The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Crush or no crush?

- Ellie Tesher Advice

Q-I’m wondering if my friend (a girl) and one of my close friends, has a crush on me. We go to the same school and the same church.

I only knew her for two years, but one day she complained, asking why I never say Hi to her at school.

I said that I never noticed her (the real reason is that I don’t know how to talk to girls that well).

After that, when I did say Hi to her, she was very happy.

A couple of weeks later in the cafeteria, she came up to me saying, “What do you think I should eat for breakfast - the muffin or the waffle?”

I told her to get the waffle but didn’t know why she used that weird excuse to talk.

On the last week of school, it seemed she wanted to talk to me when I was talking to one of my friends (her locker neighbor), and she was teasing me how I thought the finals were easy because I’m so smart and that.

Does she have a crush on me or is she just being a good friend?

Crush Confusion

A- She likely does have a crush on you. But it’s interestin­g that you already consider her a “close” friend.

As a crush, you have trouble handling her signals. Her questions seem “weird,” you get confused and shy.

Yet you both have your immediate world in common – school and church. Also, she thinks you’re smart, which is a high compliment.

How to handle all this? Be her good friend.

Text her asking how her summer’s going, who she’s hanging out with, what she does during the day, etc.

By the time you both get back to school, or meet at church, you’ll find it a lot easier to talk to her.

Reader’s Commentary “I find counsellin­g is hit and miss.

“I’ve been to counsellor­s over the years, some good. Some are subsidized through a family services program so you pay at a sliding scale.

“These sometimes provide interns as counsellor­s. You confide in them, feel connected, then they must leave when their program is finished. It’s very stressful.

“One counsellor just listened to me without providing useful feedback. Another just talked about her/his own personal experience­s and didn’t listen to me at all.

“With another, we had personalit­y difference­s.

“It seems you sometimes need to go through several different counsellor­s to find a good fit.

“Most people aren’t aware of this. They give up.

“Sometimes you don’t have the luxury to shop around - you can’t afford those that charge at least $100 dollars an hour. But it limits your choices to the subsidized ones with interns.

“Counsellin­g seems a great solution but it’s notalways the ideal.”

Ellie – Counsellin­g does require a “fit,” but not necessaril­y someone who agrees with your former efforts which haven’t resolved your problem.

People switch doctors, dentists, trainers, and hairdresse­rs who don’t suit them.

When shopping for a counsellor, ask ahead whether he/ she uses a short or long-term approach.

Also ask their main point of view (e.g. behaviour, cognitive, humanistic or holistic therapy) and get informed about it.

Those who let you hear yourself talk, are counting on you to recognize something you haven’t acknowledg­ed before.

A good counsellor is a guide, and can teach new responses to triggers while explaining why past efforts failed.

The rest is up to you.

See my home page at www. ellieadvic­e.com for how to “Find A Therapist.”

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