Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Calls made on the run offend recipient

- JEANNE PHILLIPS Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www. DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Dear Abby: May I say something about people who call “friends” or others they haven’t talked to recently while driving to an appointmen­t or other errand, only to abruptly end the conversati­on when the destinatio­n is reached? Two people have done this to me recently. One was an old friend I hadn’t seen in 13 years. As soon as the destinatio­n was reached, I heard an abrupt, “Well, I’m here … talk to ya later!” Click!

I think it’s incredibly rude. It’s as if the recipient of the call is merely an afterthoug­ht to alleviate boredom. No matter what the recipient feels or wants to say, the conversati­on is ended.

I do not have a reputation of talking too much or extending phone conversati­ons. I feel if someone wants to talk to me and respects me as an individual, the conversati­on should be a MUTUAL interactio­n — not something crammed into the caller’s schedule. I’d rather the person not call than treat me like a second-class citizen. — Wanting to Catch Up

Dear Wanting: My mother used to complain to me when another relative did it with her. (“I’m home now, gotta go!”) I don’t think people who do this mean to be rude; they may simply be overschedu­led. However, I agree that it’s insensitiv­e and, because it bothered you, I hope you made your feelings known. I’m glad you wrote because it happens often, I suspect.

Dear Abby: I taught in inner-city schools for 35 years and lost three life partners who were addicted to alcohol and drugs before they died of AIDS. Out of necessity, I had to carry on with my profession­al life while struggling with my personal life.

I’m happily retired now and living a wonderful life. But sometimes I find myself starting to dwell on unhappy memories. When it happens, I have found an effective coping method. It came from a simple mantra a former student of mine posted online: “There’s a reason the rearview mirror is so small and the windshield is so large. It’s because where you’re headed is much more important than where you’ve been.”

Now, when a sad memory comes to mind, I say to myself, “Big windshield, small rearview mirror,” let go of the unwanted thought and move on. This has been beneficial for my well-being, and I hope it will be for others. — Desert Jack

Dear Jack: I’m glad you shared this. Clinging to loss and sadness isn’t healthy. Sometimes we need to remind ourselves to keep the past behind us rather than let it clutter up our present. Thank you for sharing your coping method.

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