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Wedding Woes

There's grief and then there's this insanity.

Dear Prudence,

Last year my brother died. His wife planned to return to her home country with my nephew, and my parents reacted badly. My sister-in-law left her son in their care for a week while she finalized arrangements, and they refused to give him back. They tried to stage an “intervention” with friends and family about why leaving the country was a bad idea. My sister-in-law locked herself in the bathroom and called her lawyer. He convinced my parents to return her son. She then left the country.

I was out of state and working a double shift while all of this happened. I didn’t find out how crazy things got until later that week. I am the only family member who has any contact with my brother’s widow or her son now. She sends me occasional updates and photos. I haven’t told my relatives about this because I don’t want to be treated like a go-between. She’s since told me that she was actually pregnant when my brother died, and she didn’t feel safe telling our family after the incident with her son. I now have another nephew, and I don’t know what to do: It would kill my parents to know they’ve lost another grandson, but I’m worried they’ll try to do something drastic again. It will harm my relationship with my family if I keep this secret—but what happens when my nephews get older, and my parents find out another way?

—Second Nephew

Re: There's grief and then there's this insanity.

  • Whether to tell your parents about the new baby is a decision you need to leave to your sister-in-law. If she does not think it is safe to tell them, then you need to keep the news to yourself as well.
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  • Nope, nope nope.

    Should your parents bring this up again, you tell them that they should be absolutely grateful and thanking their lucky stars that you don't have to visit them in jail after what they did.   Not only was it illegal but they completely ruined any chances at having a relationship with their deceased wife's son by that.   They should seek therapy. 

    Unless they show serious signs of remorse and actually state that they regret what they did and how wrong it was for them to do that, you do nothing.

    Should they actually realize how badly they behaved and if they express a desire to mend fences only then would I even CONSIDER acting as a go-between and approach your SIL and tell them that your parents are remorseful and sad for what they've done.

    In the interim, keep up the contact with her if you can feel confident that by doing so you are not going to open up this to tell your parents or other family members.  It appears that you can be trusted and act with logic.  Do not engage with those who can't.  
  • Yikes!

    what a position LW is in! I would have to keep my mouth shut but it would be difficult. Them knowing of grandson #2 is on SIL

  • Um, your parents committed a literal felony involving a child. They don’t deserve to know anything. 


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  • Keep your damned mouth shut. If your SIL ever tells you that she wants to let your parents know about the baby, you can offer to be a mediator. Otherwise, it's not your news to share. Be happy that your SIL trusts you and try to keep up a relationship with your nephews. 

    If your parents somehow find out about this baby and your knowledge of it some other way, you repeat that it wasn't your news to share. Your parents suck. 
  • Love all the PP responses!  This is NOT LW's secret to tell.  They're already keeping it a secret that they have communication with the SIL, so just keep on keeping secrets.  Have comfort that they are the one person in the child's paternal family the SIL can even trust to stay in touch with.  Don't jeopardize that trust.

    Most importantly, while I'm sure this is hard to admit about the LW's own parents, they have proven themselves to be extremely dangerous people to the SIL.  Not one word about her can ever be disclosed to them.
    Wedding Countdown Ticker
  • Do. Not. Breathe. A. Word. Of. Any. Of. This. To. The. Kidnappers. Of. Your. SIL's. Child. Without. Your. SIL's. Explicit. Permission.

    Your parents were 100% in the wrong to hold him hostage.

    Let your SIL be the one to decide if they should have any further information about her or her children. Keep what you know to yourself. If they find out, you respond that you were not at liberty to divulge the information to them. Lather, rinse, repeat.
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