Journal-Advocate (Sterling)

A reader provides an update on advice in 2016

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DEAR READERS >>

This column is devoted to a Q&A that was originally published in 2016.

DEAR AMY >> I live on the West Coast with a 1-month-old baby. My husband travels to the East Coast for work four nights a week. My tight-knit family lives 2,000 miles away, it’s just me out here, alone with a newborn. This is an impossible situation.

I hate my husband for sleeping through the night and eating his dinners uninterrup­ted. I hate him even more when he lets his phone die or simply doesn’t take my once-daily call because the timing is inconvenie­nt.

My husband should be able to switch to something local in six months or a year. How do I (and our marriage) survive the next six to 12 months?

— Sleepless in Seattle

DEAR SLEEPLESS IN SEATTLE >> You should set up a time each evening to do a video call, where he and you can talk face to face and include the baby. Given the time difference, right before he goes to bed might be a good time to have this daily appointmen­t.

The very least he can do is to be available for this short daily conference call with his family while he is away, and his one responsibi­lity is to be present for this call.

Additional­ly, when he is home, you should have times when you leave the household while he is alone with the baby.

He needs to step up, but, unfortunat­ely, you are going to have to show him how..

DEAR AMY >> Seven years ago, I wrote to you as an exhausted new mom, caring for a newborn alone, while my husband traveled weekly for work. That infant is now a grade-schooler and my marriage is (thankfully) still intact.

I took your advice and scheduled a daily video call for my husband, baby, and me. In addition, you recommende­d we plan regular time for my husband to be alone with the baby. My husband took the baby out every Saturday morning while I slept and relaxed. I needed the silence and space more than I realized. Plus, my husband made memories with our child.

In my letter, I expected the travel to last six months. Instead it lasted nearly four years. We built a routine around your advice and survived.

Finally, thank you for answering my letter with compassion and empathy.

I felt guilty for feeling as angry with my husband as I did, and your validation of my feelings went a long way.

— No Longer Sleepless

DEAR NO LONGER SLEEPLESS >> I firmly believe that most people who write in are looking for a “second opinion,” supportive statements, or perhaps a nudge to proceed in the same direction where they were already headed.

Yours is a somewhat rare example where I offered concrete suggestion­s and an actual prescripti­on, you followed these, and — it worked! I’m delighted this worked for you, not (only) to make me seem like a smarty-pants, but because your little family seems to be thriving. I call that a big win.

Any reader who would like to submit an “update” should email me at askamy@amydickins­on. com, write “update” in the subject line, include the original Q&A (if you have access to it), and let us all know what happened next!

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