Dear Annie
Caught between daughter and granddaughter
Dear Annie: My daughter, 31, left home at 19 to attend university. Within weeks, she began dating a boy she’d met through the school’s Facebook group. Coming from our cultural background, we weren’t comfortable with relationships outside marriage, but after two years, she moved in with him, mostly on her terms. They lived together for six years, bought a house, got a dog, eventually married and, two and a half years later, had my precious granddaughter.
My daughter has always dominated her marriage. Everything has to be on her terms. She’s intelligent, determined and successful, but also bossy, pushy and demanding. Outwardly she can be sweet, but behind closed doors she often belittled her husband, and his laid-back nature just let her have her way.
About a year and a half ago, while I was babysitting, my daughter suddenly announced she no longer loved her husband and wanted to separate. I was shocked, but she bulldozed through the conversation and didn’t let me say a word. Deep down, I was sure another man was involved. Within six months, the house was sold, assets divided and custody arranged, with little thought to the impact on their young daughter. My daughter was also left with the dog, which my son-in-law wanted no part of anymore.
It’s been nearly a year since the split. My daughter appears to have a new partner, though she won’t confirm it, only dropping hints to “familiarize” us with this new relationship, while her not-yet-ex-husband has turned to online dating. My granddaughter now splits time between them.
At her father’s house, she still sees her other grandparents weekly. But with us, my daughter controls every visit and barely lets us into her life. We went from caring for our granddaughter regularly to limited contact with her and only when my daughter is present. She uses her daughter as leverage, essentially saying to us, “Accept my choices or lose contact.”
Being around her feels like walking on eggshells. If I disagree, I’m met with silence, manipulation or explosive behavior. I cry every night, heartbroken over what feels like losing a limb. I feel for my son-in-law, who I believe was wronged, and I ache for my granddaughter, torn between two homes and two very different upbringings. Most of all, I am at a loss for how to move forward.
Deep down, my instincts tell me this new relationship won’t last, but I don’t know how to stand by my values and still hold on to my only grandchild. How can I stay in her life without surrendering completely to my daughter’s demands? — Heartbroken Grandmother
Dear Heartbroken Grandmother: You’ve been handed a difficult situation and one that’s not yours to fix. Your daughter is making choices you don’t agree with, but she’s an adult and, unfortunately, fighting her will only jeopardize the time you have with your granddaughter.
You don’t have to endorse your daughter’s decisions; you just have to stop giving her reasons to shut you out. Keep your focus simple and on what matters most. Your granddaughter needs stable, consistent and loving adults in her corner, and you can be just that, even if not as often as you’d like.
Hold your values quietly and let time do some of the heavy lifting. Calm consistency has a way of opening doors that force never will.
“Out of Bounds: Estrangement, Boundaries and the Search for Forgiveness” is out now! Annie Lane’s third anthology is for anyone who has lived with anger, estrangement or the deep ache of being wronged — because forgiveness isn’t for them. It’s for you. Visit http://www.creatorspublishing.com for more information. Follow Annie Lane on Instagram at @dearannieofficial. Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2025 CREATORS.COM


