Ask Amy: I feel taken advantage of while already grieving
Dear Amy: My mom unexpectedly passed away about a year ago after a very brief illness. We were extremely close. I was with her nearly every moment for those last weeks.
When she died, I was raw, devastated and completely numb. It took me days to even be able to shed a tear.
My sister-in-law, whom I love, immediately asked me for the earrings my mom wore daily, as well as an expensive handbag and a fur coat.
Saying no has always been hard for me in the best of situations.
I’m a people pleaser. This was the worst of situations, and I just said OK.
Now, I find myself feeling infuriated and angry.
I feel like I was taken advantage of in one of my darkest times.
I would have said yes to these requests. I have enough mementos and the “stuff” wasn’t what was important to me.
I feel like my SIL completely disregarded how grief stricken and exhausted I was, and was greedy and demanding during a vulnerable time.
I do love her, so this feels awful.
Being a people pleaser also means that confrontations are difficult for me and the last thing I would ever want to do is create a rift in my very close and loving family.
Do you have any advice on how I can move past this?
— Grieving Daughter
Dear Grieving Daughter: As a “people pleaser,” you may not quite recognize how to put yourself on an equal footing with the people around you.
A lifetime of extending yourself toward others can take you outside of your own emotions, and so your first task is to give yourself permission to actually feel your negative feelings (“infuriated and angry”). You then need to recognize the legitimacy of your feelings and reactions, and to deal with them, either by expressing them or by working through them on your own and letting them go.
You have a voice and the right to speak your own truth.
If you don’t feel able to share your honest reaction with your sister-in-law, you could write down your reactions: “I feel taken advantage of. She didn’t recognize my grief. She jumped in too quickly and didn’t give me the chance to offer these things to her. She made a mistake. If I choose to forgive her for her behavior, I will let it all go.”
Lastly, you should recognize this: You miss your mother. You miss seeing her wear those familiar earrings. You wish you could reverse all of these recent events, but you know that you can’t.
And now you must adjust to this new reality, but it will take time — and tears.
You should allow yourself both.
You can email Amy Dickinson at [email protected] or send a letter to Ask Amy, P.O. Box 194, Freeville, NY 13068.