Los Angeles Times

Sister sleeps in her yard

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Dear Amy: I allowed my sister, her dog and her friend to stay at my house instead of being homeless and sleeping on the street. The problem is, they are both alcoholics and will not try to get help or try to get a job to pay some kind of rent.

I asked them both to make other living arrangemen­ts. They decided to sleep outside my house on the ground. This breaks my heart and makes me angry at the same time.

What can I do to solve this issue without calling in the police? Sad and Mad in California

Dear Sad and Mad: Loved ones of people in the throes of addiction draft on hope, but looking for a surefire solution to this will test the strength of that hope. If your sister was basically homeless when she landed with you, I wonder how realistic it was for you to expect some sort of turnaround.

There is no real solution here but only a process of you deciding what you can and will tolerate. When the prospect of losing shelter provides no incentive to grasp at recovery, you know that things are about as bad as they can get.

If you want these people off of your property, you will have to ask them explicitly to leave and give them a certain deadline. If they won’t leave, then you will have to call the police. There might be a shelter nearby where they could find beds (although the drinking and the dog might preclude this).

One alternativ­e might be for you to get them a tent or a secondhand camper, to at least shield them from the weather. However, you should look into any possible liability regarding having these campers living on your property.

This is a very tough and sad situation for all of you. You are not in a position to police their drinking, and you don’t seem to have enough leverage to force your sister into recovery. This does not mean that you should be forced to watch her heartbreak­ing downslide, however. How your sister chooses to live is up to her. You gave her an opportunit­y, and now she will have to scramble to find another.

I hope you will get yourself to a “friends and family” support group, such as AlAnon (al-anon.org). Being around others who are walking this path will help.

Dear Amy: I just moved in with my boyfriend, and I’m kind of starting to feel like maybe it was a bad idea. He is always at work, and I only get to see him for a couple of hours when he gets off work; but then he’s exhausted.

Now he’s trying to get a second job, and I’ll never see him. I feel like he doesn’t care if he sees me or not. I feel like I’m not important to him and that he couldn’t care less if he sees me. I’ve tried to tell him this, but his answer is, “I gotta make money, bills need to be paid!” What should I do? Lonely Girlfriend

Dear Lonely Girlfriend: I have the perfect solution to both your loneliness and the financial needs in your household: Get a job.

You don’t mention whether you work, but it sounds as if this relationsh­ip is more or less your full-time occupation. If you stepped up more, your partner might be able to pull back more.

Ultimately, living together might not be the answer for you. If it feels like a bad idea, then maybe it is.

Send questions for Amy Dickinson by email to askamy@amydickins­on.com or by mail to Tribune Content Agency, 16650 Westgrove Drive, Suite 175, Addison, TX 75001.

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