Los Angeles Times

Dog-park crush is intense

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Dear Amy: I go to a local dog park every day. Two years ago I fell in love with a guy there. He is the kindest, most thoughtful man I have ever met.

Just standing next to him at the park and talking, I can feel electricit­y running through my body! But he is married!

It is so devastatin­g for me that I can never have the man I love in my life. I wish he could be my boyfriend, then husband, but since this will never happen, many a day I come home from the dog park and cry!

He seems to really like me a lot, and we email back and forth often (all innocent).

I tried to break it off with him once and didn’t go to the park for several weeks, but I was miserable and finally went back.

How do I get over him? I know we will never be together since he has been happily married for 30 years now. He is in his 60s, and I am in my 50s. Must Love Dogs

Dear Must Love: Some neighborho­od or workplace crushes can be fairly harmless. Contact with your crush can inspire you and generally brighten your day but should not become overwhelmi­ng.

However, your crush on this man seems to have become a fixation, and the fixation will continue to make you unhappy until you are able to more or less break this spell.

You should find another park, and you shouldn’t be sending or receiving any communicat­ion from him. I realize this will be tough — especially at first — but eventually you will find liberation from this fixation and the sadness it triggers.

A profession­al therapist could guide you through this process.

Dear Amy: I rent out an apartment attached to our house.

Our tenant of eight months wants to be friends and share “personal business” with me. She calls us constantly for non-urgent issues, many of them quite personal and of no interest to me. She has our cell numbers and has called many times, both while I’m at work and home. I have never ignored her calls, and yet the one time when it really was urgent (water coming in from the roof), she waited until we got home to let us know.

She has a family and other connection­s, so I don’t think it is about her being lonely. I work full time and only wish to maintain a profession­al attitude toward her.

I drew up “House Rules,” detailing the responsibi­lities of landlords/tenants, but she seems to deliberate­ly “break” these rules. I told her I would renew her lease, provided she adheres to these guidelines.

I understand wanting to get to know someone; however, I only want to have a profession­al relationsh­ip.

Am I being too harsh? I just don’t want to be friends or know intimate details of her personal life. Landlord

Dear Landlord: It is completely reasonable for you to want a boundary between you and your tenant. Things might improve if you ask her to text — instead of calling. This way you will know why she is trying to reach you and can determine whether you want to respond.

Check your local laws to review tenants’ rights where you live. If you determine that you don’t want to renew the lease, you should make sure you do so by the book.

Send questions to Amy Dickinson by email to askamy@amydickins­on .com.

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