DEAR SOMEONE ELSE’S MOM: Out of the blue I received a Facebook friend request from an older woman with my last name. When I checked out her profile, there was a photo from what looked like the mid-1960s of this woman and my grandmother. I knew it is my grandmother because I have seen photos of her when she was young before.
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I had known she had a younger sister and an older brother. I got to meet the older brother when I was real little, but I was always told their sister died in an accident when she was just out of college.
I accepted the request and have since come to know more about this woman. She is really and truly my great-aunt, and told me her family wrote her off when she got into drugs when she was in her early 20s. She had a rough time of it, and after going through multiple rehabs and meeting her first husband, who helped her get and stay clean, she pulled her s
t together, and has been living in Oregon with her family since 1976. She has two daughters and six grandkids, most of them about my age.
My grandmother died in 2018, and so far I have not yet told my parents about this whole situation. I am both hurt and angry my family would have lied to me and the rest of my siblings and cousins about our own relative. I know it was a different time and all that, but holy s
t, the woman is part of my family, with a whole other branch I never had the chance to know. I have since connected with some of my cousins, and they are as happy as I am to get to know each other.
How do I tell my parents and the rest of our family here I know the truth and we should all make some kind of effort to reconnect with my lost great-aunt? --- SOME FAMILY SECRET
DEAR SOME FAMILY SECRET: First off, do you know from your great-aunt that she has any desire to connect with the rest of your family beyond you? That she reached out in the first place makes me think she does want to be in touch on some level. It’s possible she previously put out feelers to other relatives, and you’re the first one to respond.
Now that you’ve heard your great-aunt’s side of the story, I believe along with you that it’s time to get another interpretation from your parents. They may have a very different tale to tell. As you say, it was a different era, and it’s not impossible that they honestly believe the aunt died decades ago.
It’ll be a difficult conversation to start, and my recommendation to you would be to go in with the thought that they are as much in the dark as you were until recently. If they are familiar with what caused the estrangement, listen to their side of the story. There’s an old saying, “The truth will out,” and if it holds in this case, what did in fact happen might be pieced together at long last from various interpretations of perceived and actual events.
Once you’ve had an opportunity to try and reassemble the past, you can discuss with your parents how or if they want to make the situation generally known to the rest of the family. News such as this is likely to lead to a variety of reactions, so be prepared.