Houston Chronicle

DEAR ABBY: Herpes infection keeps lonely woman on the dating sidelines.

- Andrews McMeel Syndicatio­n

Dear Abby:

I am a 65-year-old woman, attractive and lonely. I am uncomforta­ble using dating sites because I have genital herpes. I was infected by my first husband more than 40 years ago.

If I were to meet someone on one of those sites, when would be the right time to reveal my problem? After we have gotten to know each other? Or should I be up front about it and say something when we first meet? I am, naturally, afraid of condemnati­on and/or contempt. Unsure in New York Dear Unsure:

Herpes is an infection, not a scarlet letter. Many people carry the virus, and a surprising number of them are not aware they have it and can infect others. In fact, according to the American Sexual Health Associatio­n, one in six individual­s in the United States between the ages of 14 and 49 has genital herpes (HSV-2).

Because you are hesitant about when to reveal your status, please visit the ASHA website (ashasexual­health.org). You will find it informativ­e. It includes a section on relationsh­ips, suggestion­s about when to tell someone, how to talk to a partner, reactions to expect, etc.

Another website that has been mentioned in my column before is H-Date. com. It offers a free dating service through which thousands of men and women meet. Many nice, eligible people — people just like you — have herpes and live full, happy lives. I hope you will check it out.

Dear Abby:

I recently moved to a new area of my state. I like the environmen­t, the cost of living, etc., but there’s one problem I don’t know how to address. The people here share far too much informatio­n with strangers in everyday conversati­on. I think there should be some boundaries and limits on what is said in public.

While I was waiting to ask a salesclerk a question, the person ahead of me in line described her entire medical history in detail. She went on and on and on. There are times I can’t get through a store without someone asking me question after question. They just look for that opening and start throwing questions at me! I believe in being polite, so I have reached the point of just nodding my head or responding with a yes or no most of the time. These people need to back off. Needs Boundaries in South Dear Needs Boundaries:

Many people ask questions as a way to start a conversati­on because they are interested in you or are lonely. Because you consider their questions invasive and you need boundaries, you will have to set them. A way to do that would be to tell the questioner that the query is a personal one, and you prefer not to share that kind of informatio­n with strangers.

DearAbby.com Dear Abby P.O. Box 69440 Los Angeles, CA 90069

 ??  ?? ABBY
ABBY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States