- Joined
- Jul 19, 2016
- Messages
- 69
No offense intended, Alia, but I see only positive in your dad's choice (save for the fact that he should have tell you before).
None taken. Thank you.
No offense intended, Alia, but I see only positive in your dad's choice (save for the fact that he should have tell you before).
First Alia- the new wife is not a replacement for your mother- are any of your kids a replacement for the other?
If we love people, we can continue to share our life/love with other people.
I am sure your dad married again because he loved your mother very much and misses her. Therefore he was lonely and wanted companionship- someone to talk to, someone to laugh with, I am sure your mum would not want him to sit alone in the house depressed and rotting away waiting to die - she would want him to try and be happy again.
I'm glad you said that posting in this forum has helped a bit.
Did you get to meet her? The only thing I would find odd is her age and perhaps the circumstances of their meeting. You never mentioned if they are even living together.
but i understand your dissapointment for him not telling his kids about his remarriage. but do you think if he had told you earlier, you would have taken it easier on him? dont you think that if he had told you earlier, he would have to face rejection and all the 'no' answer from his kids, without any solution for any problem that he's facing.
Geez Louise, I'm much more cynical that the rest of you guys.
Most likely, yes, and I doubt the marriage will last long if the money doesn't end up coming.
Lonely or not, that's terrible behaviour from a father. He obviously didn't tell you because he thought you'd be able to stop it from going ahead. The new wife's no saint either. What sort of relationship are you expected to have with her after a terrible start like that?
The biggest problem I think you'll have is if his court case pays out and he proceeds to spend all the money on his new family. There's very few people that could see that happening and not become bitter. Especially if you or your siblings are struggling financially.
It might be time to forget about being a polite and obedient child and demand that he draw up a will that includes you and your siblings.
We’ve been wondering about this. About her intention. Their age gap is huge like 33 years. My dad is an educated man, a law expert and an Islamic scholar. Probably this what she sees from him, but probably because of the promises he made to her, if there is any. There was another point untold however he wanted to tell us that night but cancelled it seeing how hysterical my sister react. I can only guess he wanted to tell us that “If I go, I will give some of the asset that I’ll have from this case for her, and you cant deny that since it is her right as my wife”. I’m talking about billions here.
It is entirely possible that he was attracted to her youth and vitality in a bid to re-energise his life by learning new things - seeing the world through younger eyes - a different perspective for him to enjoy.Kimdub, Thank you very much for your thoughtful post.
I cant think of any better positive reason why he did what he did. And I want to believe what you have said is true, coming from the same age range as my dad, you know it better. He remarried to continue living his life, not to replace my mom, as she is irreplaceable.
& be prepared for the other info to be that she is pregnant- it could well be the news he held back.
@alia: a bit of warning: no matter how mad you are, somehow, get over it soon. Holding on your anger and grudge will only ruin your own life. You'll waste days (or weeks, or months, or years) of happiness -- and it's not just you, but your family -- you're children and your husband's as well.