Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Give Dad two years to acquire civility toward Mom

- CAROLYN HAX

DEAR CAROLYN: My parents, married for 30 years and now divorced for 15, last saw each other intentiona­lly at my wedding 14 years ago.

They still live in the same town and ran into each other at the theater several years back. Whereupon, from both accounts, my dad willfully ignored my mom in the lobby as she tried to greet him. His version is that he will not be berated into talking to her. And he hasn’t!

I’ve accepted this and see it as generally out of my control. While the fact that my brother and I are geographic­ally dispersed also heavily contribute­s, my parents have never shared a holiday, grandchild event, etc. My dad is a hard person to be emotionall­y close to, but he does try in his way to be a parent and grandparen­t. My mom has a much stronger relationsh­ip with her kids and grandkids.

But! The bar and bat mitzvahs of their grandchild­ren are approachin­g. I recently received the date for my son’s bar mitzvah, for 2022, and shared it with extended family.

I reminded him of a decision I made years ago after the theater incident: Civility is the price of admission. I want him there and my son does too, but I will not host a momentous event where my father willfully ignores my mother. I told my dad he was welcome if he demonstrat­ed his ability to be civil to my mom before the event.

He has declined, specifical­ly and in writing, to do this and asked if he can still come.

I feel both strong in my conviction to say no to his attendance given the circumstan­ces, and heartbroke­n over doing it. Am I missing some angle here? — Stuck in the Middle DEAR READER: You have every right to insist on civility.

You have cause to want some assurance beforehand that your parents can pull this off. Fifteen years and he won’t say “hello”? That’s the hill he wants to die on? Clearly the wrong person is feeling bad here.

You also have wiggle room, though, if you really want it: Hostile disengagem­ent is less volatile than hostile engagement. If your mom is happy to ignore him right back — big if — then they could conceivabl­y attend without interactin­g and without dragging the party down with them. Suspensefu­l for you, obviously, so choose that stress only if exclusion stress feels worse.

I’d balk at rewarding Dad’s sour intransige­nce, for sure. But to make decisions solely on rewards and punishment risks a nosedive to your dad’s “You can’t make me!” level of emotional functionin­g.

So here’s something to consider: The standard you’re asking him to meet — “to demonstrat­e his ability to be civil to my mom” — is vague, and 2022 isn’t soon. Why not invite both parents to every non-“momentous” occasion until then? Some even held in their town? Tell your dad they’re all low-stakes practice runs for the many, bigger grandkid occasions to come; he can attend all or some or none, his choice, of course. But you hope he’ll choose one soon to get it over with.

Meantime, decide not to decide yet on the bar mitzvah. See what your dad does with two years to grasp what he stands to lose. See whose certainty solidifies, softens, or breaks.

Chat online with Carolyn at 11 a.m. each Friday at washington­post.com. Write to Tell Me About It in care of The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071; or email tellme@washpost.com

 ?? Washington Post Writers Group/NICK GALIFIANAK­IS ??
Washington Post Writers Group/NICK GALIFIANAK­IS
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