Anonymous wrote:You need to get over it. Your in-laws are now at the age where their contemporaries are getting scary illnesses, hip replacements, bypass surgeries, and dying. They are facing their mortality. Some people handle death well. Some people completely fall apart. I had a cousin who literally passed out at talk of death, funerals, cemeteries - she truly couldn't handle it. You need to get over it, and focus on your memories of your granny. That is what's important. Keeping score of who sent which sympathy cards or paid shiva calls and stayed one hour vs four is ridiculous and unproductive to life.
Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry OP.
Your DH should have made your inlaws say something and show up to shiva/funeral. I assume they're not Jewish? These are the times when DH needs to step forward when he sees you're upset and it's something that he could have remedied.
Anonymous wrote:You need to get over it. Your in-laws are now at the age where their contemporaries are getting scary illnesses, hip replacements, bypass surgeries, and dying. They are facing their mortality. Some people handle death well. Some people completely fall apart. I had a cousin who literally passed out at talk of death, funerals, cemeteries - she truly couldn't handle it. You need to get over it, and focus on your memories of your granny. That is what's important. Keeping score of who sent which sympathy cards or paid shiva calls and stayed one hour vs four is ridiculous and unproductive to life.
Anonymous wrote:I think sometimes when you (anyone) is hurt or devastated or going through a bad time, it's natural to channel feelings of grief, pain, and anger that can't be focused or expressed easily on someone who is annoying in some minor way. It's a way of clearing the system. Because you can't really get mad at the universe. OP, you are upset about death. Be upset about that.