Anonymous wrote:I do not believe this really happened exactly as described. No way. OP is hearing this second hand from a 11 year old who has been predisposed against her aunt for her entire life. I’m taking this with a huge grain of salt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not believe this really happened exactly as described. No way. OP is hearing this second hand from a 11 year old who has been predisposed against her aunt for her entire life. I’m taking this with a huge grain of salt.
This take sounds like a "you" problem. You probably missed your calling as an investigative reporter.
Anonymous wrote:I do not believe this really happened exactly as described. No way. OP is hearing this second hand from a 11 year old who has been predisposed against her aunt for her entire life. I’m taking this with a huge grain of salt.
Anonymous wrote:I think, as of right now, you should end the idea of "Friday dinners." If she asks, just say you're not up to family dinners at all for a while. Maybe if you stop making it a "thing," she will stop asking about it. If your DH wants his family over, do it on a Saturday or Sunday and don't call it a family dinner. Just end the whole concept of Friday Family Dinners.
And I agree that's a wholly inappropriate thing to say to your daughter, especially when a loved one has passed. I'm sorry for your loss.
Anonymous wrote:My sister has done similar awful things. When she verbally attacked my spouse and children, I was done.
If you see your sister again, don’t see her where you can’t make a quick exit. So don’t see her at your house. Better to be out so you can leave if she starts acting out.
Anonymous wrote:Tell your DD that when her mother died, it made your sister feel out of control, bc we can't control whether people live or die, and she tried to regain control by making your DD see Grandma, but Sister was wrong. Tell DD everyone gets to say goodbye in their own way, and anyway it matters more how you treated someone while they were alive than how you say goodbye once they've died.
Then don't have your sister to your house. This was just the last in a long line of mean things she's said to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who else comes to the family dinners?
Not that it matters, she shouldn’t.
Mostly just our immediate family. Me, DH, DD & our two sons. Sometimes DH’s parents will come or his brothers family but that’s rare.
My older brother doesn’t live close by and is already back home. We aren’t super close either but we get along fine. We are 17 years apart so not much in common.
Edit to add. My mother would come until she got too sick to attend. My sister came occasionally.
Why did you assume she'd be there this Friday if it was only occasional before?
Anonymous wrote:I think, as of right now, you should end the idea of "Friday dinners." If she asks, just say you're not up to family dinners at all for a while. Maybe if you stop making it a "thing," she will stop asking about it. If your DH wants his family over, do it on a Saturday or Sunday and don't call it a family dinner. Just end the whole concept of Friday Family Dinners.
And I agree that's a wholly inappropriate thing to say to your daughter, especially when a loved one has passed. I'm sorry for your loss.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who else comes to the family dinners?
Not that it matters, she shouldn’t.
Mostly just our immediate family. Me, DH, DD & our two sons. Sometimes DH’s parents will come or his brothers family but that’s rare.
My older brother doesn’t live close by and is already back home. We aren’t super close either but we get along fine. We are 17 years apart so not much in common.
Edit to add. My mother would come until she got too sick to attend. My sister came occasionally.