancer. It is too late for surgery, so they are treating him as an outpatient. The outlook is not great.

My twin brother recently was hired to work at a funeral home. He sends emails to me and our older brother almost daily regarding his funeral home duties.

These emails are extremely detailed accounts of prepping bodies (“They don’t complain”), transporti­ng bodies, preparing for funerals, placing the heavy casket over the grave on slings and straps, and then waiting for the family to leave so they can lower the casket down (“Sometimes it seems like forever”).

Amy, I am struggling with these emails, thinking that if I were the one fighting for my life, I would not want to read or hear about this.

Do you have any thoughts or suggestion­s about what I might say?

Grieving

Dear Grieving: First off, making fun of the important and sacred work of preparing a body for burial (“They don’t complain”) is extremely unprofessi­onal and insensitiv­e.

Every single body passing through this funeral home was a loved one, friend or family member of someone who has paid the funeral home for this important service. The deceased and their family members should be respected, both in the moment of preparing for burial and afterward.

Your twin brother desperatel­y requires sensitivit­y training.

These notificati­ons upset you, and so you have the right (and responsibi­lity) to tell your brother the truth about how they affect you.

I suggest that you send him an email: “I can tell by your detailed descriptio­ns that your work is engrossing. I am truly happy for you that you seem to love your job. However, being totally honest, I find the detailed discussion­s of what happens behind the scenes at the funeral home very unsettling — in no small part because our older brother is currently fighting for his own life. I don’t know how he feels about these descriptio­ns, but in my sisterly opinion, I do wish you would be more sensitive.”

Dear Amy: My mother died in 1996. She gave me her wedding ring.

My youngest nephew, who is also my mom’s youngest grandson, was getting married a second time to a girl I actually thought would be “the one.” (His first marriage ended in divorce.)

Anyway, I gave my nephew my mother’s ring for this wedding. He was so moved that he cried. Well, the second marriage lasted only five years.

My nephew has three daughters from his first marriage, and I would prefer the ring stay in the family.

Do I have the right to ask for the ring back?

Hoping

Dear Hoping: You have the right to ask for anything, as long as your expectatio­ns are reasonable.

I’m assuming that your nephew gave this ring to his second wife. State laws seem to vary concerning whether wedding rings are marital property (belonging to both and subject to division upon divorce) or separate property (individual­ly owned). Family heirlooms are often considered a separate category, and (according to my research) a judge might ask that the ring be returned to your family.

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