Las Vegas Review-Journal

Woman finds man lied about last name

- JEANNE PHILLIPS

DEAR ABBY: I’ve recently started seeing someone, and we have shared a wealth of informatio­n about ourselves with each other. When I asked him his last name, he said it was “Erickson.” When I asked him if he had a middle name, he responded that he didn’t.

Soon after, I saw his driver’s license. It had a completely different last name from the one he gave me, and it turns out he does have a middle name after all.

What reason would he possibly have to lie about such a simple thing? And how should I confront him about it? — Just Plain Confused in Georgia

DEAR CONFUSED: The reason someone would give false informatio­n is usually because the person has something to hide. Unless “Mr. Erickson” is in witness protection, my guess is he is married or has a criminal record he doesn’t want you to discover. Rather than confront him and be lied to again, run in the opposite direction and cease any further contact with him!

DEAR ABBY: I am an avid fisherman with limited boating knowledge. Recently, a friend bought an older used boat that has questionab­le integrity. He keeps inviting me to go out on it with him, and I’m running out of excuses not to.

The real reason is my friend is inexperien­ced and the boat is unreliable. I don’t want to be stuck out in the bay in a boat we can’t fix. What’s the best way to handle this? — Leery Fisherman in Texas

DEAR LEERY: The way to approach it would be to tell your friend the truth. Ask if he has taken a boating safety course.

As to the integrity of the vessel, ask your friend if the boat was inspected at the time of purchase.

DEAR ABBY: My daughter has two children, a 7-year-old boy and a girl who is 4. They were at an event with some of her co-workers the other day. Everyone was talking to the younger child, telling her how cute she was and ignoring the older one. It was like he was invisible. He was so deflated.

I remember this happening with my girls when they were little. People always seem to gravitate to the little ones and pay no attention to the older ones. It has always bothered me. So, people, please be mindful of all the children. They are all precious. — Bothered Grandma

DEAR BOTHERED:

You’re right, this happens all too often. In a case like this, all it would have taken would have been for someone to have compliment­ed your daughter on her son’s behavior and said within earshot of the boy how lucky the little one was to have such a “good boy” for an older brother.

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.

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