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(The Best of) Ask Dr. Paulson
Q: My sister and my father have both died. They are the only
people my mother has pictures of on display. Mom has four living
children and many grandchildren, but their pictures are never
displayed. What can I do?
A:
I often hear from surviving siblings that their parents put up lots
of pictures or very large pictures of their brothers or sisters who
died. This is often very difficult for the surviving children. They
ask questions like: What about me—I’m still living, don’t I count?
Aren’t you proud of me? How do I compete with a ghost? Don’t you
care that it’s difficult for me to see his or her picture all the
time? How can I ever get them to love me as much as they love my
brother or sister who died? This is the important part that you need
to talk about—how it makes you feel and what you think when you see
these pictures up around the house. What do you feel? What do you
think about yourself? What do you think about your relationship with
your mom? What do you think about your mom’s love for you? We can
talk about why your mother only puts up pictures of your father and
sister who died, but the most important part is how this is
affecting you. This is what you need to talk about with your mother.
Although understanding why parents only put up pictures of their
children who died should not be the main focus of my reply, a brief
explanation may be helpful. Generally there are two main reasons: 1)
Parents are afraid that their children who died will be forgotten
and everything will go on as if they never lived; and 2) This is one
way to keep them in their lives every day. Parents see, talk with,
or know they can reach their living family members anytime, but this
is one way that they can keep their children who died alive in their
hearts every day. But again, understanding why should be only a
small part of your focus. The main thing is that you communicate
with your mom how this makes you think and feel. You’ll be surprised
how this will help your relationship grow stronger.
Mary A. Paulson, PhD, is a bereaved sibling as well as a child and
adolescent psychologist at Harding Hospital in Worthington, Ohio.
Her question and answer column, aimed at bereaved siblings and the
family that loves them, appears in the quarterly TCF national
magazine, We Need Not Walk Alone. Copyright 1996.
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