Anonymous wrote:My mother hasn’t spoken to her family in decades. In the past, one of her siblings will reach out when someone has passed away, as they did with her grandmother, two brothers, and then her mother. It appears no one contacted her about her father dying because just a couple of weeks ago she was talking about how a large storm passed through the town where her father lives, but he passed away this past January. My grandfather had a unique name which I heard on a podcast, and it prompted a strange and urgent curiosity in me to search his name, and that’s how I found out.
I think it will devastate my mother that not only is her father dead, but will confirm that he never tried to reach out in his illness (he died after a long sickness), and that nobody cared enough to inform her of his passing. There is a LOT of history there, childhood trauma, unresolved hurt. I don’t think I should tell her, but at the same time, this feels like a heavy burden. She mentions him occasionally, I think she hopes/hoped he will reach out to her before he dies/died, and now it’s too late.
If I keep this a secret and let her discover this on her own, how should I act the next time she brings him up?
Anonymous wrote:Yes, you should tell her.
I am estranged from my sister. A big fear of mine is her getting sick and dying and me not knowing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probable fake post. Anecdotally, unless you are prepared to help your mom work through the devastation you say she will experience if you tell her, stay out of it and act surprised when she does find out.
OP here. Omg it’s not a fake post! Please stop! Why does everyone always think everything is a fake post? This isn’t even remotely scandalous. Just stop!
New poster here.
"Please stop!" "Just stop!"This is dramatic, controlling language and I'm even more convinced it's a story in someone's mind. In the first place, when you start a topic, you can't dictate how people respond to it and DCUM has plenty of trolls inventing stories for the laughs. In second place, what are the odds that you randomly heard of a grandfather's passing on a podcast. A podcast? It'd be more plausible if you'd mentioned reading his obituary in the paper.
In real life of course you'd tell her. Now, if this was my book, she is a woman with "issues" to put it politely and who walked away from her family and refuses to keep in touch. They are effectively already dead to her. Why would she be so devastated by the news of the death of a father she refuses to keep in touch with? And if she would be upset, keep in mind she long made clear to the family she wants nothing to do with them or be part of the family, so they have no obligations to her either. Reaping the consequences of her actions.
Anonymous wrote:This is why you shouldn’t estrange yourself from your family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probable fake post. Anecdotally, unless you are prepared to help your mom work through the devastation you say she will experience if you tell her, stay out of it and act surprised when she does find out.
OP here. Omg it’s not a fake post! Please stop! Why does everyone always think everything is a fake post? This isn’t even remotely scandalous. Just stop!
This is dramatic, controlling language and I'm even more convinced it's a story in someone's mind. In the first place, when you start a topic, you can't dictate how people respond to it and DCUM has plenty of trolls inventing stories for the laughs. In second place, what are the odds that you randomly heard of a grandfather's passing on a podcast. A podcast? It'd be more plausible if you'd mentioned reading his obituary in the paper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This happened to me and I wish someone would’ve told me. I found out my estranged parent died on the internet when I happened to google them. Their family didn’t even bother to tell me they’d died. If I found out that someone in my own family knew but didn’t tell me, I would be incredibly hurt. It was awful finding out the way I did.
If this bothered you so much, why was there no attempt to end the estrangement?
Your question presumes the estrangement was my doing. And no, it's not always a "two-way street." Besides, it wasn't so much that the person died--it was that their other family couldn't even be bothered to tell me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This happened to me and I wish someone would’ve told me. I found out my estranged parent died on the internet when I happened to google them. Their family didn’t even bother to tell me they’d died. If I found out that someone in my own family knew but didn’t tell me, I would be incredibly hurt. It was awful finding out the way I did.
If this bothered you so much, why was there no attempt to end the estrangement?
Your question presumes the estrangement was my doing. And no, it's not always a "two-way street." Besides, it wasn't so much that the person died--it was that their other family couldn't even be bothered to tell me.
But they didn’t tell you no matter how or when you finally found out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This happened to me and I wish someone would’ve told me. I found out my estranged parent died on the internet when I happened to google them. Their family didn’t even bother to tell me they’d died. If I found out that someone in my own family knew but didn’t tell me, I would be incredibly hurt. It was awful finding out the way I did.
If this bothered you so much, why was there no attempt to end the estrangement?
Your question presumes the estrangement was my doing. And no, it's not always a "two-way street." Besides, it wasn't so much that the person died--it was that their other family couldn't even be bothered to tell me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This happened to me and I wish someone would’ve told me. I found out my estranged parent died on the internet when I happened to google them. Their family didn’t even bother to tell me they’d died. If I found out that someone in my own family knew but didn’t tell me, I would be incredibly hurt. It was awful finding out the way I did.
If this bothered you so much, why was there no attempt to end the estrangement?