Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Neighbors’ one-sided friendship annoys

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

Dear Abby: I have a friend of 20-plus years I’ll call “Gladys.” We enjoy walking our dogs and talking about relationsh­ip issues. Sometimes it’s just me counseling her. She often regales me about these wonderful times she has — get-togethers with her other friends that I’m not invited to. She loves going into detail about how wonderful her excursions are, etc. I have always made excuses to myself about it — I’m more boring and straitlace­d than her other friends, not as rich, not as smart. (It’s true. I don’t party much. I’m a total lightweigh­t.)

Also, I’m one of her only friends who hasn’t met her boyfriend of more than a year, and she has confided in me about their relationsh­ip the whole time. I have been concocting in my mind a way to address this with her without driving a wedge. (She can be very sensitive and defensive.) What is your take on this? — Strange Friendship in California

Dear Strange Friendship: My “take” is that over the last 20 years you have fulfilled one particular function in Gladys’ life, being her therapist and dog-walking chum.

Ask Gladys (and her boyfriend) to go out for a social activity. If you really want to know why you have never been included in her social circle, I don’t think it would be rude to ask.

Dear Abby: My grandsonin-law seems to have no motivation to take advantage of his VA benefits after just having completed his military service and not having been trained to do anything in civilian life. He’s married and has a toddler. They have moved in with his parents, who babysit the child while his wife works.

My granddaugh­ter is at her wit’s end. We have offered suggestion­s and sent emails for virtual job fairs for veterans, but he doesn’t seem interested enough to apply for anything or follow up on the one or two interviews he has had. What can we do? — Granddad-in-law in Florida

Dear Granddad: Your granddaugh­ter’s husband appears to need more help than being steered toward job fairs. He may need to be medically and mentally evaluated. Could he suffer from PTSD, drug addiction or an undiagnose­d mental illness? And what do his parents have to say about this? Once your granddaugh­ter knows what she is dealing with, she will have a better idea of what to do about it. Right now the most helpful thing you could do is discuss with her what I have written and provide emotional support until she has some answers.

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