Anonymous wrote:Woah op. You’re way out of line and are being extremely selfish. It’s been 6 years. Everyone deserves companionship. He will never replace your mom. He is just dating someone in this stage of his life. I can’t believe you thought he doesn’t deserve someone because he already had a wife.
I think you need to explore your grief if you aren’t able to let him have a girlfriend.
Anonymous wrote:This is one of those situations where you parent yourself and remind yourself all feelings are valid, all behaviors are not. Despite the snark on here I’m sure every poster can understand it is hard to hear about a new woman - it’s a reminder your mom is gone, that time moves forward, that your dad is a human separate from “dad/husband” and lots of other knee jerk feelings bc it pokes at your pain
However while you’re human and have emotion driven vs logic driven feelings (that’s the nature of feelings) things like refusing to meet the woman which punishes your dad unfairly and will damage your relationship and is a bid at controlling your dad and even things like putting “companion” in snark quotes like she’s not a real person and companion isn’t a real and important role are behaviors you need to stomp out, just like you’d expect your own child to stop impulse behaviors. Get therapy to do that if needed
Anonymous wrote:My 71-year-old dad just told us that he has been seeing a 36-year-old woman and they have two kids (1y.o. and 2 y.o). My mom passed away 9 years ago. He plans to leave her some property that he bought together with my mom. My mom was a doctor and always worked full-time while raising four kids. This woman is younger than my dad’s two older kids. I’d be happy for my dad if she was someone closer to his age, but this one is hard to swallow. I’d count your blessings, OP, and just be happy for your dad. At least he makes sensible choices lol
Anonymous wrote:Grow up op. Your mom is passed. Let him live his life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grow up op. Your mom is passed. Let him live his life.
That’s all easy to say…then the new wife inherits 100% of his estate after <10 if not <5 years of marriage. I’ve seen it happen over and over. I don’t care how nice they seem, they all want the money and house(s).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly we were all happy after a few years that dad wanted companionship. Women keep men alive and healthier.
BUT: have a conversation about estates because my dad wanted wife #2 to become our mother 2.0/give her the family home etc (even though were in our 30s/40s) so we had to point out that mum's plans for the estate wasn't for it to go to some random woman. Luckily he seemed to understand that finally.
You are right that bringing up estate issues with a parent is an important topic to bring up. However, you must also understand that your parent still has agency (unless declared incompetent) and they still have the right to make their own choices.
Here's where you are wrong. You call your father's wife "some random woman" which is very disrespectful to her and your father. Would you like it if your spouse's family called you "some random" person? What about your mother - would it have been right if she had been referred to as "some random woman" when she married your father?
Most laws, religions and decent people show basic respect for a person's spouse. Whether it's their first or not. Why don't you do the same in this case. I do think you are very wrong in your attitude which comes across loud and clear in your post. You obviously don't like your father's wife and it comes across as "stepmother/SM" bigotry.
It was your father's mistake to think you should treat SM like a mother. SM may not have even known about his 2.0 request or disagreed and he did it anyway.
It is easy to set up a will/trust to leave assets so there is no mistake about who gets what. But as for the "family" home, that may be a different case. If your father and his wife are living in this house then they may be there for decades, depending on life expectancy. Do you really expect that if they live there for decades and your father passes, you would expect SM to pack up and get out of the home she's known for decades, because it's your "family" home?
Yet you seem to think it's perfectly fine for her to spend decades of her life caring for your father, keeping him "healthier and happy," being his companion & nurse, yet when she's an old widow it's perfectly fine to toss her out on her a$$ because, well you know, she's nothing but a stepmother.
Coming in at the twilight years of a lonely old man’s life to steal his and his late wife’s net worth compiled over decades from their kids and grandkids does make you a random. Not blood and never will be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly we were all happy after a few years that dad wanted companionship. Women keep men alive and healthier.
BUT: have a conversation about estates because my dad wanted wife #2 to become our mother 2.0/give her the family home etc (even though were in our 30s/40s) so we had to point out that mum's plans for the estate wasn't for it to go to some random woman. Luckily he seemed to understand that finally.
You are right that bringing up estate issues with a parent is an important topic to bring up. However, you must also understand that your parent still has agency (unless declared incompetent) and they still have the right to make their own choices.
Here's where you are wrong. You call your father's wife "some random woman" which is very disrespectful to her and your father. Would you like it if your spouse's family called you "some random" person? What about your mother - would it have been right if she had been referred to as "some random woman" when she married your father?
Most laws, religions and decent people show basic respect for a person's spouse. Whether it's their first or not. Why don't you do the same in this case. I do think you are very wrong in your attitude which comes across loud and clear in your post. You obviously don't like your father's wife and it comes across as "stepmother/SM" bigotry.
It was your father's mistake to think you should treat SM like a mother. SM may not have even known about his 2.0 request or disagreed and he did it anyway.
It is easy to set up a will/trust to leave assets so there is no mistake about who gets what. But as for the "family" home, that may be a different case. If your father and his wife are living in this house then they may be there for decades, depending on life expectancy. Do you really expect that if they live there for decades and your father passes, you would expect SM to pack up and get out of the home she's known for decades, because it's your "family" home?
Yet you seem to think it's perfectly fine for her to spend decades of her life caring for your father, keeping him "healthier and happy," being his companion & nurse, yet when she's an old widow it's perfectly fine to toss her out on her a$$ because, well you know, she's nothing but a stepmother.
Anonymous wrote:Grow up op. Your mom is passed. Let him live his life.
Anonymous wrote:My mom passed away 6 years ago after a long battle with cancer. She was in her mid 60s. It’s still extremely heartbreaking to my family (me, my dad and my brother) and I miss her more than anything.
A few months ago, on a phone call with my dad (who is in his 70s now), he very casually mentioned that he felt like he was ready for some “companionship.” It took me completely by surprise as I couldn’t imagine my dad ever wanting to be with anyone after 40+ years of marriage with my mom. I voiced my surprise and confusion on the call and he didn’t bring it up again. A few months passed and he, again very casually, mentioned a childhood friend that he reconnected with. I also recently found out via another family member that they travel together and spend quite a bit of time together. Most recently, he brought her to a family function, which I must admit, was upsetting to hear.
I’m not sure how to process these emotions. Part of me feels like my dad is forgetting or replacing the 40 years he shared with my mom and her memory feels more and more distant. At the same time, I’m glad my dad isn’t completely alone because we don’t live near each other and I worry about him. Truth be told, I never want to meet this friend of his and I don’t want her to be a part of my life. I know she could never replace my mom. I guess I’m wondering if anyone else has navigated feeling this way or if I’m completely off base.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you to the PPs who provided some perspective on this without insulting me. I love my dad and of course want him to be happy. I also recognize I am still grieving which is probably clouding my judgment and emotions.