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Carolyn Hax: Grandpa-to-be’s decision to start a new family upsets daughter

Pilgrim Soul's picture

I decided to share this because the story definitely rang a bell for me: i know a family where the same scenario took place. One of my close GFs is not the daughter, but the DIL of a similarly afflicted guy. She is not happy with her kids not having closer ties with their grandfather, however, everyone is getting along ok, including the grandmother who is ( unlike in this story) alive and well. It also reminds me of You've Got Mail. Modern families are complicated.

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http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/carolyn-hax-grandpa-to-bes...

Dear Carolyn: My widowed-for-20-years father is having an “accidental” child with a woman my age. He is an extremely poor communicator (I got that particular gift from him), and repeatedly denied he was even dating this woman when we asked him point-blank. I would say he has Asperger’s, if that were still a thing. We are all scattered around the country and he revealed this to us when this woman, whom we barely know, was already about five months pregnant.

At first I was just shocked, but now I feel so uncomfortable and disappointed. Uncomfortable because this woman is my age, and disappointed because my children (and future nieces and nephews) have not only been robbed of a grandmother, but now a fully involved grandfather as well. In an unfortunate coincidence, I am pregnant with his first grandchild. I had been looking forward to my father becoming a grandfather for years, because I thought it would help heal him emotionally from the devastating death of my mother.

My siblings and I are all very unhappy and suspicious at this turn of events. While we were never that close to begin with, I feel like we are all even more distant with our father now.

How should I behave with him? Is it selfish for me to feel so uncomfortable and disappointed? How do I explain this to my future children?

R.

People are who they are, no matter how badly you want them to be someone else. The more you embrace this, the better this or any outcome will be.

And here’s part of who your father is: an adult having a child with a fellow, consenting adult. So?

You want a Normal Rockwell grandpa for your kids, of course, probably everyone does, along with some glue for your disconnected family.

Understandable, but — where is reality here? The hopes you had riding on your dad were so unmoored from fact and history that you’re the primary agent of your own disappointment.

To my eye, these future children were robbed of a “fully involved” grandfather the moment your generation was born to this particular dad. Label it Asperger’s or a jar of pickles, and the point remains: Your dad struggles with human interaction — and no grandchild was ever fixing that.

Meanwhile, investing in false hopes of a cuddly father turned your attention away from appreciating or drawing out the good things he is able to provide.

Bright side, these self-inflicted injuries can be healed. It’s jarring but ultimately liberating if you let old notions go — like an emotional catapult.

Healing requires that you land in reality, though: Your father, again, is who he is — relationship and secrets and awkwardness and babies and all. And, the main things you have in common right now are poor communication and babies on the way.

This adds up to awkwardness, sure, but how you cope is up to you. You can avoid your dad, or take deep breaths and raise your child alongside his. You can dwell on the age of the baby’s mother, or just approach her as a peer. You can open yourself to what your dad offers, or be consumed by what he doesn’t.

As for telling future children? “Grandpa was sad for a long time after Grandma died, but in time he met someone new.” Why editorialize when a simple truth will suffice.

Anon2009's picture

It's sad that this woman feels...sad over this instead of thinking of the child as another friend/playmate for her child.

furkidsforme's picture

I think her only issue is the lovers age. Now she doesn't get the "matronly" GM she was hoping for. Where do people get off thinking they get to design others lives?

Disneyfan's picture

Can you imagine how the other woman must feel? The man has repeatedly denied he was even dating her and kept her pregnancy hush, hush for five months.

Poodle's picture

Sounds like he may have been right to hide/deny it! His partner may feel like he was protecting her from this viperish SD.

sandye21's picture

"---- you’re the primary agent of your own disappointment." This one statement speaks volumes. The writer of the letter to Carolyn is what I consider the typical SD. Unrealistic expectations of everyone else, justifying hate with unreasonable arguments, wanting to control lives of others to live out illusions of 'family' when there never was one to begin with. The one I really feel sorry for is the woman who is having her Father's baby. She doesn't have a prayer!

Pilgrim Soul's picture

I hope when the son marries he won't let his spouse ruin the father-son time, and they will just continue to ride into the sunset together, two guys on the horseback. I can just imagine how happy it is going to make his wife and kids!

Rags's picture

I believe she then went to expand her web cast site and business and still is making big bucks.

sandye21's picture

"no moral authority." That explains it all, doesn't it? Thank you for sharing this information. I have not listened to Dr. Laura in many years because of her rigid, judgmental, nazi-like views. It is hard to tell whether her advice to the son was sarcastic or just bad advice. Glad to know she is no longer on the air.