Montreal Gazette

Break off relationsh­ip with cheater

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Dear Annie: I have been dating a wonderful woman and have been intending to ask her to marry me. We’ve made plans for the future together, but at present, I’m recovering from a horrible motorcycle accident. I won’t be at 100 per cent for a few months. I asked her whether that would be a problem, and she said no.

Well, it came to my attention that she has been sleeping around with three guys, one of whom is a nurse who cares for me. Needless to say, I was devastated — not only because I spent $13,000 on a ring and building a tiny home for us but because of the lies, deceit and unfaithful­ness. I know the smart thing to do would be to walk away. But I just can’t let go. All Twisted in Vermont

Dear Twisted: You dodged a bullet, friend, and now you’d better stay clear of the line of fire. This woman cheated on you when you were down and out and needed love the most. You must be a sweet, forgiving person to describe her as “wonderful.”

You need to get out of her range. End things, and then create as much distance as possible. Return or sell the ring, and use the cash for a vacation. Your heart needs a safe space to hide out and heal.

Dear Annie: This week at the mall when I went to try on clothes in two popular retail stores’ women’s dressing rooms, there were men in them.

In the first, a large middle-aged man sat alone on a chair inside the entrancewa­y, talking on his phone. As I walked toward the dressing rooms, he sneered at me, so I left and looked for another dressing area.

At the next dressing area, there was a man blocking the entrancewa­y while his girlfriend tried on clothes. She couldn’t even try on a T-shirt without his evaluation.

At the next store, a tall man blocked the rooms while his girlfriend tried on clothes, leaving her door open while she changed. He reluctantl­y stepped aside for me, with both of them making disgusted sounds toward me for interrupti­ng their experience.

These days, these stores are so thinly staffed there’s never anyone monitoring the dressing rooms. What legal obligation­s do these stores have to provide a safe female area for disrobing? Done Shopping

Dear Done: I have a feeling this was more of a venting session than an actual question, but here goes. According to my research, there are no legal requiremen­ts for clothing stores to provide dressing rooms; it’s just in stores’ best interest to have them. It would also be in their best interest to make sure ladies’ dressing rooms aren’t full of “sneering” men, so I’m a little incredulou­s that in a single afternoon, you could encounter three separate men in three separate dressing rooms who were out to ruin your day. If someone is changing with the door open or if a man is alone in the women’s dressing room and seems threatenin­g to you, let a sales associate know.

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