Los Angeles Times

Boyfriend’s mom is toxic

- Send questions to askamy@amydickins­on.com or by mail to Ask Amy, Chicago Tribune, TT500, 435 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60611.

Dear Amy: I am a 23-yearold woman who has been in a relationsh­ip with my boyfriend for four years. We live together and plan on getting married and having children.

We are perfect together, and I couldn’t ask for a better partner.

His mother and I do not get along. From the beginning of our relationsh­ip she has talked constantly about his exes. She will post pictures and tag them and invite them to family functions where her son and I are expected to attend.

For the past couple of years we have both told her that this makes me feel uncomforta­ble and that I won’t be going to these functions if an ex or multiple exes will be there.

The last family function was three months ago. I decided not to go because his ex accepted the invite. My boyfriend decided he would not attend, either.

This caused a major uproar, and his family is now accusing me of keeping their son and brother from them. I have decided I want nothing to do with them anymore.

Is it right for us to be upset about this? Am I being unreasonab­le or jealous? My feelings are badly hurt, and I can’t understand why they can’t let these exes go. Can my boyfriend and I still thrive in a relationsh­ip if there is a strain between me and his family? Worried

Dear Worried: Your boyfriend holds the key to how to both hold firm and help to rebuild your relationsh­ip with his family members. He should not put this all on you but should say, “I don’t want to see my ex-girlfriend­s at every family event. So if one or more of them will be present, please let me know in advance.”

You should both read, “Toxic In-Laws: Loving Strategies for Protecting Your Marriage,” by Susan Forward (2002, Harper Perennial).

Dear Amy: I have been married to my husband for 42 years, and every year I wonder why I stay. I don’t believe in divorce but can see why some people do. If I had known how much he would change after we married, I would not have married him.

I know sex isn’t everything in a marriage, but mere weeks after we had married, he turned me away, and I was devastated. I wondered what I did wrong.

Here we are, 42 years later, and it is worse than it was then. In the last six months I don’t think he has even kissed me, and I can’t remember the last time he hugged me.

I finally gave up on making the first move because it hurt too much to be rebuffed.

I couldn’t survive financiall­y if I left him. Any advice? Suffering in Silence

Dear Suffering: If you intend to stay in this marriage, don’t suffer in silence. Talking about this may be the toughest thing you have ever done, but you must try. Honestly talking about your feelings (and not just about the hurt) can help you to reclaim some intimacy.

Your husband may associate hugging and kissing and other endearment­s as foreplay to sex, and because he doesn’t seem to want to have sex, you can encourage him to simply be close to you, without the pressure of sex.

Counseling will help both of you, but if he won’t commit to meeting you in this way, please go by yourself.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States