Greenwich Time

Partner’s habits put future in doubt

- Amy Dickinson Ask Amy, P.O. Box 194, Freeville, NY 13068. e-mail: askamy@tribune.com

Dear Amy: I have been with my partner for more than 30 years (we’re both women). We’ve lived together for the past seven years.

During this time, I’ve watched her “bad habits” become worse, to the point that I’m worried about our future.

I think she may be suffering from depression. I asked her how/why she wears clothes that are stained and torn, even to work. She said, “I don’t care about that stuff.”

Her car is dirty inside and out, she never picks up anything she uses in the house (I run around behind her like she’s an unruly teenager), and she leaves things where she has dropped them in the house and yard. In the morning, she fixes herself breakfast and leaves the dishes in the sink. Over and over, every day.

I’ve tried to talk with her. We both work long hours and are successful in our pressure-cooker jobs, so why do I have to work so hard in this house?

She has always been sloppy, but this is more than I know how to handle.

She is also shut down emotionall­y. She spends every minute on her phone. I suspect she is shut down because she’s so closeted, which is hilarious because everyone knows I’M gay.

She truly believes that people think she’s straight, although she has never been married, never dated men, and has been living with a lesbian for years.

Amy, I am 63 years old. I know two things: First, our bad habits get worse as we age, and second, I cannot keep up this house on my own for the rest of my life.

I’m afraid of the future. I still love her, and I remember how much we used to “click.”

But now... is she lazy, or is she depressed?

Hanging On

Dear Hanging On: From your descriptio­n, it doesn’t seem to me that she is depressed, but rather that she has found herself a wonderful woman who enables her at every turn.

And now, 30 years later, your partner simply doesn’t seem to give a damn, in part because she has never really had to.

You should see a therapist on your own. I think you should also consider separating, in order to clear your head, review your own choices, and contemplat­e your options for the future.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States