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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Meet mother’s wish to please her

Washington Post

Dear Carolyn: My mother’s college friend was one of those family friends you refer to as “aunt.” I see her usually at Easter, Christmas and random family events. I do not chat with her beyond that. I am in my 30s and it has always been this way.

My dilemma: My mother will prompt me and sibs to communicate with her. If she is lonely it can’t hurt to send a card, but my mother also requests that we get her Christmas gifts, drop notes, etc. This is the only person she requests this of.

I am not close with this “aunt,” and have found her increasingly uncomfortable to be around.

I’m not sure why these requests rub me the wrong way, but they do. My mother is usually a very reasonable person, but with regard to this friend can become illogical and emotional. I’m not sure if it is one of those things I should just suck up or if I should speak up. – Forced “Aunt”

Celebrate excess, choose both.

For a usually reasonable mom, indulging one irrational, mildly inconvenient request makes a thoughtful gift. Drop the occasional note.

But also act on your very legitimate interest in knowing the reason behind your mom’s request. To help bypass her defenses, declare upfront that you’re not going to fight her on this, you’ll keep in touch with not-Auntie, because it’s obviously important to your mom and your mom is important to you.

Then ask one thing of her in return: that she helps you understand why it’s so important to her.

Your mother is entitled to some degree of privacy, so provide an example to demonstrate just how vague an answer will satisfy you – say, “Maybe she did something for you many years ago, and this is something you can do for her?” Acquiring that missing bit of logic can turn a bizarre chore into a kindness that enriches you all.

Email Carolyn at tellme@washpost.com.