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How much time does it take you to sit and write out a few lines about how "M" is doing?
It does not cost anything to send an update.
If nothing else it might make her feel just a little bad that she does not have a connection.
Now if the daughter were on the forum and wrote ... "I keep getting emails updating me on my mother's medical condition, my mother and I have never gotten along and I really don't want these emails! Why don't they get the hint and stop sending them"
My response to daughter would be....
If you no longer wish to get the email updates send an email and tell them that you no longer wish an update. You can just delete them without reading. But my suspicion is you do want the updates. Just because no update probably means mom has died and that leads me to the question is do you want to be informed when she dies?
So I guess my answer to you is...I would still send the update, does not take much time and it does not cost anything. I would probably do a monthly or every other month one and keep it short. (and yes I realize that monthly or every 2 months is more than you are doing now but as I said very little time and no cost to you.)
Gives her another excuse for not contacting her mother...why should she when she knows everything is ok and being handled by you and your husband?
Back off, let her call you if she wants to know something. There are no repercussions to be dealt with, it is her responsibility to check on her mother.
They have to keep her updated because she's immediate family and they don't want to run into problems later.
Problems like maybe challenging a POA or conservatorship because they're failing to keep her in "the loop" and it's her mother too.
She sounds to me like she doesn't give two sh*ts or a pickle about her mother and her reasons are her own. She'll get no judgments from me on that. But I have seen siblings who had zero contact with a parent for years take a sibling who does have the legal authority into court and challenge them for it. Not out of love or care for the parent but because someone talks them into believing maybe there's money somewhere that the NH or MC didn't find out about. Or that the sibling in charge is screwing them out of a possible inheritance in some way.
The argument they always bring into court is that the sibling in charge wouldn't keep them updated on their "loved one". Not even an email or text.
This is why the OP needs to keep sending those update emails.
Well, there's your answer. Let HIM do the periodic updates!
Have your husband pick up a phone and call his sister. Tell her that you both understand that she doesn't want email updates on mother but that you have to send them because she's immediate family. She doesn't have to read them and can just delete them when she sees them in her email. You and your husband need a record of her being updated though.
I'm sure she'll understand. If she doesn't, well just keep sending her an email update until she blocks you from doing so.
If it will make you sleep better at night, send her a certified letter stating "mom is a resident at this particular facility and her diagnosis is XYZ. We have reached out to you repeatedly with updates, but have not gotten any response. The ball is now in your court. If you want updates about your mom or wish to visit her, feel free to contact us."
I guess I don't understand what the concern is....does MIL have a large estate that your husband thinks his sister is going to challenge?
Simple as that. It's what I would do. One thing off my plate, less to think about, and I would be assured she could reach out to me if she wished.
Best to you.
All the best!
You're sure she is alive and kicking, are you? - the daughter, I mean.
Leave sleeping dogs lie.
"When people show you who they are, believe them the first time."
So, let her go.
The letter should NOT be detailed, should not ask for money or advice, and keep it light-hearted and short, and maybe include a pictures of a pleasant memory. Get to the point fast. It should not be more than a page.
If you want her input on something, put it at the top of the email and make sure it is on the subject line. Try to stay away from drama words like "urgent" and "need your response"...I automatically toss those because email should not be used for urgent matters and they are usually from spammers anyway.
The reason why your emails might be going unacknowledged could be because they are in her spam box or her primary email address is different than the one you have. It doesn't matter, that's her problem. I would still send her a quick update, maybe once a month, if anything of interest has happened.
Use it as a way to chronicle your MIL's life.
Then they move mom, cut sisters contact with the facility, criticize sister for telling mom things she asked about, blocked her from any contact except email and now they are wondering why she doesn't respond.
Hmmm? I can't even begin to imagine why you wouldn't know why she doesn't respond. Seems quite clear to me.
These emails may be worded in a way that don't seem to require a response.
There's obviously tension here - would a " thanks for the update" response from her really make a difference? Are the emails worded in a way that would try to make her feel bad? Maybe she's having personal issues - have you asked her how SHE'S doing? She did put in 14 years - maybe she's physically or mentally damaged from it.
No, YOU should not continue to send updates regularly.
Your HUSBAND - whose sister and mother this is - should be the one to update his sister regularly.
It's not on either one of you if SIL chooses not to respond.
Is your husband's relationship with this sister acrimonious? If so, has it always been so? Or is this new behavior on the part of your SIL?
My one sister NEVER responded to updates about our mother's health. Never. I still let her know, but I did it for MY sake, not hers. And it had nothing to do with "covering myself". I didn't want to look back in 10 years, 20 years, whatever, and ask myself if by NOT letting sister know what was going on, did I inadvertently "rob" her of time with our mother? So now that all is said and done, I can look in the mirror and know that I did the right thing by letting her know how bad mom was getting - the choice to not respond was hers, and she can never, ever use the excuse "well, no one ever told me how bad mom was". By keeping her in the loop, I removed that excuse from her lexicon.