L
Lovemyfaith
Guest
Don’t worry about it.
My husband’s father left the family when my husband was 9 and really never looked back. Through another relative, my husband got his dad’s phone number and called several years after we were married. Honestly, I was really nervous about that call, but it is important to try to mend fences and forgive. Well, his dad didn’t change, still was pretty awful and started calling our family while intoxicated and generally was a pain to deal with. We tried to offer support but he really didn’t want to change and the most annoying part was my husband’s step mother blamed my husband when his father finally died. I think she was probably happy to have a someone to point to as the problem so she didn’t have to face the fact that her husband was the problem. Your grandmother might think revisionist history makes her son a great guy, but it doesn’t.
It bugs me beyond words when families refuse to support each other. You would think in such a big and sometimes unfriendly world that the people who share the same blood as you would want to support each other. Your grandmother doesn’t have to blame you to prove she loves her son. In fact she doesn’t have to not love her son. She should recognize that her son had a problem. After all, plenty of people have circumstances worse that he had with estranged family members, and do not turn to alcohol.
My husband’s father left the family when my husband was 9 and really never looked back. Through another relative, my husband got his dad’s phone number and called several years after we were married. Honestly, I was really nervous about that call, but it is important to try to mend fences and forgive. Well, his dad didn’t change, still was pretty awful and started calling our family while intoxicated and generally was a pain to deal with. We tried to offer support but he really didn’t want to change and the most annoying part was my husband’s step mother blamed my husband when his father finally died. I think she was probably happy to have a someone to point to as the problem so she didn’t have to face the fact that her husband was the problem. Your grandmother might think revisionist history makes her son a great guy, but it doesn’t.
It bugs me beyond words when families refuse to support each other. You would think in such a big and sometimes unfriendly world that the people who share the same blood as you would want to support each other. Your grandmother doesn’t have to blame you to prove she loves her son. In fact she doesn’t have to not love her son. She should recognize that her son had a problem. After all, plenty of people have circumstances worse that he had with estranged family members, and do not turn to alcohol.
