Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It never hurts to be kind. You both are grieving a major loss.
Op here, I'm grieving, but she is not. She did not love my dad, and it was obvious to everyone but him. I felt like it was foolish to remarry so late in life (he was 77 when they married) and with so much to lose due to the legalities/technicalities of marriage.
You sound like a really mean person. How do YOU know her feelings towards your dad? You seem to have held her at arm's length. My dad is 77 and just started dating someone last year (or very early this year?) after my mom died three years ago. He's happier and having more fun than he was ever able to have with my mom. His personality is lighter. How do you quantify love? I don't care how much this woman loves him. She makes him happy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom (and the rest of us) basically never spoke to her Dad’s second wife again after the funeral. My mom blamed her for basically abandoning my grandfather when he could no longer care for himself. She insisted he be moved out of their home because she didn’t want to be stuck caring for him and when he was in assisted living she almost never visited and just moved on with her life. It was a huge thing and my mom HATED her.
Op here, without going into too many details, much of what you wrote is what happened with my dad. The wife didn't want to be his nurse.
OP, you also said, "I can count on one hand the times I've been around her in person." Your father was ailing and needed care. In two years' time you only saw this woman a couple of times? Was it your expectation that she should have been his full-time caregiver for the long-term?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom (and the rest of us) basically never spoke to her Dad’s second wife again after the funeral. My mom blamed her for basically abandoning my grandfather when he could no longer care for himself. She insisted he be moved out of their home because she didn’t want to be stuck caring for him and when he was in assisted living she almost never visited and just moved on with her life. It was a huge thing and my mom HATED her.
Op here, without going into too many details, much of what you wrote is what happened with my dad. The wife didn't want to be his nurse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It never hurts to be kind. You both are grieving a major loss.
Op here, I'm grieving, but she is not. She did not love my dad, and it was obvious to everyone but him. I felt like it was foolish to remarry so late in life (he was 77 when they married) and with so much to lose due to the legalities/technicalities of marriage.
Anonymous wrote:If you didn't have much of a relationship before, no. My dad's girlfriend of maybe 5-6 years was horrible to me at his passing and took over the funeral with my sibling, changed the date, didn't tell us, took everything, took money out of his account, etc. She occasionally reached out for drama and my mom and sibling responded and I just ignore all of them. She never once invited us for a meal or treated me like family before his death, so why pretend after.
Anonymous wrote:My mom (and the rest of us) basically never spoke to her Dad’s second wife again after the funeral. My mom blamed her for basically abandoning my grandfather when he could no longer care for himself. She insisted he be moved out of their home because she didn’t want to be stuck caring for him and when he was in assisted living she almost never visited and just moved on with her life. It was a huge thing and my mom HATED her.
Anonymous wrote:My mom (and the rest of us) basically never spoke to her Dad’s second wife again after the funeral. My mom blamed her for basically abandoning my grandfather when he could no longer care for himself. She insisted he be moved out of their home because she didn’t want to be stuck caring for him and when he was in assisted living she almost never visited and just moved on with her life. It was a huge thing and my mom HATED her.
Anonymous wrote:There is no reason to maintain a relationship with a stepmother, ever.
Why would you need to keep them in your life once your father passes?
Any woman, at any age, who remarries should KNOW this and prepare accordingly. The stepkids have no interest in you nor the time spent with their father. It doesn't matter if it's two years or fifty years.
As OP said, "I care about the memories he made with my mother."
Original family comes first. Anyone else added later is expendable - including spouses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
For those of you who've had a parent remarry while you are an adult and then the parent passes away, what happened with your relationship with the second spouse after your parent passed? I am currently navigating this situation. My dad remarried after my mom passed, and at the time of the remarriage, I was already well into adulthood and established, so there was no traditional stepparent relationship.
My dad recently passed away; he and his second spouse had been married for two years at the time of his passing. I have a cordial relationship with the second wife, but nothing beyond the surface. I can count on one hand the times I've been around her in person. I assumed his passing would naturally end my relationship with her. However, she continues to reach out post-death, and I am uninterested. I've never trusted her and feel her outreach has an agenda. Would you gently state as much or ignore the contact and assume it will fade with time?
Hey Op, I don’t think this woman is after your thousands. She might be in shock and also lonely especially if this is her first holiday alone or she has no family of her own