lost in london
Well-known member
If you think you can go and not steal the limelight, then do your bit for your brother and your mother's memory and go. If you think you being there will cause aggro / pain for others, then steer clear.
If I were a relative and you did turn up for the funeral I’d be bloody furious.
You made your decision 16 years ago. Stick with it now.
You only had one Mum so do the decent thing and go to the funeral otherwise at some point you will bitterly regret you did not go.
Yeah, I was going to suggest that. There's no point in pretending that it's all 'happy families' when it isn't. So just go to the service, sit at the back (but make sure at least somebody clocks your presence), and then leave immediately afterwards without talking to anybody. Obviously don't go to the wake. That way if at some stage in the future you (or members of your family) want to build bridges they won't be able to say "And you didn't even go to Mum's funeral!" Who knows? Your mere presence may start that process.
Obviously I don't know you and given your circumstances this might be irrelevant or crap advice, but there you go!
Personally I've never been in quite that situation. My Dad and his brother (my uncle) had a massive falling out and my uncle never went to my Dad's funeral. Then when my uncle died none of us (me, my brother and sister) went to his funeral, but as we'd only seen him about twice in thirty-odd years we didn't really have any type of relationship so there was no real sense of loss. Our absence wasn't missed or remarked upon apparently and we haven't seen any of his family since, although my sister does exchange the occasional Christmas card.
My brother and I were in that sort of situation a few years ago and went to a funeral of an uncle, intending to scoot off straight afterwards. Two people afterwards came up to us and were genuinely warm and friendly, asking us back for the wake. One of them was our cousin, the Uncle's daughter.
Different people have different takes on different situations.
Fair comment. And to be honest I'm only considering the possibility of going to be there for my brother rather than from any sense of pretending the rift hadn't happened.
You simply can’t generalise it like that imo.I'm gobsmacked this is even a thing. I guess partly due the the fiercely strong relationship I have with my mother. Cant imagine the day.
I think, if you decide not to go, you may well regret it. She is your mother.
I had a dilemma (slightly different) when my ex wife died. My kids, with her are only in their early 20s and it was a massive unexpected shock to them
Our parting hadn't been painless and I hadn't spoken to her since the day I left, 10 years earlier. I was torn between attending, to support my kids or stay away so as not to cause upset.
I took my kids to one side and explained my thinking, both were happy for me not to attend, as they had other family support their, and understood my reasons!
I guess at the end of the day, it is down to you and how you feel. Just don't be pressured into going...!
It is also hard not to view his dilemma in the context of the relationship we have/had with our own parents. So because his situation is with his mother I think about the relationship I had with my mother which might lead me to advise a more magnanimous attitude, but of course not all mothers are the same. If on the other hand his dilemma concerned his father I might have no hesitation in advising a total boycott of the funeral but that would only be because I would be considering it in the context of my feelings for my own father, but that would also be wrong because not all fathers are the same.
You simply can’t generalise it like that imo.
Quite a number of people are estranged from relatives, when neither of them are nasty pieces of work - just circumstances and personalities can cause people to part. It sounds like it was quite a straightforward decision for you, and you don't regret it because you know it was the right decision, but it's not that straight forward for everyone.I didn't have a relationship with my father for the last 20 years of his life. As I got older I realised what a nasty piece of work he was. I won't go in to it.
Fair comment. And to be honest I'm only considering the possibility of going to be there for my brother rather than from any sense of pretending the rift hadn't happened.