Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You keep being courteous to both parents. This is very important. They are in recovery mode and need people to be compassionate, and not nosy. If neither tells you, it means you cannot really ask questions, unless for some reason you feel you're a little closer than that, and can ask whether they are OK. Sometimes, that's acceptable.
I mean we have hung out as families for years. Seems strange not to say anything. I will just not mention it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another vote for MYOB!
Yeah yeah, MYOB, and all. Fine.
But, OP: now you DO know. Or at least you suspect. So you SHOULD change your behavior:
- I would not say to the mom “oh, you and Brad are such a great couple!” Or
- “You have the kind of marriage I admire!” Or
- “we’re going on a couples-only vacation, want to come?”
So it does matter to that degree.
And everyone else: stop being so fake! You know you really WANT to know.
Anonymous wrote:Another vote for MYOB!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have known this family for years. We didn’t see or talk to them all summer and DS said the boy told him his parents got divorced a few months ago. I saw the mom today and was friendly as usual.
Do I say anything? Just act like I don’t know?
Would a kid know the difference between divorce and separation?
I’m newly separated and headed to divorce. I am fine and don’t really need to talk about it or even have it acknowledged if we aren’t close enough to know already. The way you behaved was perfect in my opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have known this family for years. We didn’t see or talk to them all summer and DS said the boy told him his parents got divorced a few months ago. I saw the mom today and was friendly as usual.
Do I say anything? Just act like I don’t know?
Would a kid know the difference between divorce and separation?
How old are the kids?
In this situation, I would probably say, "Hey, Sam told me that Ryan said you and Ryan's dad split up this summer. How are you doing?" if I was at all friendly with her. I couldn't just be normal and act like I didn't know.
This would make me uncomfortable. Don’t do this, OP. The son could get blowback from the parent, too, on the lines of “why are you telling your friends about our divorce?!”. You never know. Let them tell you their own time. They’ll appreciate it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have known this family for years. We didn’t see or talk to them all summer and DS said the boy told him his parents got divorced a few months ago. I saw the mom today and was friendly as usual.
Do I say anything? Just act like I don’t know?
Would a kid know the difference between divorce and separation?
PP. If you didn’t already know-then you don’t need to say anything
I’m newly separated and headed to divorce. I am fine and don’t really need to talk about it or even have it acknowledged if we aren’t close enough to know already. The way you behaved was perfect in my opinion.
Anonymous wrote:We have known this family for years. We didn’t see or talk to them all summer and DS said the boy told him his parents got divorced a few months ago. I saw the mom today and was friendly as usual.
Do I say anything? Just act like I don’t know?
Would a kid know the difference between divorce and separation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You keep being courteous to both parents. This is very important. They are in recovery mode and need people to be compassionate, and not nosy. If neither tells you, it means you cannot really ask questions, unless for some reason you feel you're a little closer than that, and can ask whether they are OK. Sometimes, that's acceptable.
I mean we have hung out as families for years. Seems strange not to say anything. I will just not mention it.
Oh, spare us the bullshit. You didn’t talk to them all summer and they haven’t said anything to you about it themselves. You’re not that close. MYOB.