East Bay Times

Man’s tattoos draw fire from wife

- BEar ADDy contact Dear Abby at DearAbby.com or P.o. Box 69440, Los Angeles, cA 90069.

DEAy ABBY >> My tattoos are destroying my marriage, and I just don’t understand why. I’m a 56-year-old elementary art teacher and the father of three grown children.

Since I was young,

I have loved the artistic expression of tattoos, and I ALWAYS envisioned having them, lots of them.

It had been about 10 years since my last one, but I decided to get another one. Telling my wife about wanting another one was awful. My wife of 28 years hates tattoos. We have terrible arguments every timeIgeton­e.Ihavecover­ed my entire upper body. (Other than my hands, none of them are visible while I’m wearing my work clothes.) I love them.

I just returned home with roses tattooed on my hands, and my wife is ready to leave me. She says I have gone too far with all my ink. I’m a responsibl­e and respectful person. I don’t drink, smoke, gamble or have any destructiv­e vices. I’m highly regarded as a leader and role model at my school.

Friends, colleagues — even strangers — compliment me on my tattoos. However, you would think my tattoos and I are the devil in my wife’s eyes. Am I the problem,orisherper­ception of tattoos the issue? Please, any advice would be greatly accepted. I can’t understand her stance on this.

— Art in Las Vegas

DEAyAyT>> It is your body, and you have the right to do what you want with it. While not everyone is a fan of body art, I assume that you had tattoos before you and your wife married. It is possible that over the years, when you told your wife you were getting more, knowing her feelings about it, it came across to her as disrespect­ful of her feelings. As you have acquired more and more, it may have felt to her like one insult piled on another.

Having never spoken with your wife, I can’t guess her reason for talking about leaving you, but it’s important you ask why those roses were the last straw. (Am I correct in assuming there’s no place else on your “canvas” that hasn’t been illustrate­d?)

DEAy ABBY >> My husband and I have been married 20-plus years. His mother hasneverli­kedme.Ihave never done anything to her or her husband.

My father-in-law passed away two years back, and my mother-in-law is older. If something happens to her, how am I supposed to react? I know I have to be there for my husband. My husband and I get along wonderfull­y, but at the same time, I would feel like a hypocrite if I went to her funeral. We haven’t spoken in over a year.

Other family members have repeated things she hassaidabo­utmeaswell as my family. I put up with her behavior for years.

— Hates Hypocrisy

in Michigan

DEAy kATES >> Attend the funeral and comfort your husband, who likely will be hurting and need your support. And when you do, ABOVE ALL, refrain from humming, “Ding, Dong, the Witch is Dead.”

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