Last year there was a major family fallout that ended with my mother and I not speaking to my aunt. Long story short, she got her family together and disposed of my grandmothers ashes without letting us know or inviting us or anything, and then lied about it for weeks before coming clean. My aunt is a raging moderately functioning alcoholic and often does and says nasty things, particularly as she ages (she's not the good time aunt anymore, like she was when I was a kid). My mother is 7 years sober and my aunt continually berates her for her sobriety and spirituality. She once called me stupid in front of the whole family bc I dropped out of college. Things like that. And this ashes thing is just the last straw. I had a very special close relationship with my grandmother and my mother took care of her for the last 6 years of her life, so when this happened last year I was hurt and PISSED. It's not something I stew on, but every time I recheck my feelings, I'm still angry and don't have any inclination to forgive her or let her "back into" my family fold. I can tell my mother misses her though and I totally support whatever she wants to do with their relationship. Well, my aunt emailed us today, saying I apologize, let's not live with regrets, are we ever going to speak again. In my head, I was already thinking no, but then she signed it with "let's not let this be Nan's legacy". Uh, no, this is your legacy, not Nan's. But I can tell my mother wants to repair their relationship and is holding back bc of my anger. What should I do? Pretend to forgive her, when I know that not the truth? Stand my ground? Just get the hell over it?
Re: Family drama
Hi there, sorry about the loss of your dear grandma and how your aunt's poor behavior has affected you. Since your question is if you should forgive her or "stand your ground", I go for the former, to the extent that you can. Even if you have good reasons, as you do, harboring resentments against someone only hurts you, and it gives that other person an unfortunate power over you. It's like a terrible cancer. Just learn how NOT to be, and in the meantime give your mom lots of love and support. Three cheers for her sobriety, too, that is so awesome!
There are really understanding counselors at Focus (no cost - 855-771-4357) if you need some encouragement or advice. They've helped a lot of us.
PS Your aunt sounds like a very unhappy individual - don't be like that! Hugs to you!
HappySeeker
This IMO is a proper response to the situation!
Forgiveness is a very personal decision along with the reasoning behind it is not directed at the person whomever did you wrong, it's forgiving yourself from handing them so much power over your life because of their action and holding onto it. There isn't some magic fairy wand and you forget what they did, it's actually good that you're taking this attitude towards things for the time being. Enabling those kinds of behavior by "forgiving" her because she asked is just enabling to her IMO. Give you some concrete reason she should be forgiven (i.e. YEARS clean and sober) and I'm sure you would with the proper time and healing to the extent you could be in a room together.
Good luck and go this one at your own pace!