Truro News

Young cyberbully­ing victim admits to cutting herself

- Abigail Van Buren Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, Calif., 90069.

DEAR ABBY: My granddaugh­ter “Ruby” has been cyberbulli­ed. I suspect a friend of hers who is her on-again, offagain friend. When the girl is “off,” she is cruel, but Ruby is very attached to her.

Ruby has told her dad and me she’s so depressed and has such low self-esteem from it and that she has started cutting herself. (I think she has just started because she has no marks I could nd). Her father is not very concerned, but I am.

What’s the next step for me in doing something about this before it has escalated to a level beyond my help? — CONCERNED GRANDMA IN ALASKA

DEAR GRANDMA: Continue to affirm your granddaugh­ter, but for now her online presence and social media should be eliminated. Consider putting Ruby into activities that will expose her to different people. A self-defense course might build her con dence and self-esteem, as well as give her the opportunit­y to make new friends.

However, if she remains depressed to the point of self-injury, your granddaugh­ter may need profession­al counseling to help her overcome it.

DEAR ABBY: I am 32, married, with two young sons. Since starting my own family, I have grown closer with my mom as a source of support and guidance. e pro-b lem is, my dad seems to be jealous of the relationsh­ip I have with her — probably because I was a daddy’s girl growing up.

Mom and I were planning a girls’ trip together, just the two of us, and dad said my mom couldn’t go because he was feeling left out.

is was after he invited himself along on another attempt at a girls’ trip.

How can I have a close relationsh­ip with my mom without hurting my dad? Should I confront him? — FORMER DADDY’S GIRL IN GEORGIA

DEAR FORMER DADDY’S GIRL: No, your mother should confront him. That you need bonding time with your mother is not a rejection of your father. at you were “Daddy’s girl” implies that he was the favoured parent for decades. He doesn’t own you — or her.

Women need each other, and what your mother has to offer you at this stage of your life is important. I hope the two of you won’t allow your father’s insecurity and apparently controllin­g nature to interfere.

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