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Background. I have a distant cousin two years older than I am. We were pen pals 50 years ago and attended college together 40 years ago after which we drifted apart. Her brother died Tuesday. My YS forwarded me a text about the news advising the funeral would be Saturday. I told ys that dh was charge of maintenance of two buildings over weekends now and we would probably not make it as he had scheduled Friday off for an unrelated matter. Because it would look terrible for an hourly worker to request another weekend day off with no notice.
I didn’t even have cousins cell until today, but Cousin insisted that she REALLY REALLY needed me to be there. No concern for dh’s employment. Just arm twisting to fulfill my role as a prop, a mirage. Her parents are still living and in their 90s and this will be repeating twice pretty soon.
I feel like a prop. A mirage. This cousin apparently is telling ys that she wants to go through pictures of her brother with me and have me recollect him. I honestly barely remember him.
This is last minute and who knows who is even awake, but I need help in overcoming my feeling like a prop and an ill prepared one at that.

Your husband needs to contact his boss and say he can work after all. Tell anyone you need to that you will be unable to make it as plans have changed. That's it. You don't need to explain things to them. If they want to travel to see you, you can welcome them to your home. Otherwise your husband will be going to work and you will be staying put. Therapy might be a good idea as well if you are over 50 and cannot say no to an almost stranger. There must be a reason deep down and you probably need to find that before you get stuck in more such situations.
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PeggySue2020 Jan 20, 2026
I normally am not even pressured into family events. Neither my middle sister nor I even attended our own grandma or aunt’s funeral, just ys and there was no guilt tripping from her then. The last thing I expected was to be subject to it in this case from her.

YS is a 1 percenter in the nonprofit field. Her whole job for decades has been negotiating people to say yes for a good cause. She is extremely effective professionally. Add in the personal element of her personally asking for a call, that never happens with royal highness unless it’s pretty important. I mean, what was I going to say at that point? “Look sis, the fact is he took Friday off because we are sitting here in a casino that his work knows all about and him submitting for the additional day off looks too risky to attempt” would make me definitely look like I was prioritizing the casino over a grieving family member.

Just as I have a poor poker face, we couldn’t lie and say we made the request when we hadn’t. So we did. YS achieved a yes. My presence was obviously important to cousin. DH remains employed and best case healthy enough to keep installing major appliances by himself.
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Glad all turned out well. Love that YS got seated elsewhere. You feel good now you went, huh.

If husband gets anything, maybe it will be a just a warning? But really, not much anyone can do about a death in the family.
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PeggySue2020 Jan 18, 2026
The Work can’t exactly warn him as it was work who approved the request. We all know, though, that employers will just come up with another reason.

Being unseated from my censorious sisters and fueled by a Bloody Mary, I told them how we were literally in a casino hotel that his work knew we were going to vacation in when cousins request came in and hopefully dh wont get fired. It was one of those dark comedic but accurate glimpses into the life of a blue collar worker, which these investment bankers and professors and doctors don’t actually eat with unless it’s for an occasion like this.
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So here’s what happened with the whole thing. First we had bridge traffic and were five minutes late. Which cousin waited for, just like his fam waits for us when we go over. Theres a slideshow of brothers life in which I’m featured including one shot of me at 9 yo and one as an adult holding the cousin’s baby 26 years ago. Ok, it’s nostalgia. I was pretty irritated. And then there was a secondary graveside service. After the casket was being lowered, cousins mom started crying wreaked with grief in the front row. I went right over there and stroked her gray hair and omg her thin tiny body. The deceased was three months older than me, and by this time I’m crying too, My mom came over on seeing this and started comforting cousins mom and then ys came over to tell me to give up my seat to mom. So to the regular who astutely noted ys controlling demeanor, you were right.

There was a luncheon afterward, and cousin and her sister seated us with them whereas my sisters were assigned elsewhere. So I think I got a greater appreciation for where the cousins were at, as well as them getting a greater appreciation of what it took to get dh, an hourly employee, to even ask to cancel out on a Saturday when his work knew he’d taken Friday off to go to a casino. Hopefully he’s not fired for this. If there are more deaths, I have both their numbers so I don’t have to go through ys anymore.
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SnoopyLove Jan 18, 2026
PeggySue, wishing you some nice rest and relaxation after all this! Maybe putting your feet up and enjoying a good movie. 🍿
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Next time, if you still feel like you can't say no, be prepared to tell your sister, or cousin, or whoever, that you don't drive and your husband needs to work so if they would like you to attend they can come pick you up and then drive you home.

I hope, after all this, that you and your husband were at least appreciated once you got to the funeral?
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Well, about to hop in the truck. Thanks for all the afbice, everyone.

When cousins parents die, I won’t be gaslighted into putting poor dh in a position like this again. Yes, cousin came to dad’s funeral but her brother, newly deceased, did not.
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How does your cousin think your going to have time to go through pictures of her brother when you hardly knew him? Hopefully the funeral is early. Ours start about 9 for visitation and service at 10. Get there for the service, go to the grave sight, go to the luncheon, eat and run. Use the 2 hour ride as an excuse to get back. Stop at husbands work and see if there is anything he needs to do. If so, he can go back and do them. Shows initiative on his part.

Good, honest maintenance men are hard to find. If your husband is good at his job and reliable, don't think he will be let go.

Next time, if sister wants you to go so bad, she can pick you up and bring you back. If she can't, then you apologize to cousin that husband works weekends and cannot take off the time and you no longer drive.
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If you don't want to go tell your cousin no, but own it. Don't attempt at some gaslighting of your cousin by trying to make it about her not having any concern for your husband's employment. It's about you not wanting to go. I'm assuming 'ys' means your 'younger sister' so go with her if you don't want to go alone. Or tell your cousin you can't make it.

It's one day. Also, the you feeling like a "prop" is pretty selfish. It's not about you. Your cousin wants to respect her brother's life and give him a nice funeral. If you can't put your feelings aside for a day and go along with what your cousin wants to do for the funeral, don't go. Don't try to turn the blame for you not wanting to go on your cousin not being concerned for your husband's job.
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PeggySue2020 Jan 17, 2026
Well, burnt, as I said, the damage was already done when dh asked and got the day off. So as it was so worth it to cousin and ys, we might as well just go now to satisfy them.

i wish I were selfish enough to have told ys no in the first place, or selfish enough to have the chutzpah to keep insisting as a loyalty test. The pressure was such that it might as well be my mom’s funeral.
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Why isn't your cousin talking to her brother's friends and co-workers (if any)? I think it's weird that she wants to loop you into this.

I personally would have no problem backing out because I don't care about the feelings of manipulators or family Kabuki theater. We don't get to choose our family, so why spend all that time/energy/money on someone you don't have much/any relationship with? It's just family tribalism.

Remember what you learned on this forum: "No" is a full sentence. Also, no one can twist your arm unless you allow them to. And, they will get over it if you back out. Bonus: they probs will respect you more in the future. But you have to respect yourself first, and have clear boundaries.
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Beethoven13 Jan 17, 2026
That was my first thought after reading this question. “No” is a full sentence. I’ve been on the giving and receiving end and neither is easy. Doesn’t mean it’s not the best response.
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Well since it sounds like you've already committed to going per your response below, there's really not much we can say to you at this point.
I guess my only questions would be since hubby is supposed to be working why can't you just go on by yourself, and why did you let yourself be talked into it if you really didn't want to go?
Whether or not you feel "like a prop" is neither here nor there as you had the opportunity to say no and chose not to. So that my dear is on you.
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JoAnn29 Jan 17, 2026
Peggy Sue does not drive.
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Any normal person would not be so demanding that you attend their family member's funeral, cousin or not.

This person sounds like a manipulator, who only cares about appearances.

I would tell them "I'm so sorry for the loss of your brother. Unfortunately, it is simply not possible for us to attend the funeral. We will be with you in spirit."

Due to the distance of this relationship, I would not feel compelled to offer an excuse. Manipulators love excuses like cats love catnip. An excuse just gives them bait to further manipulate you into saying yes.

If all else fails, there's a lot of flu going around that comes on all of a sudden :-)
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notgoodenough Jan 17, 2026
I don't know, in reading her post, it seems to me that if anyone is doing any manipulation here, it's Peggy's own sister, NOT the grieving cousin. Considering all of the communication in regard to this funeral has been with the younger sister, and she's the one actually "putting the arm" on Peggy to go.

Maybe her ire needs to be with her sister.
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"I need help in overcoming my feeling like a prop and an ill prepared one at that."

I don't understand what you mean by feeling like a "prop" or a "mirage". Maybe if you explain a little further, someone can help you navigate your feelings.

As far as things being "last minute" - funerals generally are, especially if the death was unexpected. And no one usually looks forward to going to a funeral. Insofar as you barely knew the deceased, and really don't remember him - if you go, you're not going for him, you're going to support his family. Funerals are for the living, not the dead.

It's one day. Is there a reason why you can't go by yourself and explain that your husband was unable to get off work? Would it be that much of a hardship to go and comfort a person who - at one time, at least, it seems - was important to you and now for some reason feels as though your presence would offer her some comfort? There comes a time in all of our lives when we need the comfort of others; it's a kindness we can offer to each other, and there is, unfortunately, a lack of kindness these days.
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PeggySue2020 Jan 17, 2026
I have worsening glaucoma and don’t really drive anymore. Ys knew this and KEPT INSISTING anyway. Maybe I could take Bart, she said. That is over two hours through bad parts of the Bay Area alone as an older petite Asian woman. Or maybe for 600 I’d have to pay, I could Uber it. It was so, so, so important to cousin, insisted ys. Could she put me down as a yes for the stupid lunch? So dh texted his work from his hotel we were at and asked for Saturday as well. Which looks bad, especially since last fall he had to take off three weeks for medical himself.

The work said yes. I texted ys. There was no thank you from her. Next day she sends update from cousin as to funeral location and finally includes cousins number. The cemetery has two chapels about a mile apart and I still don’t have an answer. It’s over an hour to even get to the grounds. Cousin wrote in the group text she was so looking forward to seeing me. I didn’t respond with “anything I can do for you, I’m happy.” I didn’t say anything.

Grandmas right in that I didn’t stand my ground. I also have a poor poker face.
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Just say no. And don't go. Or go by yourself so your husband can work. No one can make you go if you don't want to.
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PeggySue2020 Jan 17, 2026
We committed when ys was on The phone with us twisting my arm. The who.e thing had a very corporate managerial undergone to it as that’s what ys does.
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