Daily Press

Opposite sisters don’t attract, they repel

- By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter@askingamy Copyright 2021 by Amy Dickinson Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Dear Amy: My sister and I grew up in an abusive home and have had issues to work through.

We’ve had to cope with anxiety, learn to forgive and learn what is healthy in relationsh­ips.

We have very different ways of handling conflict. She attacks verbally, using put-downs and a barrage of lectures on why she thinks I deserve whatever wrath she is dishing out.

When she does this, I tend to shut down. Because I tend to avoid arguing and work through my issues with others in a calm way (sometimes choosing to distance myself from drama), my sister and I are like oil and water.

We have forgiven one another and moved forward several times, but her recent group text, attacking family members while our father was hospitaliz­ed, showed me that she hasn’t changed.

I’ve pulled away, and now she has confronted me for my reaction.

She says I’m judging her and that I’m a liar for not telling her immediatel­y why I pulled away.

She goes between saying: “I don’t need you” to sending me gifts and sweet texts, which I don’t enjoy receiving. I want space from this unstable relationsh­ip.

How do I convey this without causing her to blow up again?

— Walking on Eggshells

Dear Walking: When it comes to the “fight-orflight” response, your sister is “fight” and you are “flight.” (I am, too.)

Meeting your sister’s wrath with some of your own might change the dynamic (it might not), but because you are sensitive while your sister is volatile, you should put your thoughts down on paper. That way, you can say exactly what you want to say, review what you’ve written and then decide whether to send it.

You might say, “My goal has always been to have a calm and peaceful life, as well as a consistent and caring relationsh­ip with you. After the challenges of our childhood, I believe this is what we both deserve! I’m letting you know that in the future, when you behave in a way that I believe is mean or hurtful to me or other family members, I’m going to back away. The reason I don’t confront you at those times is because — I don’t want to. Maintainin­g some distance is just me trying to take good care of myself.”

On receipt, your sister will blow up. And you will back away. And you two might continue this dance — in various forms — for the rest of your lives, unless she changes, or you decide to exit completely.

Your duty is to protect yourself. Protecting yourself does not mean that you are unforgivin­g or unloving, it just means that you are removing yourself from the dramatic maelstrom and living your life the way you want to.

Dear Amy: I recently saw one of my friends’ wife with another man. They walked hand-in-hand, acting like nothing was wrong with that.

I really wanted to tell him about this, but it would destroy him.

He totally loves his wife and does everything for her. I feel so bad for him. If I act any differentl­y toward her, he will ask me what’s up. What should I do?

— Unsure

Dear Unsure: There isn’t necessaril­y anything wrong with walking handin-hand, and because you don’t have any idea of the context behind what you witnessed, you should make a choice to avoid leaping to conclusion­s.

If you choose to discuss this episode with anyone, it should be with the wife. She may be able to provide some helpful or illuminati­ng context.

Dear Amy: I was so surprised to see the question from “Desperate for Change,” outlining a problem I thought I alone had: Terrible anxiety about talking on the phone!

This aversion has been weirdly crippling. During the pandemic, this anxiety has really gotten in the way of my genuine desire to communicat­e.

I appreciate­d your commonsens­e suggestion to communicat­e via text and writing, but you also suggested “practicing” making calls by calling a business and asking one simple question: “What hours are you open today?”

Well, I tried this, and then I did it again, and my confidence is growing. Thank you for the tip.

— Talking

Dear Talking: Well done! (By the way, I’m open 24/7.)

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