Albuquerque Journal

Children take over, second wife left out

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

DEAR ABBY: This letter is for women who have stepchildr­en or are considerin­g marriage to a man with children. My second marriage of 20 years is in limbo with no closure. My three adult stepchildr­en took my husband away from our home two years ago. He was having some cognitive dementia, but we were doing well in our home. After a fall, everything came apart. To make a long story short, I was naive about legal issues and discovered he had named his children as powers of attorney with no plans for me.

I have not had a visit or phone call in months because his kids will not allow it unless they are present. Our home was jointly shared and the court has ordered me to maintain it with no financial assistance. He has been shuttling back and forth between his son and daughter and is presently living in another state.

Abby, I encourage any woman who is considerin­g remarriage to take great care of important legal matters for their well-being in case stepchildr­en try to “kill” the marriage and take over. I have experience­d the ups and downs that go along with abandonmen­t, depression and absence of closure. Ladies, beware! — SURVIVING ALONE

DEAR SURVIVING: Please accept my sympathy for the loss of your husband. It is tragic. Sadly, you are not the only woman I have heard of this happening. This is why I urge anyone, female or male, who is going into a second marriage to be conscious of the legal ramificati­ons and end-of-life planning and to do it with the help of an attorney.

DEAR ABBY: My acupunctur­ist and staff are all bilingual, speaking both English and Spanish. Almost always while I’m sitting in the waiting room, the staff will converse with one another in Spanish like they’re the only ones in the room.

Once, a patient came in, and the receptioni­st didn’t recognize the person. She asked the patient her name in English. Once the receptioni­st realized she knew the patient and the patient spoke Spanish, the remainder of the conversati­on was in Spanish despite the fact that the woman spoke clear English.

Another time, one of the staff pointed to something on the receptioni­st’s computer screen and spoke in Spanish to the receptioni­st. I feel the only time the staff should speak Spanish is when a patient doesn’t speak or understand English. What do you think about this? — DON’T UNDERSTAND IN FLORIDA

DEAR DON’T: What I think is that you should address your concerns to the person whose acupunctur­e practice it is. Explain that it makes you feel uncomforta­ble and isolated. And if you are not satisfied with the response you receive, change acupunctur­ists.

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DEAR ABBY

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