You are here

Spoiled adult daughter

baffled-and-sad's picture

Seems like a lot of you have the same situation as me: a spoiled adult daughter whose father doesn't want to admit that he has spoiled her. My situation is so similar. I am engaged to a wonderful man. We both have adult children, me two, a 27 year-old young woman and a 23 year-old young man, and my fiance's one 24 year-old daughter. My fiance has been a widower for 13 years. We have been dating for close to 3 years now and got engaged a few moths ago. When he told his daughter, she cried and said that he "was not taking her feelings into consideration." On the other hand, my kids said, "Congratulations, Mom. We are so happy for you." In the time we have been dating, his daughter has been unwelcoming to me, surprised when I am going to be at things like his birthday, and gone behind my back to say really awful things about me to her dad and now I hear to his friends as well. I have always been welcoming and inclusive with her. But now I am at my wit's end. Any advice on how I deal with her? At this point, I just want to avoid her as much as possible because I don't like possessive, selfish people, which is what her behavior has been all this time. I raised my children to be loving and inclusive; apparently he has not raised his daughter with the same values. Instead, he makes excuses for her behavior because she lost her mother--but that was 13 years ago, and I don't agree that losing someone gives a person license to be unkind to others or so controlling towards her dad. My overtures of friendship towards her have been met with comments behind my back that I am "trying too hard." At other times, I have just remained fairly quiet around her and then hear comments later from her dad that she said, "Is she (meaning me) always that quiet?" So I feel there is no winning with her. Every time we are around each other, there is always the "elephant in the room." The elephant is that she does not want her father to have a relationship with a woman, any woman. She acts like I am the "other woman." She even sent him a really rude text when he stopped by my house briefly last Christmas day to exchange gifts with me because I had been too sick to attend the Christmas gathering we had planned to go to together on Christmas eve which was when we planned to exchange gifts. Her text said, "Are you paving the highways before you drive home on them?" I was flabbergasted by that text, but it is indicative of how she views me, as an interloper and as "the other woman." Any ideas on how to deal with her?

Comments

twopines's picture

Don't deal with her. She's 24 years old and you don't have to do anything with/for/around her. Seriously, just ignore her. It's very freeing. My DH has two adult kids and I don't even know where they live.

oneoffour's picture

She is 24 and should know better. Why would you even consider marrying a man who makes excuses for his adult daughter? He will never put her in her place. He will always make excuses for her crappy attitude. Does she live near you? How often is she around?

No, he has a fatal character flaw and that is allowing his ADULT daughter to be rude and nasty to his future wife. No brainer for me. She is never going away and he isn't such a catch while his daughter is continually excused her crap behaviour. Just tell him the wedding is off because his daughter doesn't want to lose him and you cannot come between him and his daughter.

baffled-and-sad's picture

Well, oneoffour, that seems a bit extreme: to break up with a wonderful man because he has a manipulative daughter. And besides, that is just what she wants! We have a counseling session with this daughter next week. I plan on being honest and authentic at this session. I will tell her that she and I don't have to like each other and that I will make no more overtures toward friendship with her unless she makes some towards me. I will tell her I will treat her like an adult, not like a child to be coddled, and like any other adult relationship, I will not go out of my way to spend time with someone who does not support my relationship to this man and who I am uncomfortable around because of the "elephant in the room." I will also tell her at this counseling session that she is being horrible to her father. No one else tells her this, but I will. She has been rude and hurtful to me, but worse she has been rude and hurtful to her father. I do not expect her to change, but I want this out in the open. Then on the times when I have to be around her I will say "hi" to her, and then to myself, I say "hi" to the elephant and then entertain myself without her. Needless to say, we won't be around her much if this is her attitude. She lives a 6 hour drive from us, and thank goodness, she now has a boyfriend.

Indigo's picture

Unfortunately, it sounds as if you are attempting to address the situation in a mature, straightforward manner. Helpful when dealing with adults, but I just can't see it working well with this SD-24.

As an aside, before you tie the knot clear up the situation with medical POA, durable POA, bank accounts and wills. You do not want this SD to swoop in making decisions because your SO didn't quite get around to straightening out his wishes.

notasm3's picture

IGNORE THE WHORE - that's how you do NOT deal with her.

Just remove the bitch from your life 100%. There is absolutely no reason on the face of the earth that you should ever have to even speak to her again.

I am not telling you to ditch your fiancé - just his daughter. Let him see her outside of your home and away from you. Forget any aspirations to have a "happy blended family". Not going to happen.

I have a SS30 that I have removed from my life after spending a few years trying to accept him. If your DH is a decent man he will not try to force you to deal with her. He also needs to stop repeating all the shit that she says about you. What good does that do?

On the other hand you need to refrain from telling him how worthless she is. She is just someone that exists but does not exist in your relationship with her father.

baffled-and-sad's picture

Yes, I have planned that we do a pre-nup and draft wills that distribute our assets upon our deaths and state how they are dispersed. I have assets that I want to go to only my kids as his should go only to his. Disbursement of joint assets that we accrue as a married couple will be spelled out explicitly as well.

I suspect that this counselling session will only be a way for me to say what I need to say. I really don't expect her to change. I actually think at this point I think that she is not capable of ever celebrating her father having a relationship with a women; she has been too spoiled for too long, even by her mother before he she passed apparently. If she continues to be an issue in our marriage, then we will need to see a marriage counselor who has no prior relationship with either of us.

baffled-and-sad's picture

Yeah, I don't tell him how "worthless she is." That is completely counterproductive.

Aeron's picture

It wouldn't be breaking up with a wonderful man who has a manipulative daughter.... It would be breaking up with a man that excuses the rudeness and poor behavior of another adult towards you and himself. He is showing a lack of respect to himself, to you and to the relationship when he doesn't shut her down. He is showing you where his priorities really are when he excuses the behavior.

Her having a boyfriend or even getting married is not going to change this dynamic. She will continue to be rude and entitled. She will likely also have children which she will then use as pawns to try to get her way with her father or to inflict pain upon him if he doesn't comply. "You won't know your grandchildren" can be a very powerful threat to some.

You feel like the other woman because your SO is allowing you to be treated that way. There is Zero need for him to repeat her petty comments to you. There is also a good chance that you calling her out, in therapy or elsewhere, when he's so firmly in the excuse he behavior camp is going to make him feel the need to defend he against you. You will call her out, she will cry and protest and he will feel bad for his princess and resent you for upsetting her when she obviously just can't help it.... He has seen no reason to address her behavior with her so while you say she is hurting her father, you trying to stand up for him is not only likely to do no good but actually may be counter productive.

Have you two discussed expectations around time spent with each other's families and relationships? What kind of relationship is he expecting you to have with his daughter? Is he going to be offended and defensive if you want to step back and not see her, not invite her to the home, etc? Many of these fathers have a very difficult time allowing their offspring to feel adult consequences and your SO doesn't yet seem willing to treat/view his daughter as an adult.

HappyHome's picture

Focus on yourself, your marriage and your own children. Why would you want to deal with someone who has no boundaries and disparages you to your husband? Let you husband deal with her and go about your merry way!

bah's picture

I kind of think you're going to counseling with the wrong person. You might want to think about walking through this issue with your husband to be. You might not want to wait for after the marriage to get into counseling, rather begin as you mean to go on. In my situation, I had a cordial relationship with the skids as long as I made them the center of attention and put up with all the subtle and not so subtle insults in the interest of family harmony - and it still didn't work - and that's when counseling became urgent and far more painful after 14 years of unspoken expectations

. You will get nothing from someone who doesn't feel they owe you even basic courtesy, let alone good will. But, the man you love, who presumably loves you back, has motivation to make it work between the two of you - the couple. You might get a better outcome if you put your energy there. It's right to expect your mate to have your back, and it's perfectly within your purview to insist on it. In our case I really don't think DH saw the manipulations of his D's until the showdown came. I was ready to walk - because I will NOT come second. DH is still struggling to put up emotional boundaries, and there are things he doesn't get, but my line in the sand, hill to die on - whatever - is "I come first", and to me that means no unkind behavior can be justified ever. I don't expect him to change it, but he sure as hell needed to learn not to enable it.

bah

just bah

baffled-and-sad's picture

I appreciate all of your comments, and I agree, as does my own counselor, that my fiance and I should have couple's counseling over this issue since he is blind to her reasons for acting this way (it is really not related to her mother's death 13 years ago; it is related to her not wanting her dad to have a woman in his life, to her not wanting anyone to get his attention-time-money-etc. except her). Yes, he is enabling her and has perpetuated this behavior in her. From reading your responses, as well as other posts on other blogs, sounds like this is a pretty common dynamic between men, their daughters, and the step mother (or in my case the step mother-to-be). I really appreciate the validation for my own observations and feelings about this issue that you have all shared with me. I have done a lot of thinking about this issue and about this upcoming counseling session (scheduled for next Weds--it was actually scheduled for June 3rd, but two days before that scheduled session, she pulled tears again with her father so they just went to the counselor by themselves--personally, I think she pulled the tears on purpose to get out of that session!). I expect nothing from this upcoming counseling session with him and his daughter other than to get this out in the open, to get to a place where this huge "elephant in the room" is no longer swept under the rug and expected to be pretended about, but rather is acknowledged. I need that for me because I will not pretend all is peachy king between his daughter and me when it is not. I will also bring up the need for him and I to have our own separate counseling over this issue. In all reality, I do not expect her to change. So what we need to do is acknowledge that and figure out how we deal with a "blended family" when one member, her, refuses to view me as family. I am confident that this man will agree to counseling about this. I know he truly loves me and appreciates me. But she has had him wrapped around her little finger for a long time and I think he views it as being a good dad (as misguided as that is). To view it otherwise, he is going to need someone other than me tell him this.

Amber Miller's picture

Ignore the bitch. You don't have to deal with her at all. I don't even think I would go to counseling with her. She's your husbands problem. If she can't treat you with common decency them she shouldn't be allowed to visit her father in your home.
It never ceases to amaze me how these adult brats don't want their parents to move on with their lives and be happy. If she loved her father than she would be happy for him that he found someone. Does she really expect him to go the rest of his life without having a relationship with someone? Does she plan to never marry so she can be with daddy, sleep with him, cook for him, hang out with him, be his confidante? I think you get what I mean. My SD tried to pull this nonsense and my DH wants no part if it. She told daddy that she wants nothing to do with him unless he divorces me. Sorry bitch, not happening! She demanded he choose her over me. He put her sorry ass in her place!
These adult brat mini-wives are disgusting at best. Let her have her little tantrum. You stay quiet and keep your opinion about the little bitch to yourself. Sit back and let her self destruct. That's what I did and it worked. My SD is now out of our lives by her own doing and I can't be blamed or made out to be the bad guy. It took me years to learn this. I used to try and point out what a rotten little brat DH's lovely daughter was and it backfired. When I learned to keep my mouth shut and not engage was when my DH finally started to see the light. She's a selfish bitch who is mad that daddy is no longer a walking ATM machine. Of course it's all my fault in her eyes but I don't care because I am disengaged. She calls me a white trash meth whore (funny, I'm not white and I don't use drugs). I've been called a gold digger (my DH said she's the gold digger). I've been called a hard core drug addict (funny, she's the one that was strung out on cocaine when she called daddy to rescue her). She says I smoke cigarettes and I don't care about my children and my DH's health as I expose them to second hand smoke (funny, she chain smoked during her pregnancy and the baby was born with a lot of health problems). I am very sick with a chronic illness and the bitch says that "Amber is sick and she deserves it because she's a drug user and she's suffering the result of her bad decisions". I don't give a flying fuck what she says about me because I am disengaged. In fact, the more she insults me and I don't react the worse she looks. How cruel to say that about someone who is battling a deadly horrible disease. This just shows daddy how cruel and rotten his spawn is. He must be so proud! NOT!!!!!
Learn from my example. When you get to a place where you don't care anymore you will be happy.
Good luck to you and take care.
Amber

baffled-and-sad's picture

Thank you, Amber, for your comment. Yes, I am working on getting to a place where I just don't care. I certainly hope you get well.
Best,
Baffled-and-sad

hereiam's picture

I would not deal with her at all but I'm not sure that I would deal with a man who made excuses for this grown adult, either. I lost my mother when I was a teenager, I did not treat my dad's girlfriend, who was later his wife, disrespectfully because of it. That is no excuse.

I do not agree that she is your husband's problem. As long as she is able to manipulate him, she will be your problem as well, even if you choose to have nothing to do with her. She will do her best to come between you, unless your fiance sees what she is doing and puts a stop to it.

If you marry him as things are now, that's how they will continue. She may not change (and probably will not), but your fiance's view of her actions and how he handles her, needs to.

And yes, it is a reason to not marry him because it's this exact scenario that causes divorces.

baffled-and-sad's picture

Well, it really sounds like he and I should have couple's counseling then. He does not see what she is doing, he accepts her justifications for her horrible behavior, as well as has his own justifications for her horrible behavior. He refuses to see that this behavior is wrong and instead thinks it is all because she lost her mother at age 11 and so feels sorry for her and accuses me of not being compassionate towards her due to her loss. (Note: I lost BOTH my parents at the age of 18 and it did not make me unkind towards others, in fact, just the opposite.) So I will state my position at the counseling session we have with the three of us on Weds (that is with his counselor of 13 years who is also his daughter's counselor of 13 years--and yes, I feel I have no advocate in that session, although I have met with the counselor individually so she could get to know me a bit and had one session with her and my fiance). I will state what I have observed about the daughter's behavior; what I have felt as a result of her behavior; my displeasure at her actions towards me, towards her dad's and my relationship, and towards her father; and my lack of optimism that she will indeed ever change. And -- that he and I get couple's counseling with someone other than this counselor -- with a counselor who has no prior history with him, the daughter, or me -- before we get married since this dynamic could ruin our marriage.

baffled-and-sad's picture

Good advice, StepAside. I will try to keep what you said in mind. I think bottom line is that he and I need couple's counseling on this issue. I have felt all along that I have no advocate in this 3-person counseling session since it is with THEIR counselor. And although I think my observations of this dynamic are right-on, (and many of the comments here say the same thing), I am VERY concerned that any of them will hear me or validate me in this counseling session. I will be taking a mild tranquilizer before I go to this session so I can try to remain calm, focused, and authentic. I have A LOT of anxiety about this session.

baffled-and-sad's picture

Again, very good advice. I will try to remember all that I have learned about "fair fighting" techniques: using I statements, paraphrasing back what I think I heard, not interrupting someone, active listening, etc. I will come back and tell what happened. Wish me luck!

baffled-and-sad's picture

Or then, I may not go to this counseling session with my fiance and his daughter and THEIR counselor of 13 years on Weds. I am weighing that decision now. Although I would love the opportunity to give the daughter a piece of my mind, I think that could backfire, and I can't really see what good would be accomplished by this venue of counseling. She doesn't want to be called on her behavior and it won't sit well with her if I do that and doing that might also spark protective feelings in her father. And it seems like a huge conflict of interest for this meeting to be with THEIR counselor. My counselor said she would not ever do a counseling set up like this where some people being seen in the session have a long term relationship with the counselor and one doesn't. I am already viewed as the outsider and interloper by the daughter. And this dynamic certainly has me as the outsider and reinforces the "me-as-the-outsider" dynamic. Who is MY advocate here? Other than me? It is not a level playing field. I'm wondering if a more productive situation might be that he and I go to a counselor--one who does not know any of us, not me, not him, not the daughter--and deal with a new counselor on how we move forward as a couple in the best possible way, given some of the dynamics that are going on with the daughter and him. And we do this before we get married, which is about a year away anyway, so we have plenty of time. I know I do not want to marry again if I think it could end in divorce. I don't want to go through another divorce in my life. Not ever.

What do you all think?

baffled-and-sad's picture

Yes, he and I just talked about this, and I expressed my concerns about this session with their counselor not being a level playing field and requested that he cancel this session and that we find a NEW counselor and deal with this issue as a couple.

I can't tell you all how incredible this site has been with the feedback I have gotten from people with personal experience in this. Two days ago, I would have not canceled this counseling session because I always want to please, often at my own expense (I know, I'm working on that one). I want to thank all of you for the wonderful insight and incredible support I have gotten on this forum. I will post more developments as they occur.

notsurehowtodeal's picture

I don't think an ethical counselor would treat a father and daughter separately. And 13 years seems like a long time to be in counseling. Maybe the girl - but why did the Dad need counseling for 13 years?

There is no way you should walk into that situation. After 13 years there has to be an extremely tight bond between all of them. There is no way you would be in a fair situation.

You and your finance should find a new, neutral counselor.

***posted right before your post about cancelling***

baffled-and-sad's picture

BTW, he agreed that we go to a NEW couple's counselor. So maybe there is hope. What a roller coaster of feelings I have gone through in the last two days. Whew!

baffled-and-sad's picture

Yeah, we are going to do find a new counselor. He agreed with that. I also requested that this canceling be presented to SD as a joint decision of him and me. He agreed to that as well. WE need to be seen as a couple making couple's decisions that she has no part in and cannot change.

notsurehowtodeal's picture

Your last sentence is right on. Hopefully the new counselor will be helpful to both of you.

baffled-and-sad's picture

I agree, Wickedsm 123. I realized recently that SD and I do not have to like each other. And I'm fine with that. I doubt she will ever like me, and I certainly don't like her behavior, and I am done with playing the game that I try to get her to like me and she rejects me. It has been going on since her father and I began dating about 3 years ago. My fiance and I are now set up to see a new, neutral counselor. Not sure if we can get in this week or if it will be next week. And, yes, I sense that he wants SD's approval of our marriage, which he will most likely never get. And he really wants her and me to like each other. I just don't see that happening based on her behavior and what I have learned about her in the last 3 years. I am going to ask that he support me and tell her that she is not allowed to badmouth me to him or to our mutual friends (his friends who have now become my friends). That behavior is disrespectful to me, and I would never allow my children to do that if the tables were turned. I would have stopped it after about 3 words. I cannot stop her disrespect; I cannot even ask her to respect me. I am not her parent. He is the only one who can stop it. He walks up to the fence, but he doesn't quite open the gate and put his foot down with her. And he needs to start doing that. He has blinders on when it comes to her behavior. He wants it to be comfortable between her and me the way it is comfortable between my kids and him. But my kids are not possessive of me and were not raised with a huge sense of entitlement. And she was. He seems to think that giving her everything is being a good parent, whereas I have always set limits with my kids. He also seems to think I can do something to make her accept me and our relationship, but I can't. Only he can even attempt that, not that I think she will ever accept me regardless of what he does. This is what I hope to accomplish in the counseling session with only him, the new counselor, and me. No SD! I have been very nice and welcoming to her from the beginning, but I have given up thinking she will ever accept me or approve of our relationship. He also needs to see and accept that, and we work from there as a couple on how to deal with her. I just want him to put a stop to her badmouthing me to him and our friends, which seems to me as an attempt to sabotage our relationship, and I do not want to be around her much at all, only when it is absolutely necessary, and then only when there are several other people around, never just the 3 of us alone for dinner. I do not feel comfortable around someone who wants to dislike me and who does not support my fiance's and my relationship. When he and I live together, she will only be welcome in my home if she is being respectful to me, and I will make myself a bit scarce and do my own thing. I have always supported their spending time alone, just as I want that occasionally with my own kids. But I do not want her in my life in any big way and will not go out of my way to plan things with her like I do with my kids and him. But they support our relationship and are truly happy for me whereas she perceives me as a threat to the kingdom where she has reigned as princess for many years.

baffled-and-sad's picture

So do any of you run into the situation where the dad thinks you can somehow "fix" it so that his daughter accepts you? My fiance has suggested that I write her (my future SD) a letter, but I don't see what purpose that would serve. In the beginning and for most of the 3 years we have been together, I was very welcoming towards her, bought her Christmas gifts, found out helpful information for her about her new college and its writing skills requirement since that is something I have much experience with in my position at the university where I work, invited her to family gatherings on my side of the family, found a colleague who is in the career that she wants to go into in order to get more information about her career choice and network with a professional in her field, all sorts of things like that. But I was met with comments said behind my back that I am "trying too hard" or still treated coldly. She refused to make eye contact with me, or maneuvered it so that he and I didn't get to sit next to each other at gatherings that we were all attending, and still continued to complain about me and say untrue and disparaging remarks about me to him and our mutual friends. It seems like he thinks I can somehow fix this, that there is something I can do to make her feel okay about me. But I can't. I've tried, I've been kind, I've been welcoming, but none of it has worked and I really don't think it ever will. Now all I want to do is disengage from her, but it seems he is really upset that she and I don't want to have anything to do with each other. We have NONE of these issues with my two adult children. They are warm and accepting towards him, so we do things with them occasionally and everyone has a good time. But that is not possible with future SD because she views me as competition and an interloper and that colors all her interactions with and about me. Thank God we start counseling with a new neutral counselor next Wednesday.

baffled-and-sad's picture

So our first counseling session went well. The new neutral counselor said that his telling me all the bad things his daughter says about me needs to stop now. I was able to say that I don't want to be around his daughter because I don't want to be in a situation where I feel uncomfortable, and her hostility towards me makes it uncomfortable for me, so I won't be doing any dinners with just the two of them, nor will I be inviting her to any family gatherings that I do with my family and him. I know there will be social gatherings that the 3 of us will be at, and I can deal with that if it's something I want to go to, like one of the neighborhood gatherings. But I don't want to go and won't be going to any events of hers, like her graduation from grad school or even her wedding if she is still hostile towards me and her dad's and my relationship when she gets married. I also told him that I can't fix this with her. And he seemed to think I could and that her and I communicating would get this healed between us. He even recently suggested that I write her a letter or take her out for a drink the next time she was up. But I have done everything I know how to get her to accept me, and all my overtures of friendship have been rejected and I will no longer play the game of my trying to get her to like and accept me into her world. And I won't be spending time with anyone who doesn't treat me with kindness and respect. I create my world and populate it with people that I like being around. This counselor said that we need to get the SD out of our relationship. She reiterated that it is quite clear the the SD doesn't want to accept or like me and that that is not likely to change, and that is something that he really needed to hear because he kept thinking it would get comfortable between us. She also reinforced I have the right to not want to be around her and that he has the right to see her, which I have always supported. I also was able to say that when she comes up for the weekend, we need to still have at least one weekend night that we spend together, and since she doesn't accept me our our relationship, that one weekend night he won't be spending with her. This is especially important because right now we basically only see each other on the weekends. Not how sure how all of this will play out when he and I do live together because at this point SD would not be welcome in my house. But the counseling seems it may help us get over this issue.

baffled-and-sad's picture

So now I'm not so sure about the counselor that I found that we have seen about 3 times. It seems like my feelings are not being validated in these sessions and I am beginning to feel I have to watch everything I say and how I say it in these sessions, which doesn't feel right. For example, DH said he felt I was asking him to make a choice between me and his daughter (which I wasn't and had told him on more than one occasion that no parent should ever be asked to make such a choice--I thought his D was asking him to), and he said he thought this because when I was excluded from SD's college graduation I got very upset. Then the counselor said, "Well, it was her event," which seemed to imply that I had no right to be upset, which makes me feel that my feelings about things are not being validated at all and I am being told that I shouldn't feel a certain way. I felt that way because it was not only the SD's event but also her father's event being that she is the only child he will have graduate from college, and I wanted to be there with him at this important moment just like he has been able to be at events for my 2 kids that were important events in their lives (and thus in my life). And this isn't the only example. When I express my feelings about being upset about being bad mouthed behind my back by SD and it feels like she is trying to sabotage our relationship, the counselor said, "Well, you are taking it personally." But isn't it personal when an SD says insulting things about me specifically to both her father and our mutual friends? Aren't I allowed to also feel how I feel? Isn't saying that I am taking it personally implying that my feelings are wrong? So I'm having reservations about this counselor. It seems like I am being told that I should not feel how I feel. But according to this counselor it seems fine if SD feels bad about our relationship, she is entitled to her feelings and doesn't have to look at them and try to grow or make any effort, but I have to. What do you guys think?

baffled-and-sad's picture

HELP!!!! Am I crazy or is this a snub? I have another question for this community. My soon-to-be SD (she is 24 years old) is still really uncomfortable around me, so much so that she won't even make eye contact with me. This has been going on for 3 years, and her dad and I have been engaged now for almost a year. After much urging from her father, I wrote soon-to-be SD a really nice, kind, heartfelt letter inviting her to meet with me so that we could try to begin to establish a rapport. This was one of many overtures of friendship that I have made towards her for the last 3 years, almost all of which have been rejected. But I once again "offered the olive branch" even though she has been unfriendly, unkind, unwelcoming, and sometimes downright rude to me for 3 years. This was at Christmas when she was up staying with her dad (we aren't yet married and so don't live together). She got the letter but refused to meet with me the week that she was here for Christmas. Instead she postponed it "to give herself space from the issues." She wanted to postpone it for 2 months until the next time she was up. We texted back and forth about it, and I told her that both her dad and I really wanted her and I to meet while she was up this time. But she wanted "her needs to be respected," and refused to meet with me now. To me this feels like yet another snub. She has been telegraphing loud and clear for 3 years that she does not want to be family with me, and this feels like a clear message to me that she doesn't want to change this. To me it feels that if she had truly wanted to work on establishing a good rapport with me and healing this, that she would have met with me at Christmas rather than insisting on postponing it. To me, that felt like yet another rejection and I feel hurt. Am I crazy or is this as snub? Is sure feels like one to me.