My husband died 7 weeks ago. He has 2 older sisters, 8 and 10 years older respectively.
We don't talk to the eldest (long story) but the younger one used to live near us and we spent quite a bit of time with her. She also experienced some emotional trauma in her youth thus she has a very hard time coping with, well, anything. 2 years ago, she moved to Florida. Neither sister came to the Memorial service. Other sister lives in northern Georgia.
OK, so the younger sister called up in tears wanting some things of her mother and father that my husband had. OK, no big deal. I put them in a box and sent them down to her. Got a call a few days later, saying that she received the box, but can't open it. All she can do is look at it and stare. Then she promptly asked for more of their belongings, including her father's wood carving tools.
Our garage is a black hole and I had no idea where the tools were. One of DH's friends showed me an antique chest and said these were probably it. OK, send those and some other things down. This time in a big box that cost me $60 to ship.
So SIL calls today, says that those weren't the woodworking tools. And I forgot to include a jacket that she wanted. And while I'm at it, could I send down some more things.
1. I accidentally sold the woodworking tools. I didn't realize it. Luckily, I got a hold of the guy and offered to buy them back. He's returning them to me on Tuesday. Whew!
2. While on the phone with her, I mentioned as tactfully as I could that this wasn't cheap. She began sobbing that she doesn't have any money (she lives with her rich boyfriend but since their situation isn't my business, I didn't bring it up) but she NEEDS the tools and the jacket. While she began sobbing about how hard everything was and how she didn't know she she could go on, I said firmly but as politely as I could manage, that "J--, you CHOSE to move down to Florida and I'm the one paying for the memorial service and medical bills since Wayne didn't have life insurance. I'm trying to run a small farm, by myself, while juggling job and while being a single mother. This isn't your day to day life that has changed. Mine has."
She then began sobbing harder and telling me that she has been his sister a lot longer than I've been his wife/girlfriend and I can remarry but she'll never have another brother and how she has always been his protector (really? Where was she when he couldn't pay a lawyer, got a court appointed attorney and ended up in prison?) and keeps an eye out for him.
And then she says how she feels protective of my daughter, which I immediately took offense to for some reason, although I'm not sure why.
For SIL's history, she had a daughter of her own, but the daughter was taken away from her due to SIL's emotional instability to be raised by the eldest sister. I almost feel like she's vicariously living motherhood through my daughter. She tried to teach my daughter to say "Mama" when she was a baby. She also refers to her boyfriend as "Grandpa Bruce" although I pointed out he would technically be an uncle.
Am I being an insensitive clod? Or is it reasonable for me to ask for reimbursement and learn to cope without a husband?
We don't talk to the eldest (long story) but the younger one used to live near us and we spent quite a bit of time with her. She also experienced some emotional trauma in her youth thus she has a very hard time coping with, well, anything. 2 years ago, she moved to Florida. Neither sister came to the Memorial service. Other sister lives in northern Georgia.
OK, so the younger sister called up in tears wanting some things of her mother and father that my husband had. OK, no big deal. I put them in a box and sent them down to her. Got a call a few days later, saying that she received the box, but can't open it. All she can do is look at it and stare. Then she promptly asked for more of their belongings, including her father's wood carving tools.
Our garage is a black hole and I had no idea where the tools were. One of DH's friends showed me an antique chest and said these were probably it. OK, send those and some other things down. This time in a big box that cost me $60 to ship.
So SIL calls today, says that those weren't the woodworking tools. And I forgot to include a jacket that she wanted. And while I'm at it, could I send down some more things.
1. I accidentally sold the woodworking tools. I didn't realize it. Luckily, I got a hold of the guy and offered to buy them back. He's returning them to me on Tuesday. Whew!
2. While on the phone with her, I mentioned as tactfully as I could that this wasn't cheap. She began sobbing that she doesn't have any money (she lives with her rich boyfriend but since their situation isn't my business, I didn't bring it up) but she NEEDS the tools and the jacket. While she began sobbing about how hard everything was and how she didn't know she she could go on, I said firmly but as politely as I could manage, that "J--, you CHOSE to move down to Florida and I'm the one paying for the memorial service and medical bills since Wayne didn't have life insurance. I'm trying to run a small farm, by myself, while juggling job and while being a single mother. This isn't your day to day life that has changed. Mine has."
She then began sobbing harder and telling me that she has been his sister a lot longer than I've been his wife/girlfriend and I can remarry but she'll never have another brother and how she has always been his protector (really? Where was she when he couldn't pay a lawyer, got a court appointed attorney and ended up in prison?) and keeps an eye out for him.

For SIL's history, she had a daughter of her own, but the daughter was taken away from her due to SIL's emotional instability to be raised by the eldest sister. I almost feel like she's vicariously living motherhood through my daughter. She tried to teach my daughter to say "Mama" when she was a baby. She also refers to her boyfriend as "Grandpa Bruce" although I pointed out he would technically be an uncle.
Am I being an insensitive clod? Or is it reasonable for me to ask for reimbursement and learn to cope without a husband?