conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote in [community profile] agonyaunt2021-02-14 03:21 am

(no subject)

Dear Annie: My daughter is marrying a widower, "Hank," with three children. The problem is with "Gail," the mother of his late wife.

My daughter includes Gail in the daily household activities, including holidays and birthdays. The children have pictures of their mom (Hank's late wife) hung up in their home and speak often about her.

Gail is not very nice to my daughter. She purposely calls her the wrong name. She says she does this because my daughter's name reminds her of her daughter.

Gail has done other things — such as pull the children out of school after being told not to. She has taken them to doctors and dentists for appointments without talking to my daughter or their father. She has been asked to back off some. My daughter understands that Gail jumped in and helped for a year and that it might be difficult for her to turn over these responsibilities, so she has been patient with Gail. But they have been together for 18 months now and live together as a family.

The issue is that my daughter decided not to invite Gail to the wedding. This is intended to be a special day about the bride and groom. My daughter was concerned that Gail might speak ill of her to other guests, as has happened on other occasions. The invitations were sent out, and Gail immediately wanted to know where hers was. My daughter explained, as nicely as possible, that she was not invited. My daughter was immediately met with mean, hateful comments.

Gail then called the grandkids' paternal grandmother — Hank's mom — and complained to her for 40 minutes.

The wedding had to be rescheduled due to COVID-19, and the delay has put the issue back to square one. Gail has started all over, assuming she will get an invitation. Is my daughter wrong to exclude her? — Wedding Drama


Dear Wedding Drama: If you have to ask the question, you probably know the answer. Yes, it is wrong for your daughter not to invite the grandmother of her stepchildren to the wedding. Your daughter is not starting fresh with Hank; she's marrying a man who comes with a family that suffered a tragedy. While Gail's behavior does sound a bit intrusive, try to remember where she is coming from. She lost her daughter. She is probably devastated, and her daughter's children are going to be another woman's stepchildren. Try to show compassion for Gail. You and your daughter don't have to love her, but you certainly have to learn to be kind and gracious to her. She should continue to be a part of your stepchildren's lives — hopefully forever — and I think it is up to your daughter and Hank to facilitate that.

As far as the negative talk about your daughter, no one needs that at their wedding. Your daughter and Hank should have a very direct conversation with Gail, explaining that they will not tolerate drama on their special day and that she is invited only on the condition that she meet their kindness with kindness.

https://www.creators.com/read/dear-annie/02/21/marrying-into-family-drama
torachan: (Default)

[personal profile] torachan 2021-02-14 08:53 am (UTC)(link)
This is so weird. Their wedding is not about Gail at all. Even if she was a great person, there's no reason to invite her, just because she's the kids' grandmother. It's not the kids' wedding...
mommy: Wanda Maximoff; Scarlet Witch (Default)

[personal profile] mommy 2021-02-14 02:57 pm (UTC)(link)
If you know that a potential wedding guest is going to cause issues by badmouthing the bride at the wedding, then it makes perfect sense to drop her from the guest list. This is a "based on past behavior" issue, not a "wrongful exclusion" issue. Also, the LW isn't one of the people getting married, so I'm not sure why they get a say in the matter at all? The whole letter screams None Of Your Business to me.
pensnest: Calvin not enjoying his homework (Calvin blehh)

[personal profile] pensnest 2021-02-14 03:09 pm (UTC)(link)
Love the suggestion they should have a very direct conversation with Gail. After all, the world is filled with unreasonable people who just need a direct conversation to make them change into kind, considerate folk.

Hah.
shirou: (cloud)

[personal profile] shirou 2021-02-14 03:59 pm (UTC)(link)
LW's daughter and future SIL certainly are not wrong to exclude Gail from the wedding. But that's not the relevant question. The right question is: by choosing not to invite Gail, are they improving their situation or making it worse? They need to decide on their strategy for handling Gail, and the wedding invitation should be considered as part of that strategy.

They can decide to cut Gail off or substantially reduce Gail's role in their lives. After more than a year of trying to make things work, that sure would be my choice. Taking this approach, excluding Gail from the wedding is the right call. However, if they plan to try to somehow work things out with Gail, to continue including her in "daily household activities, including holidays and birthdays," then excluding Gail from the wedding will probably make life more difficult, and they need to think hard about whether it's worth it.
jadelennox: Senora Sabasa Garcia, by Goya (Default)

[personal profile] jadelennox 2021-02-14 09:11 pm (UTC)(link)
How old are the kids? Do they have an opinion, here? Your dead wife's mom's feelings might not be relevant, but surely the kids' feelings are relevant in a remarriage, and whether their grandma at the wedding is relevant to them.
cereta: Batman with words, "No, you're a poopy butt" (Batman thinks you're a poopy butt)

[personal profile] cereta 2021-02-14 10:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Where is Hank in all of this? What decisions is he making? What actions is he taking?

(I know: broken record, but this is just weird.)
eva_rosen: (Default)

[personal profile] eva_rosen 2021-02-15 05:12 am (UTC)(link)
'Gail jumped in and helped for a year' totally sounds like she took care of the children pretty much on her own (she takes them to doctors and dentist appointments of which the dad has no idea? Um) , so that might be why Hank doesn't do anything to make her stop being horrible with his new wife. Also, LW mentions the children having pictures of their dead mom and talking about her in a way that suggests she thinks they shouldn't, which. Um.