Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What you do is go to the funeral.
If you must say anything to him you say "I'm sorry you can't make it I wish you could."
And that's it.
Disappointment speeches and guilt trips are inappropriate.
As others have pointed out people grieve very differently I could not attend my grandma's funeral. losing her was devastating, but worse than that was my judgmental family members who pushed me to grieve their way.
Sorry for your loss.
I think it's completely appropriate to say more than merely "sorry you can't make it..." This is a good opportunity for the son to learn that his actions affect others, and that some things you just power through and do for the sake of your family.
Anonymous wrote:This! My nephew did this to my sister, knowing that she need his support (she had been my mother's primary caretaker for years) and he couldn't be bothered. It was very hurtful.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your mother is dead and doesn't care who shows up at her funeral. Maybe you an your son can do something special some other time - such as visit the grave together with flowers.
But the OP cares. Her son should have gone to support his mother. It was a shitty thing to do. Sorry OP.
This! My nephew did this to my sister, knowing that she need his support (she had been my mother's primary caretaker for years) and he couldn't be bothered. It was very hurtful.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your mother is dead and doesn't care who shows up at her funeral. Maybe you an your son can do something special some other time - such as visit the grave together with flowers.
But the OP cares. Her son should have gone to support his mother. It was a shitty thing to do. Sorry OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funerals are strange. I mean the person has passed away, they don't know if you are there or not. A simple celebration of life or family get together is so much better. I don't go to formal funerals unless they are for a member of the military.
Funerals are for the living. They are an important ritual and milestone for many of us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, you are the one that looks bad here.
If he doesn't want to go to a funeral, that's not a "wrong" or "bad" decision.
I wholeheartedly disagree. Going to the funeral is the decent thing to do. Not going is choosing the easy way out, the lazy way. You always go to the funeral. And your own grandmother! Shame on that kid.
Anonymous wrote:Op, you are the one that looks bad here.
If he doesn't want to go to a funeral, that's not a "wrong" or "bad" decision.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funerals are strange. I mean the person has passed away, they don't know if you are there or not. A simple celebration of life or family get together is so much better. I don't go to formal funerals unless they are for a member of the military.
Funerals are for the living. They are an important ritual and milestone for many of us.
Anonymous wrote:Funerals are strange. I mean the person has passed away, they don't know if you are there or not. A simple celebration of life or family get together is so much better. I don't go to formal funerals unless they are for a member of the military.
Anonymous wrote:OP. Why do you care whether your child attends?
Is it appearances? A relationship with your mother you wish he had? A need to have your child with you on this day to help take care of you because you are sad?
If it is the third one, then I would say something direct and only once. If it is another reason, I would say less.
(As for taking off work, perhaps he can't because he just did? You don't know the real story there, so don't assume anything.)
Anonymous wrote:What you do is go to the funeral.
If you must say anything to him you say "I'm sorry you can't make it I wish you could."
And that's it.
Disappointment speeches and guilt trips are inappropriate.
As others have pointed out people grieve very differently I could not attend my grandma's funeral. losing her was devastating, but worse than that was my judgmental family members who pushed me to grieve their way.
Sorry for your loss.