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Responding to Poor Judgment Dear Margo: This past year has been amazing for me. I successfully passed my first semester in college with a 4.0 while juggling friends and a job. I have a very goal-oriented boyfriend who is compassionate to boot! We have a lot in common and …Read more. If It's Something Dire, You Will Know About It Dear Margo: My husband is an only child in his late 30s. My father-in-law is terribly selfish. We live several states away, and because he's the only blood relative left, my spouse does his best to keep in touch with his father. It is rarely …Read more. What's Up with That? Dear Margo: I really don't know what to do about my mother. It's as though she's made a career out of not listening to what I say ... or she's dedicated herself to doing the opposite. Right after I told her I was going on a diet and staying away …Read more. Guess What: Not Everyone Is Kind Dear Margo: My husband, our children and I recently moved to a new town. Through the children, really, I've met a group of women. They apparently are longtime friends, and one of them invited me to their Wednesday mothers group for lunch. I have to …Read more.
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I Would Make This a Deal-Breaker

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Dear Margo: I would like advice on how to be treated with respect by my husband in front of his son and male friends. He is very caring, loyal and considerate when we're with each other. However, whenever his 18-year-old son is with us, my husband always belittles me in some way. It unfolds the same way every time. I make a comment to join the conversation: He either dismisses me completely or criticizes my opinion as being uninformed or off-topic, which is not the case. I end up feeling stupid for even trying. Sometimes his son ignores me completely because he has learned this behavior from him. My stepson lost his girlfriend because she was tired of his insults. My husband also does this in front of his friends and even my father. His friends have corrected him on occasion. Also, we have two little girls who I want to grow up expecting respect from men. This behavior is hurtful and degrading and ends up causing arguments because he refuses to recognize what he is doing. What can I do to fix this problem? — Exasperated in Ohio

Dear Ex: Are you married to the Aga Kahn? This is how he treated the mother of one set of his children. They are now divorced, and friends of hers have remarked that her sons treated her with absolutely no respect at all. I don't know if your husband is from that part of the world, but a male-superior society is not a requirement for this kind of dismissive behavior. I would, with the help of a neutral third party (a clergyman or a therapist), get him to recognize what he's doing, why and what this model is saying to his children. Also, why is it he can be wonderful to you — in private? — Margo, unacceptably

Dealing With Aging Parents

Dear Margo: My husband and I are in the classic 50-year-old sandwich generation — kid$ in college, 80ish parents who are emotionally demanding, a 30 percent drop in retirement savings despite having made what we thought were low-risk investment choices, and while we are still both employed, we've taken pay cuts and there are storm clouds on the horizon for both of our industries.

Just too much fun! I want advice about my mother. She's always been fairly "high drama" in terms of being overly emotional, but it's getting worse. She "forgets" how often my brothers and sisters and I come to see her (though she has a mind like a steel trap, so the forgetting is a complete fabrication), and my dad is always complaining about how lonely she is. No matter what any of us do, it's never enough, and she seems to want to pit us against one another. While this makes her sound awful, she also has many good traits, and certainly no one wants to cut her out of their lives. We just want to turn down the negative noise, have her appreciate what we do for her and not constantly try to make us feel guilty for what we can't do. Suggestions? — Frazzled

Dear Fraz: If your mother is "80ish," I wouldn't bet the rent that she still has a steel-trap mind. In any case, why don't you and your sibs keep a "Mom Calendar" at her house so you can mark off the days when you've come to visit? Then there can be no question about frequency. (And you can invite your dad to look at it, too.) You can't, at her age, effect a personality change, so try not to let the drama queen make you nuts. Consciously do your best to ignore the unfounded negative noise. It can't be easy being old, but neither should her age drag you down — Margo, managerially

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Dear Margo is written by Margo Howard, Ann Landers' daughter. All letters must be sent via e-mail to dearmargo@creators.com. Due to a high volume of e-mail, not all letters will be answered.

COPYRIGHT 2009 MARGO HOWARD

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM


Comments

1 Comments | Post Comment
If this were my mom, I'd get her a computer and an internet connection asap. This would serve two purposes. When you get together with her, you can snap photos of yourselves together, e-mail them to her, and set up her screensaver to retrieve pix from a photo file you set up on the computer (with the dates and a caption on each photo, of course). The other advantage is that she could find some online friends, games, etc. Some oldsters don't take to computers very well, but some pick up some surprising new facets of life from them.
Comment: #1
Posted by: trinx
Sun Sep 20, 2009 11:57 AM
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