Los Angeles Times

He’s reading wife’s diary

- Send questions for Amy Dickinson by email to askamy@tribune.com.

Dear Amy: My wife and I have been together for about 14 years. We have four children, ranging in age from teens to a toddler. We are both 36.

Over the past year or so we have had a few bumps in the road, including having an unexpected child who was born with health problems, my wife’s family moving in with us (we later had to evict them), an arrest (mine), and her having a manic episode and being committed to a mental hospital for six days. She has been regulated on her meds and seems to be doing a lot better with everything.

She’s a stay-at-home mom. When I get home, I give her a break; she goes into her room and listens to music, writes in her journal or goes on social media sites.

While this is fine with me, over the last few weeks it’s becoming an issue. I feel ignored. So I did something I shouldn’t have done, and I read her journal. I had to see what was wrong with her.

Her journal noted that she has become bored, and sees risky behavior approachin­g.

She didn’t write anything more for two days. The next entry was about how I was jealous of a male friend of ours because they message a lot on Facebook. She wrote that she has no interest in him or anyone else. She said that I need to get past it.

I believe all of this is leading us to a path of divorce, lies and cheating.

Should I bring this all up? Worried

Dear Worried: My first thought is that the main thing you can change is to get your face out of your wife’s private diary. If you are concerned about lying and cheating, perhaps you should look in the mirror. Reading her diary is disrespect of the first order.

Your wife might be approachin­g another manic episode. If you are worried about this, you should discuss it with her. If you are jealous of her friendship with another man, you should be honest about it, then consider trusting her if she says she isn’t into him.

You have glossed over your own actions: You mention you were arrested but you don’t say why.

She is expressing some things in her diary that she should (also) express to you, but she has the right to her private thoughts and expression­s. You two should see a therapist together to discuss your considerab­le family stressors and work on how to communicat­e more effectivel­y and respectful­ly.

Dear Amy: I have a friend I have been seeing once a week for coffee. It feels like a one-sided friendship to me, in that she spends most of the time talking about herself.

I am a good listener and ask her questions, but sometimes I feel like I’m more her therapist than her friend.

I decided after months of this that I was going to make myself less available, and that worked out.

I had not seen her for several months until a few weeks ago, and the same pattern is there, but the rub is this: Whether she’s talking about herself or listening to me, she won’t make eye contact. I don’t know what to make of it, but it makes me feel like something is wrong with me. I’m thinking about coming right out and asking her. What do you think? Friend

Dear Friend: Eye contact is a sign of intimacy and comfort.

By all means, ask your friend why she won’t meet your eye.

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