Reaching Out to half-sister may distress ailing parents

US

Dear Eric: I found out recently that I have a half-sister who lives 15 minutes from me. I have not communicated with her so far.

It looks like the baby was born about 10 months before my parents’ wedding and was put up for adoption by my dad and this other woman.

I think this child called my parents’ house in the early ’80s when she turned 18 and talked to my parents, but the call was never discussed, and my parents also changed the home phone number to a new number and made it unlisted at that time.

My parents are now in their 80’s. My mom has a pacemaker, and my dad has Alzheimer’s. Is it better to wait until my mom has passed before trying to reach out to this relative?

I think if my parents wanted to tell us before now, they would have and with my mom being my dad’s caregiver, this is not a subject that would be good for her health.

— Newfound Sister

Dear Sister: Reach out now.

You may never get full answers about why your parents distanced themselves from your half-sister, but there’s a cruelty in their actions that you can help to assuage.

Many people who have been kept secret from their birth families talk about the longing that they have for that connection and the pain that secrecy causes. Be the bridge.

Protect yourself, as you would with any stranger. There’s a lot of emotions on all sides here. But there’s no need to wait.

You can’t change what your parents did, nor are you responsible for it, but you have the chance to start a new relationship with your half-sister.

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