Daily News (Los Angeles)

Childhood friendship waning

- Columnist Contact Dear Abby at DearAbby.com.

My 15-year-old daughter, “Nadia,” has been friends with another girl, “Kelly,” since they were 8. Over the years, I have had my concerns about Kelly because she lies. She can also be very manipulati­ve, and she hasn't always treated Nadia well.

Nadia and I have had numerous conversati­ons about this friend over the years, and I have expressed my feelings about Kelly's behavior. Sometimes Nadia would acknowledg­e Kelly's wrongdoing­s; other times she'd get upset and insist I was wrong. Either way, she seemed to have great loyalty to Kelly.

Over the years, Kelly's mother, “Brittany,” and I became friends and, over the last two or three, we have grown very close. I allowed it to happen because I thought Kelly had matured. Unfortunat­ely, I was wrong. Meanwhile, Nadia has been seeing more clearly what a difficult person Kelly is and is pulling away from her.

While I'm happy Nadia has found healthier friendship­s, I am worried about how this may affect my friendship with Brittany. Advice?

— Mom Problem in

Massachuse­tts

DEAR MOM >> I do have some. STAY OUT OF IT. It's common for childhood friendship­s to wane. By now you should have realized friendship­s cannot be forced. All it does is breed resentment. Unless Brittany raises the subject, avoid discussing it. Cross your fingers and hope that Kelly might not even realize Nadia is less available. However, if Brittany asks, simply say that the girls' friendship, like other teen relationsh­ips, seems to have run its course.

DEAR ABBY >> My ex-husband has been incarcerat­ed off and on for the last several years. The kids adore him and want nothing more than to spend time with him, even though I am the responsibl­e parent who cares for them and provides for their needs.

I'm glad the kids are not angry with him,however, I can't help feeling anxious, angry and jealous because, in spite of his many poor choices, they prefer spending time with him more than with me.

He has always been an irresponsi­ble parent, and it crushes them each time he goes back to jail. No matter what, they run to his rescue whenever he needs something, be it money, transporta­tion, etc. How can I handle this in the best way for the sake of my children without causing stress on them and our relationsh­ip?

— Stable Parent In

California

DEAR PARENT >> Until they wise up on their own, there's nothing you can do about it. So try not to spend too much time dwelling on it. Live your life.

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