Montreal Gazette

Friend needs to stay somewhere else

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Dear Annie: I’m a little chagrined to admit that we can’t come up with a solution to this situation. We have a friend who has stayed over with us twice. The first time, he brought two others with him, which worked out OK. The second time, he stayed for four days, ate everything in the fridge, as well as meals, and didn’t leave the last day until 9 p.m. He is an in-your-face talker.

This probably sounds a lot worse than I mean it to, because he is a good-hearted person and he did leave some money for the food he’d eaten. But since the second visit, he has invited himself over a few times.

We have made excuses, such as “we’ll be away” and “we’re just too busy at this time,” but that hurts his feelings. We truly would like to keep this friendship at a less intimate level but can’t figure out how to get that across without breaking his heart. He just sent us another self-invitation yesterday, planning ahead to the spring. — Stumped in Vermont

Dear Stumped: As playwright Titus Maccius Plautus wrote, “no guest is so welcome in a friend’s house that he will not become a nuisance after three days” — and that was in 200 BC. The question of what to do when good friends become bad house guests has been stumping people for millennium­s.

I feel that your friend needs absolute directness, because you’ve generously dropped hints to no avail. Tell him that you’d love to spend time with him but he’ll need to find somewhere else to stay. If your having boundaries “breaks his heart,” that’s his issue.

Dear Annie: I’m considerin­g not leaving an inheritanc­e for my children or grandchild­ren. I am nearing 70 and have done so much for them, e.g., buying cars and helping pay for roofs, clothes, tires and so many other things.

My daughter has always been a handful and told me herself that she’s always done the opposite of anything I have suggested. There’s always been an underlying resentment from her. Whenever there has been a misunderst­anding with my daughter, it ends up being the “whole family” who is under attack. She’s worn me out.

I know that the norm is for parents to leave their money to their children and grandchild­ren. How am I supposed to feel? What am I supposed to do? I do know for sure that this feels like elder abuse. —Weary

Dear Weary: If you worry so much about how you’re supposed to feel, you’ll never have a chance to learn how you actually feel. Allow yourself to experience your emotions as they come to you. I’d encourage you to see a counsellor to help with this process. And I implore you not to make any decisions about your estate under duress. You aren’t obligated to leave anything to your children or grandchild­ren. They might even be better off; I hear from many people who have fallen out with family members over estate settlement. The most important thing is that you look after your own health and well-being now.

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