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Annie's Mailbox®, January 31

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Dear Annie: After 30 years of a turbulent marriage, my ex-wife and I had an amicable divorce. Before the ink was dry, she remarried. I later married a beautiful young woman. My daughter, who is 10 years older than my new wife, became quite upset over this, and our relationship quickly deteriorated.

Eventually, my daughter wrote to say she didn't know me anymore and already had a dad (meaning my ex's new husband). My lovely wife is terribly upset because she fears it's her fault — that she came between my daughter and me. I believe this is the exact reaction my daughter is hoping for — to make my wife feel guilty.

I do not have my daughter's current address or phone number, although I could probably find it if need be. I am upset about the situation, but if she really no longer wants me in her life, I don't want to push it. Any advice? — C.C.

Dear C.C.: Your daughter is testing you, and although she is behaving selfishly and childishly, please don't throw in the towel. It will only confirm her worst fear — that you no longer need her in your life because you've replaced her with your new, younger wife. If you are on good terms with your ex, please discuss it with her and suggest she help your daughter accept your marriage. Also continue to stay in touch with your daughter and tell her you love her, regardless of her response. Time can heal this if you don't give up.

Dear Annie: My younger brother is married with three kids. The problem is, he and his wife expect my parents to pick up their kids and spend time with them frequently. They become angry when my parents aren't able to do this as often as they'd like.

Annie, my parents have 23 grandchildren. For them to spend that kind of time with each of them would be impossible. They always offer to baby-sit when my brother and his wife go out. They never miss a birthday or Christmas. But my sister-in-law says if my parents don't start being “doting grandparents,” they will be written off.

When we were kids, my grandparents did not spend tons of time with us for the same reasons my parents don't.

My parents are beside themselves because they really do love all of their grandchildren and are fair to each of them. Whatever happened to children respecting their parents? What can we do? — Concerned Sister

Dear Concerned: Some parents think the world begins and ends with their children. When your parents say they are busy, or that they need to spend time with the other grandchildren, your brother and his wife become offended and angry. Your siblings who have children might try talking to your brother. Perhaps they can help him understand that he should accept his parents as they are and encourage a closer relationship instead of making threats. Keeping the grandparents away hurts his children, too.

Dear Annie: I think you missed on your response to “Don't Want To Go,” the sibling whose sisters scheduled a birthday party for their 90-year-old mother in Florida on Christmas Eve.

It is unreasonable to expect other families to put aside their holiday plans and spend thousands to travel at the most expensive time of the year. It is true that they are missing an opportunity for a great family time, and who knows how many more birthdays Mom may have, but these arguments raise feelings of guilt by which we are all manipulated into doing things we really should not. The sibling has a right to say, "Go ahead without me. I will make it up to you later, Mom,” and send a nice card and a gift, and then call. Those sisters should understand. — M.K.

Dear M.K.: We agree it is an imposition, and if it's impossible to arrange, so be it. But sometimes these things are worth the effort. They may not be able to make it up to Mom “later.”

Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie's Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Ste. 700, Los Angeles, CA 90045. To find out more about Annie's Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

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Comments

10 Comments | Post Comment
It's interesting that "C.C." is very vague on ages and time frames. From the little information he does give and assuming that the daughter was born after he married her mother and that "later" means within a couple years of the divorce, it's not an unlikely scenario that this man is in his 50's with a daughter in her late 20's whose step-mother is a teenager. I have to admit that I can't blame the daughter for being repulsed by the revelation that her father is a dirty old man.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Jeanne
Sat Jan 30, 2010 11:28 PM
It is unfortunate that C.C.'s daughter has decided to alienate her dad and his new wife. Who are we to judge someone else's relationship; you never know what two people see in one another. And just because someone believes the father is a dirty old man because of their own morals and values does not mean it is wrong of them to be married. The daughter needs to grow up and be an adult and stop trying to manipulate her father. To write someone off before even getting to know the other person is immature. She should be happy her father found love again; you'd think your hands are full trying to raise a child, but it is even harder raising an adult who still acts like a child. Congrates to the father for his new love and good luck to him with his daughter.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Amanda
Sun Jan 31, 2010 7:05 AM
Once again the Annies can't see through their own rose colored glasses. The original letter to which MK is referring made it fairly clear that the elderly mother's birthday wasn't actually Christmas Eve, that was just the date the other sisters chose to celebrate. And there was no indication that this was the day the mother actually wanted to celebrate her birthday. A power trip from beginning to end. The siblings who live far away should take control and not be bullied. If you have maintained a good relationship with the elderly parent, then there is no reason for self-flagellation when the inevitable happens. The old "I don't know how much longer I'll be around" wears pretty thin.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Maggie Lawrence
Sun Jan 31, 2010 7:09 AM
Once again the Annies can't see through their own rose colored glasses. The original letter to which MK is referring made it fairly clear that the elderly mother's birthday wasn't actually Christmas Eve, that was just the date the other sisters chose to celebrate. And there was no indication that this was the day the mother actually wanted to celebrate her birthday. A power trip from beginning to end. The siblings who live far away should take control and not be bullied. If you have maintained a good relationship with the elderly parent, then there is no reason for self-flagellation when the inevitable happens. The old "I don't know how much longer I'll be around" wears pretty thin.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Maggie Lawrence
Sun Jan 31, 2010 7:09 AM
Sorry, I have to make comment regarding your reply to "Concerned Sister" who wanted to know how to handle her sister-in-law and brother expecting her parents to take their children frequently.
1st
As a grandparent myself, I would have to tell these two selfish people that my time is mine to choose with whom, how long and when I choose to spend it. Have these two not at all considered that the grandparents may want to have some "alone time" to do things they want to do?
2nd
As a sister who has had a sibling make similar demands on my parents, I would say that that no one, Grandparent, Aunt, Uncle,Cousin etc. is a built in babysitter who shows up when you demand it. And, why do they think their child should spend more time with the Grandparents than mine? Has their selfishness gotten to the point that they can't see they are thelling my children that they are somehow less "special" to the Grandparents than thier own children?
3rd.
How dare they put the Grandparents in this situation to force them to choose between time spent with the grandchildren like this? Are they so selfish that they can't see that they are being unfair to everyone concered? What about the other parents who may want to go out?
4th
To say that the Grandparents will be "written off" if they don't become "more doting" is blakcmailing the grandparents with their love for the grandchildren and definately needs stopped. Not only that, the brother and sister-in-law could end up depriving thir own children of the special bond between Grandparent and child, should the grandparents choose to call their bluff.
If I were "Concerned Sister", I would have had a discussion with these two the first time this siituation happened and there would have been no doubt how selfish and inconsiderate I thought them to be.
5th
As a Grandparent we have solved the problem of the possibility of one grand child feeling favored over another by rotating week ends. The children chose numbers out of a hat to set their rotation order. After one child stays, no other child stays until the next one in rotation has stayed. This way if we need a week-end for ourselves, we simply tell the child it will be the next week end available. All the other children understand who is "next" and that they will stay when it is their turn. No one child gets to spend more time than the next, no one is made to feel less special and no one feels any one has been "blackmailed" into anything. The parents plan their time out around the rotating schedule, NOT the other way around. There is a lot less tension and stress and everyone gets to truely enjoy the company of the other on our special week-ends.
Sign me:
Won't be blackmailed with love
Comment: #5
Posted by: Linda
Sun Jan 31, 2010 11:17 AM
I agree with the posters here except the one referring to dad as a dirty old man. You have NO clue what is going on. Did spoiled brat of a daughter throw a big hissy fit when mom remarried immediately after the divorce? As for the *it may be her last one* Even if my mom were still alive she would NEVER agree to a birthday party at Christmas time. The ones in charge of this made up birthday are on a power trip. BOO HOO it may be mom's last birthday. And daughter may be killed in an accident on the way there. An event she was bullied into attending. She should have spent a safe happy Christmas at home. MAGGIE LAWRENCE===I agreed 100 % with you yesterday. Why should a husband accept a wife's decision to have a completely affectionate free marriage? That is one hateful wife. It is NOT normal behavior for a woman to give up completely because she is past her child bearing years. LMAO!!! NO hugs, kisses, touching and sex because the child bearing in done. If that's how she feels then she has been a dishonest woman from the start.
Comment: #6
Posted by: Cathy
Sun Jan 31, 2010 4:06 PM
LW1 - some possible numbers... say dad & mom married at 20, had daughter at 21, and divorced at 50. She remarried immediately, he did so "later" so maybe he's now 54, making daughter 33, and new wife 23. Young, but not illegal, immoral, or 'dirty'. Not in my mind, at least. A little weird at first, if you're the daughter, but stranger things have happened, and that alone certainly doesn't merit ending the relationship. Daughter needs to give the new wife a chance, and stop behaving like a brat.
Comment: #7
Posted by: jenvan
Sun Jan 31, 2010 5:34 PM
Re:C.C.'s letter. A similar situation happened in my family before I was born. At 64, my widowed father married my mother, who was 31 at the time. One of his daughters, who was 24 and married at the time, could not accept the relationship, threw many fits in public, and eventually my father had to choose my mother over his own daughter. I was the result of that marriage. You can't imagine how many people, including me, were affected by this estrangement, starting with my mother and father but also the other siblings, aunt, uncles, cousins etc. We could never have a family gathering for holidays or special occasions. I grew up not knowing my half-sister. We eventually met and reunited when I was in my 30s and my parents were dead, and she admitted her objections to the marriage were a huge mistake, but all those lost years are gone forever and can never be recaptured. My father died without ever seeing this daughter again. All parties involved in C.C.'s story should think hard before cutting off ties for good.
Comment: #8
Posted by: Claire Beatty
Mon Feb 1, 2010 2:15 PM
These women are so not the columnists that their former employer was. Every time I read their responses I have to roll my eyes. These idiots would try to appease Hitler.
Comment: #9
Posted by: Melissa
Mon Feb 1, 2010 6:13 PM
The siblings who chose Christmas Eve for a 90th birthday are completely selfish. We had early Christmas last year for anyone who could come. We held it in Mom's home town at a small hall. It worked for 95% of the family including some cousins who were able to come. The Greatgrandchildren presented an early birthday cake. Mom's birthday was the day Grandpa passed away. Only one sibling didn't agree and that was her problem. Several of us gathered for her actual birthday but it was low key and she was free to be a little sad. I would have advised the siblings who can't make Christmas eve to travel later and have a celebration without the selfish witches. There has to be some common sense and respect for the needs of others. This gate swings both ways.
Comment: #10
Posted by:
Wed May 25, 2011 11:15 AM
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