Houston Chronicle

DEAR ABBY: Grandpa serves chicken nuggets to vegetarian kids.

- DearAbby.com Dear Abby P.O. Box 69440 Los Angeles, CA 90069 Universal Press Syndicate

Dear Abby

I have been a vegetarian for 12 years. My husband has been one on and off for five years. I thought our children, 7 and 3, had never had meat in their lives.

I recently found out that my father-in-law has been feeding them chicken nuggets. I was, and still am, very upset about it. It has been six months and I haven’t talked to him since and no longer let my kids go over there without my husband. He texted me an apology that seemed very sarcastic and made me even angrier.

Everyone says I need to get over it, but no one has confronted him about it. Can you please advise me on what to do next?

Furious in the South

Dear Furious:

Text messages are, by definition, terse. Accept the apology you were given and move forward.

That said, however, continue to insist that your children be under their father’s supervisio­n when they visit their grandfathe­r because his judgment is questionab­le.Dear Abby:

I have had a few negative encounters with dog owners who invited me to their home and became upset because I pushed their pet away when it tried to jump/ lick/nudge me (although I do it gently).

I think it’s inconsider­ate when pet owners not only refuse to restrain their pets, but also imply that I’m somehow a lesser human being because I don’t want my personal space infringed upon by an aggressive animal.

I would never allow my children to behave similarly around guests. Am I wrong?

Dog Encounters

Dear Dog Encounters:

No, you’re not wrong. People have had scratches on their legs and items of clothing ruined because a dog jumped on them. The problem is that some dog owners identify so strongly with their pet that they lose the ability to distinguis­h between it and themselves — and take anything they perceive as a rejection personally.

While a guest may be technicall­y on a dog’s turf, that doesn’t mean the guest should be fair game. Considerat­e hosts control their dog until it has calmed down enough to be properly introduced.

Dear Abby:

I have a 19-year-old granddaugh­ter who has three tattoos and now a ring in her nose. Any suggestion­s as to what I might say to her to stop the destructio­n?

Granddad in New Orleans

Dear Granddad:

Whether your granddaugh­ter is “destroying” herself is a matter of opinion. Obviously, she doesn’t think so. That’s why I’m advising you to say nothing beyond “I love you” to her because she is now an adult and responsibl­e for the choices she makes.

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ABBY

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