Asking Eric: Should you ghost unappreciative stepparents?

Dear Eric: My parents divorced when I was 5 and my brother was 3. He went with our father and I with our mother. We saw each other on holidays and summers. Both parents remarried and had two more children. There is a seven- to nine-year gap or more in our ages.

My brother and I were treated less like family and more like a resentment. Thankfully, we had loving grandparents who showed us love and created safe places for us when we were with them.

Fast-forward to today, we are both retired, have families and have done well by all accounts. We worked hard to build and maintain a relationship with our parents and stepparents/siblings. I thought progress had been made.

Both parents passed within a two-year period. Both stepparents redid their willโ€™s writing us out of them. I was surprised. Less for me, but for my children and their grandchildren.

I am left with an angry residue of past resentments that have resurfaced. There is nothing of my parentsโ€™ I want. This isnโ€™t about money โ€“ there isnโ€™t much, I know. I just donโ€™t know how to move forward. Do I ghost them? Stop calling, writing and visiting because it feels very one-sided? I have done most of the work and effort to maintain a relationship.

โ€“ Slighted Stepchild

Dear Slighted: What petty people your stepparents seem to be. They can adjust their wills in whatever ways theyโ€™d like, but itโ€™s very telling that they didnโ€™t make the big change until after your parents were gone. It doesnโ€™t sit right with me. It feels callous and calculating. And unnecessarily so.

Despite the machinations with their estates, you still get to decide what you want from them. Thereโ€™s a version of this where you decide that these are people who are not worth knowing. They were brought into your life at a tender moment, and they werenโ€™t kind. It may be most freeing to say, โ€œI deserve better than this; Iโ€™m leaving this relationship in the past.โ€

Alternatively, you can say, โ€œI want to have a relationship, and this…

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