Albuquerque Journal

‘Perfect’ disappears when man drinks

- Abigail Van Buren Contact Dear Abby at www. DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

DEAR ABBY: I have been dating the most amazing man for the past 11 months. As we approach the one-year anniversar­y of the day we met, this “perfect” man is showing some not-so-perfect traits. I was unlucky in love for many years until he swept me off my feet. We have both become extremely close with each other’s respective friends and family.

He’s everything I have been searching for in a life partner and husband. But when he drinks, he confides his deep fears of dating me and enumerates each and every one of my relationsh­ip insecuriti­es

nagging, anxiety, loneliness, etc. The next day he acts like nothing happened! He swears up and down that it was the alcohol talking and he doesn’t mean any of the harsh words he spoke the night before.

Should I believe him? Please don’t let me be the naive girl traveling down a dark rabbit hole.

SELF-CONSCIOUS GIRLFRIEND

DEAR GIRLFRIEND: Your “amazing” man appears to be a looselippe­d lush. Not knowing him, I can’t guess the degree to which he blacks out when he’s been drinking. Some alcoholics don’t remember what happened the night before. Others simply don’t WANT to remember, so they claim amnesia.

For your own well-being, draw the line and tell him he needs to stop drinking.

If he’s as alcohol-dependent as I suspect he is, he will give you an argument or refuse. And that’s your cue to tell him if he wants a future with you, he has to make a choice.

DEAR ABBY: My in-laws are angry that I have declined to host them over the holidays this year. My husband is never helpful. When company comes, he sits on his mobile phone while I do everything. I told his parents I can’t have them over because all the responsibi­lity falls on me. My “no” should suffice, but my mother-in-law hopes to argue me into hosting.

We don’t have children because I knew I would end up raising them alone. I don’t want the in-laws here “hinting” that they need us to help them when my husband won’t lift a finger.

I recently became disabled, and my in-laws keep pressuring me to share my diagnosis with them. They think I should cheerfully do all the work of hosting them as a way to fight my disability!

They are extremely nosy. I know they will spend their time here trying to get a look at my medication­s and any financial informatio­n left out. What else can I do? UNMERRY IN LOUISIANA

DEAR UNMERRY: You should all try to achieve a workable compromise, if that’s possible. Ask your MIL if she’s prepared to take some of the responsibi­lity off your shoulders if she and her husband visit. Suggest they stay in a hotel or motel. And your husband (their son) should back you up on this.

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