Mimi wrote:
I never make New Year’s resolutions, but this year I am going to set myself a goal. I’m going to emotionally let go of the people I care about that have either done wrong by me or drifted away. People like one of my brothers, who I love dearly, but who just cannot show me any respect or decency. I will still love him, but if that is is choice, then that is ok. I don’t bug him or expect anything for him, but I feel the pangs of separation. My goal is to stop internalising that hurt and feeling pain from the situation. I want to have that healthy relationship with my grief and just accept.
And this runs to a number of people in various degrees of closeness.
Big fan of this.
The way I see it is this. They say life's too short but that's not it. Life's too long to spend it worrying about how people are going to treat you and it gets worse when you try to do more and more from them to win them over and make them change. They won't. They're either good for you or bad for you.
Had a lot of this in my wife's family. Her mum is one of the best people ever and we're super close. The mum's sister (Auntie Chris) and niece were disrespecting her, treating her INFINITE KINDNESS as weakness and reacting to baffling perceived non-existent wrongdoings as an equal weight to a lifetime of her doing so much for them.
Now it's not my business and so all I could do was support and advise a bit but then in December 2023 her sister (who is like 84) came to ours. We invited her and mum in law over for a cup of tea and some homemade brownies. Had a nice hour or so and then Chris picked that moment to start having yet another pop at my mum in law. Who, incidentally, put me and my wife up for 18 months when we sold our house and then got caught up in the Covid madness. This woman is an angel.
Thing is, now it was in my house and it was my turn to talk and rather than her tactic of five years of passive aggression I spelled it out like I was the prosecuting lawyer and, very calmly, destroyed her. She ran out of the house with her tail between her legs and none of our side of the family have seen that side of the family. Mum in law has never been happier, more comfortable and more protected. We appreciate her and she appreciates us. It's all love on this side of it and that's how it has to be. If you can't play nice, you're out.