Los Angeles Times

Red flags are everywhere

- Send questions to askamy@ amydickins­on.com.

2/18/19

Dear Readers:

I hope you enjoy these edited “best of ” columns.

Dear Amy:

A guy I’m interested in killed a raccoon in my yard because it was eating my cat’s food. He seems to think he did a good deed. I, however, am horrified because it’s not the animal’s fault that it found food near my house. Should I run before becoming too involved with this person?

Wondering

Dear Wondering:

What this guy did is wrong on so many levels — but let’s just start with the fact that he chose to do something quite serious on your property. Raccoons might be considered pests when they pick through garbage or eat cat food, but there is a very sensible solution to this — bring the cat’s food inside.

People who gratuitous­ly kill animals are twisted. If he comes around, I’d suggest you treat him as the pest he is. Chase him off. (October 2009)

Dear Amy:

Recently, my parents hosted a family dinner. After dinner, my sister’s boyfriend decided to light fireworks. My boyfriend and I, my sister, her boyfriend and our parents stood in front of the house, watching.

About 15 minutes in, a new neighbor approached my sister’s boyfriend. The neighbor didn’t even get to say hello before he started yelling. The neighbor began to say that his infant child had been sick and that she needed her sleep. My sister was pleading with her boyfriend to stop yelling, but that made him angrier.

We stood there in shock. The boyfriend wouldn’t come into the house, and the neighbor left.

I told my mother we should go over to the neighbor’s house with flowers and explain that we don’t condone that behavior.

Exploding Embarrasse­d

Dear Exploding:

Because this happened at your home and because the perpetrato­r was a guest of your family, your parents should apologize to the neighbor. Flowers from the garden would be a good start.

More important is your sister’s situation. She is living with a hothead who is out of control. You should all take this incident seriously and urge her to reconsider her relationsh­ip with this volatile guy. (July 2009)

Dear Amy:

I’ve been in a committed relationsh­ip for three years. It’s my first stable relationsh­ip (compared with previous whirlwind dramas), but I feel his affection has dwindled.

He was so passionate during the first six months, but after that we became more like best friends. I’ve told him numerous times how unhappy this makes me, and his response is that it’s just his personalit­y.

Every other aspect of our relationsh­ip is positive, so would it be irresponsi­ble to end all that stability for passion?

Aching for Attention

Dear Aching:

You have a history of drama in your relationsh­ips, and you may associate passion with drama. They are very different. Passion changes over the course of a relationsh­ip, because at some point people have to get up and go to work, but you say you are starved for affection — and though passion may wane, in a loving relationsh­ip affection does not.

If you are going to continuall­y miss the passion you feel you need, you probably should look elsewhere to find it. (September 2009)

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