Anonymous wrote:As long as the children from the first marriage are listed properly there is no need to mention the ex in my opinion.
My BILs step monster (the other woman) listed her adult (in their 30s to 40s when the affair started) as his dad's children in 5he obituary preceeding his actual children. As in Joe was 5he loving father to her adult children 1-3, then his actual children 1-3 (who had a relationship with both him and her even after the affair).
That is wrong. In my opinion it ahould have been loving father to ctual children and stepfather to her adult children that he did not meet until they were middle aged.
She also put his blood grandch8ldr3n last and her blood grandchildr3n first, left off his family members who maintained a relationship with wife 1, cremated him before his out of town children could fly in5o town (they flew in the next morning) and told his children a time an hour after the actual internment.
But leaving exwife off the obituary? That is okay.
Anonymous wrote:No, it is not proper etiquette to include the ex spouse in the obituary even if a parent to surviving grandchildren. The marriage is a legal contract. An ex spouse is not a member of the family.
Is the ex spouse going to be buried next to the grave, too?
Anonymous wrote:There is nothing wrong with leaving out the ex, no matter how long they were together. Obituaries usually list surviving family, not everyone who had an important part in the person’s life. After all, how often do you see life-long friends listed in someone’s obituary?
Anonymous wrote:I have never re-married. If my ex is in my obit, it will be referring to her as the cause of my early death, and as a whore and a junkie.
My relatives would probably throw her out of the church if she shows up at the funeral.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems very petty and potentially hurtful to the children. But you never know why they did this.
Probably the MIL is not a nice woman. Really weird and rude.
I'm totally going to leave out my MIL if my spouse dies.
Anonymous wrote:If someone dies and has an ex and kids, sure.
If someone dies and is remarried with kids plus the kids from the first marriage, no. He would be survived by his wife and children/ not the ex.
Some of you don't seem to get that being divorced means you're no longer family. It's cool if you personally here as a DCUM commenter are still friendly with your ex but generally speaking no, a divorce means you the divorced party don't get family privileges any longer. It would be disrespectful to the new spouse to say the deceased is survived by an ex spouse, and also untrue.
Anonymous wrote:No, it is not proper etiquette to include the ex spouse in the obituary even if a parent to surviving grandchildren. The marriage is a legal contract. An ex spouse is not a member of the family.
Is the ex spouse going to be buried next to the grave, too?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems very petty and potentially hurtful to the children. But you never know why they did this.
Probably the MIL is not a nice woman. Really weird and rude.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why on earth mention the ex???
What if you have multiple exes...do you mention all of them?
If you have common courtesy you do. Especially if it was marriage of 10 years or more and they have kids. Even just "John Smith is survived by his loving wife Elizabeth Smith, three kids Jack Smith, Margaret Smith, and Rachel Smith, as well as his parents Mitchell and Barbara Smith and his children Alex Smith-Ross and Sarah Smith-Ross by Elana Ross. He was a father, brother, and loving member of the community blah blah blah".
Anonymous wrote:As the ex wife and mother of his kids, I say no.