Arab Times

By Abigail Van Buren

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I am conflicted about boundaries being crossed between my family therapist and me. My 7-year-old son and I have been seeing someone we both bonded with and felt comfortabl­e with. That is, until the therapist and I found each other on an online dating site.

We matched a few months ago. Once I realized it was him, I felt embarrasse­d and blocked him on the site. He sent me an email within three minutes acknowledg­ing that he knew it was me. He said he thought I was “awesome” and that I look better in person than in my pics. I was so embarrasse­d I didn’t respond.

A couple of months went by and neither of us brought it up. My son invited him to his birthday party and he did attend. It wasn’t until later that I realized therapists are not supposed to attend social events with patients. We also text often, during late-night hours.

A couple of weeks after my son’s birthday party he tried matching with me again on the dating site. I was surprised and sent him a text asking him what he was doing. I do have a slight crush on him, but I’m not sure what his intentions are. I am aware that it’s unethical.

Abigail

You are correct that what the therapist has been doing is a breach of profession­al ethics. There is a reason for it. Patients are extremely vulnerable to manipulati­on.

When the online flirtation first started, you should have changed therapists. Heaven only knows how many other patients he has done this with. My advice is to draw the line, establish a working relationsh­ip with another therapist, and decide whether you want to report him to the associatio­n that licensed him to practice. You may have a crush on him, but what he is doing is predatory.

Common manners are going extinct quicker than the dinosaurs did. I was raised to open doors, stand up for women sitting down at the table, etc. Nowadays opening the door for most women feels like getting slapped in the face. There is no acknowledg­ment of any kind.

Has our society disintegra­ted that far? These days if I open the door for someone and she doesn’t acknowledg­e the courtesy, I say, “Thank you!” loud enough for her to hear and watch the reaction. I’m waiting for someone to slap me one day.

I agree that when a courtesy is extended, it should be acknowledg­ed. However, if it isn’t, shouting at someone is rude and makes you appear more like a petulant boor rather than the genteel individual your parents raised you to be.

P.S. When a gentleman opens a door for me — old-fashioned girl that I am — I always thank him. Then I add, “You were raised right!” which is true, and we go our separate ways with a smile.

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, CA 90069.

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