DNA results reveal secret half sibling
My wife’s uncle, at the time of his affair with Meg’s mom, was married with four young kids. He recently passed away.
My wife’s aunt is in her late 80s, suffers from dementia and is in very poor health. She has no idea that her late husband fathered a child 60 years ago while they were married. My wife is close to her four cousins, who are not aware that they have a half sister.
I believe that my wife should let them know about Meg. If it were me, I would want to know if my father had sired another child and that I have a half sibling out there. My wife feels just the opposite and will not tell them.
Who is right?
DNA testing has exploded in popularity, and questions about the unforeseen personal and relational complications arising from it have flooded my inbox. We are in fairly uncharted territory. But the truth is the truth, and people deserve to know the truth about themselves.
I have long advocated against holding onto “family secrets,” mainly because people who keep secrets are basically deciding who deserves the truth. I realize that people keeping secrets are often well-meaning. But I also believe that most people can handle the truth, even if it is shocking or painful. (For instance, you and your wife don’t know whether her aunt knew about the infidelity. She may have kept it secret.)
In this case, your wife has met a person who is so wonderful that they have become close friends. And yet your wife is denying her cousins the opportunity to also know her.
Your wife may be waiting for her aunt to die before disclosing this news to her cousins. The same DNA testing and social media that brought her and Meg together can also eventually lead Meg to her half siblings. Your wife should consider how her cousins will feel when they learn that she has had a secret relationship with their own sister.
He doesn’t seem overly physically affectionate — and sometimes seems downright aversive — to my sister-in-law, while I’ve seen him be quite affectionate to old male friends.
I like and respect him as a person, and he seems to mostly treat my sister-in-law well. I’ve talked with my wife about this, and we are unsure if we should do anything. Any thoughts?
He might be straight but acculturated to maintaining a physical distance from women. He might be gay and closeted for cultural (or other) reasons.
Your sister-in-law might be straight or gay and marrying for love or for cultural or financial reasons.
The beauty is that unless your in-laws solicit your opinion on their marriage, you can, and should, accept this couple at face value.