News1 min ago
Family...who'd Have 'em!
8 Answers
My mom has been unwell for the last 3 years after having cancer in her spine. For a while she was not very mobile but recovered well enough to stay living by herself and managing really well, although had to give up dog walking which earned her fairly good money. My sister lives about a mile away and helped her with shopping and hospital visits but not much more than that. I live about 3 hours away and visited when I could but practically couldn't be there all of the time. When I was there she hated me doing anything for her anyway so other than taking her meals to freeze I wasn't particularly useful. I did more with regards to paying for any stuff that she needed and couldn't afford now - broadband, household appliances, computer stuff etc. Because I wasn't up there as often as I maybe should have been, my sister had a real issue with doing all of the hospital visits etc and, so she could be a bit or a martyr about it, never mentioned that there were any pending appointments, mainly so she could be upset with me about not helping with them. She was happily taking the carer's allowance that came with the work though. Mom died on Monday and now we're being totally kept out of the loop with regards to what's happening with funerals etc (she'd made a request to be donated to a university for research purposes as she had such a rare cancer so this may or may not be happening). My wife thinks we should just head up there and kind of force ourselves into the situation but I'm not so sure about that. If my sister wants to exclude me and take over the responsibility herself should I just leave her to get on with it? We're generally subtly unwelcome when we go to visit anyway so if we do travel up we don't really have anywhere to go, other than booking into a hotel (I never had keys to my mom's place) so should I just keep out of the way?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by ck1. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I would try a gentle approach. A phone call or email. Offer help and support and request you be kept informed. Ackowledge that distance meant you couldnt always be there and she may have found it difficult. Grief can make people act in unusual ways. Thats the human answer.
Then there is the legal answer.....
Then there is the legal answer.....
Thanks everyone for your comments, I think maintaining some distance is probably the way to go. As far as what I'd like to happen, you see these situations in the movies where someone dies, everyone gets together with a bottle of single malt and recalls funny stories about the deceased, then they leave as best friends and life is good. I guess we'll just do Christmas cards for the kids though!