Aug. 8th, 2023
This should be the last one
Aug. 8th, 2023 03:25 amDEAR ABBY: I am a 49-year-old mother of 10. I always loved my kids dearly and tried my best. But I wanted to be a friend rather than a disciplinarian, and I always gave in. I assumed that because my husband and I never did bad things around them while they were growing up, and because I always resisted peer pressure when I was a teenager, they would follow in our footsteps, but I was wrong. They are now mean to me, and most of them hate me.
I sometimes feel like I don't want to go on because I'll always feel sad and depressed. I can't remember the last time I was happy and didn't dread waking up every morning. Please find time to answer and give me some hope again. -- BROKEN IN WEST VIRGINIA
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I sometimes feel like I don't want to go on because I'll always feel sad and depressed. I can't remember the last time I was happy and didn't dread waking up every morning. Please find time to answer and give me some hope again. -- BROKEN IN WEST VIRGINIA
( Read more... )
Dear Amy: My uncle has four daughters, each about two years apart in age, but his oldest daughter never really fit in.
Their mom obsessed over the three younger girls and mostly ignored her eldest.
As adults, the three younger sisters learned from a drunken aunt that their dad isn’t the oldest daughter’s biological father.
It turns out their mom was pregnant with her when she met her husband (in a bar). The daughters are all now in their 50s and for decades everyone in the family has known – except her.
I’ve always believed that someone should tell her. Her father and sisters have said it wasn’t their secret to tell – it was her mom’s, who died two years ago.
In the past few years, the oldest daughter has cut off all ties to her family.
When she didn’t go to her mom’s funeral, her father cut her out of his will without telling her.
There are complicated family dynamics, to put it mildly (her mom was a severe alcoholic and emotionally abusive).
I’m just a cousin, but I believe that someone should tell her.
It may be because I’m adopted, but I think that her DNA is something she/anyone should know, especially since dozens of other people know about it.
Should I be the one to tell her?
– Concerned Cousin
Dear Concerned: According to you, your cousin has been excluded since childhood and is now completely cut off from her immediate family.
In addition to other dynamics you describe, secrets also separate family members, interfering with relationships.
Your insight as someone who was adopted into the extended family is helpful. Your relative distance as a cousin might make this encounter easier for her.
She already knows she doesn’t “belong” with her kin, she likely already suspects that she has a different father from her siblings, or she may have already had her own DNA sampled.
Yes, I think this is a topic you should broach with your cousin. She has the right to know what so many others already know. One can hope that discovering another group of DNA relatives will bring her into a more deserving family fold.
Their mom obsessed over the three younger girls and mostly ignored her eldest.
As adults, the three younger sisters learned from a drunken aunt that their dad isn’t the oldest daughter’s biological father.
It turns out their mom was pregnant with her when she met her husband (in a bar). The daughters are all now in their 50s and for decades everyone in the family has known – except her.
I’ve always believed that someone should tell her. Her father and sisters have said it wasn’t their secret to tell – it was her mom’s, who died two years ago.
In the past few years, the oldest daughter has cut off all ties to her family.
When she didn’t go to her mom’s funeral, her father cut her out of his will without telling her.
There are complicated family dynamics, to put it mildly (her mom was a severe alcoholic and emotionally abusive).
I’m just a cousin, but I believe that someone should tell her.
It may be because I’m adopted, but I think that her DNA is something she/anyone should know, especially since dozens of other people know about it.
Should I be the one to tell her?
– Concerned Cousin
Dear Concerned: According to you, your cousin has been excluded since childhood and is now completely cut off from her immediate family.
In addition to other dynamics you describe, secrets also separate family members, interfering with relationships.
Your insight as someone who was adopted into the extended family is helpful. Your relative distance as a cousin might make this encounter easier for her.
She already knows she doesn’t “belong” with her kin, she likely already suspects that she has a different father from her siblings, or she may have already had her own DNA sampled.
Yes, I think this is a topic you should broach with your cousin. She has the right to know what so many others already know. One can hope that discovering another group of DNA relatives will bring her into a more deserving family fold.