Baltimore Sun

Beau’s eyes continue to stray online

- By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter @askingamy — RN Copyright 2020 by Amy Dickinson Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Dear Amy: I am a widow and have started dating again.

I am seeing a man who gets up early to go online. He is always compliment­ing women online, even telling them he loves them.

He and I dated before, and I walked away because of his online activities.

He got back in touch, saying he missed me. He asked if we could try again. During the time we were broken up, he went on a couple of dates with another woman. He promised she would be gone! Nope. He still keeps her number and has her on his Facebook account.

I am not on his Facebook account, and his page still says he is single, even though he tells me we are in a relationsh­ip.

I have told him I will not be second to a computer and a bunch of single women.

I got married at 18 and was married for 32 years when my husband passed away. I don’t know what to do at this point. Should I walk away? I have told him that I do not think it is right to keep old baggage hanging around because it doesn’t give us a chance to move forward as a couple.

I have had a lot of other men interested in taking me out, but I have turned them down because I don’t believe in playing these games.

Please help. I’m thinking of just being alone!

— Worried Widow

You say you don’t think it is right to keep old baggage around.

Has it occurred to you that in this scenario, you might be the baggage he is keeping around?

Dear Worried:

You had a very long marriage, followed by a huge loss. Surely during your marriage, you learned that you are important. You should be the most important person in your world, certainly much more important than a skeevy guy who can yank you back into his orbit just by asking.

Please don’t “move forward as a couple” with this dude. He is showing you exactly who he is. You need to believe him.

You don’t want to play games, so stop playing this one. If you walk away, you will (without question) be the winner.

Dear Amy: I am 68 and have been married to a 75-year-old alcoholic for 20 years. My husband continues to drink. I am his only friend. He can be a kind thoughtful man, and also a rude and socially inept jerk.

When he is drunk, he is extremely rude to me. All attempts at sobriety are short-lived.

Through the years, I have left him and then returned. I have seen three attorneys and considered divorce. Each attorney has let me know that for a variety of reasons I will be substantia­lly worse off financiall­y if I divorce my husband. This is because our home was purchased with assets he gained before the marriage, yet he is entitled to half my saved income from my business.

I also have a fairly benign but chronic health-care issue, which is in remission but flares up from time to time.

I go to Al-Anon, which has helped me, as I have built a wonderful life. I also know alcoholism is a progressiv­e disease and his drinking and behavior can get much worse.

Do you have any advice for me?

— Waiting for the Other Shoe to Drop

Dear Waiting: I can’t tell you what choice to make, just as your support system from Al-Anon can’t direct you. Your lawyers can only deliver sound legal advice concerning the financial consequenc­es of divorce.

I will say this: Waiting for the other shoe to drop is pretty much the definition of mental torture. I think it is vital that, at the very least, you have a “safe place” to retreat to if/when things get bad. Your husband has a serious, untreated illness, which unfortunat­ely has a high and negative impact on you.

Dear Amy: “Confused” was upset when a recent stroke victim made a sexually inappropri­ate comment.

As a registered nurse who worked with the brain-injured in ICU and as a certified rehabilita­tion RN, I have witnessed many changes that can occur after a brain injury.

There are many ways strokes affect people. I’ve heard a preacher’s son use language that would curl your toes.

It would be of benefit to all to meet with the neurologis­t to discuss the aberrant behavior.

Dear RN: Great advice. Thank you.

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