Hartford Courant

Hospital worker’s drinking cause for alarm

- By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter @askingamy

Dear Amy: My wife and I are in our mid-30s. Within the past year, she has begun to hang out with a new group of co-workers who are in their 20s.

I don’t have a problem with that, but I do have a problem when these co-workers regularly bounce from one relationsh­ip to the next, and openly talk about cheating with whoever the newest doctor or resident is at the hospital where they all work.

I also have a problem with my wife coming home drunk enough to pass out on the floor two or three days a week, every week.

She thinks I’m being unreasonab­le and doesn’t care to talk about any of this. I don’t know how else to approach this. Can you help?

Dear Worried: I’m going to assume that (between the time you wrote this and its publicatio­n) your wife’s bar-hopping has been interrupte­d by the pandemic.

Your wife doesn’t want to talk about this because, well, it’s human nature to avoid being confronted with your own risky behavior. And her behavior is very risky. Even without the additional factor raised by the pandemic, she is risking her health, her career and her marriage.

Drinking to unconsciou­sness is a very serious danger sign. Health care workers have extremely high paced and stressful jobs. A paper published by Mayo Clinic Proceeding­s noted that approximat­ely 10%to 12% of physicians are estimated to have an addiction disorder (alcoholism would be one example).

These days, many health care workers are undoubtedl­y feeling even more stress, and yet, their patients need and deserve to be treated by people who show up for work healthy: with adequate sleep, not hungover. You should do everything possible to intervene and get your wife some desperatel­y needed help.

Dear Amy: My boyfriend of three years has made friends with a woman in Europe (online).

They sing together on an app created to share music. The songs sometimes feel intimate. It bothers me. To be fair, the songs are out there for others to join in, so it’s not entirely private.

She has now become part of his daily life. They exchange messages so often that when he clicks on “messages” she is the first person who pops up, even before me.

He says I’m overreacti­ng, and that my thoughts “seem psycho” since she lives in Europe and is married, and we are in California.

My problem is with the constant daily interactio­ns. She’s up at 4:30 or 5 a.m. local time in her home country, listening to his new recordings and commenting on them.

Who does that? She gets up at the crack of dawn and the first thing she does is listen to my boyfriend’s recordings, commenting on how beautiful/lovely his voice is?

He says she admires his talents. I say it’s a bit more. Am I overreacti­ng?

Dear Confused: Your boyfriend seems to have a super-fan.

If he was performing live and the same woman came to his show, night after night — excessivel­y fangirling him — you would both notice it, and, rather than calling you “psycho,” he would handle the fan-friendship by behaving in a way that encourages her enthusiasm but discourage­s an emotional involvemen­t that is threatenin­g to you.

Fans are important to a performer, but they belong in a category where the artist encourages their enthusiasm, while discouragi­ng an exclusive or predatory sort of relationsh­ip that would interfere with their home lives.

No, I don’t think you’re being paranoid. I think this fan-relationsh­ip bothers you because it has become very time-consuming, seems to be growing, and because your boyfriend is encouragin­g it, while at the same time blaming you for expressing your concern.

— Worried Spouse

Dear Amy: “Hanging On” had a longtime partner who had terrible hygiene and lazy household habits. You focused on their unhealthy relationsh­ip, but this person needs to see a doctor!

— Confused

— Upset

Dear Upset: “Hanging On” has a partner who seems to have an array of problems, which had been percolatin­g for the entire length of their 30-year relationsh­ip. I agree that she needs help.

Copyright 2021 by Amy Dickinson

Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

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