Los Angeles Times

Child caught in family ties

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Dear Amy: Nine-year-old “Danny” lives with his dad and grandparen­ts, and none of them get along. Danny is always caught in the middle. Danny’s dad (in his mid-30s) is a self-absorbed jerk and spends little time with Danny, but he lives in the same house.

If Grandma is mad at Danny’s father (who is her son), Danny gets to hear all about it and vice versa. Caught in the turmoil, Danny gets chewed out by both sides.

The latest example of this is that Danny is going on vacation with his grandparen­ts, but his dad wasn’t invited and doesn’t even know they are going! Grandma told Danny not to tell his dad because she doesn’t want the dad to go! And when they return, Danny will be yelled at by his dad for keeping the secret. Danny cannot win in this dysfunctio­nal family.

How can it be right for the other family members to leave on vacation with his son and not tell him and to demand that Danny keep this secret? The grandparen­ts are his main caregivers, and if they left him behind, I doubt his father would look after him for the 10 days, so Danny must go with them.

I’m a (not respected) family member who thankfully doesn’t live there. I keep my mouth shut because nobody asked me, but Danny does share with me some of his anxieties and fears.

Is it right for them to take Danny without telling the dad? What can I say to Danny? Worried Relative

Dear Worried: It is NOT right for these grandparen­ts to spirit their grandson away — unless they are the child’s legal adoptive parents or guardians, it would also be illegal for them to take the child without the father’s permission.

Any parent returning home to find his child missing without explanatio­n would be justified in calling the police to report an abduction.

Poor “Danny” is in a toxic household. No adult should EVER ask a child to keep a secret from a parent; secretkeep­ing divides a child’s loyalty — it is also what people who exploit children ask them to do.

Given the dynamic in this household, the child will pay the price, and his path will be rocky. Stay close to the boy.

You should not stay silent. This family desperatel­y needs interventi­on, for the child’s sake.

Dear Amy: I enjoy meeting friends one-to-one. It’s upsetting when arrangemen­ts are made to meet up with one friend and then I find out that she has invited others.

It’s not that I don’t like the other people. It just changes the conversati­on when there are other people.

Should I seek other friends who think as I do, or is there a way to express my feelings without coming off as anti-social? Something of a Loner

Dear Loner: You may not be a “loner” so much as an introvert, whose energy is sapped by groups of people — especially when you’re not expecting it. There is nothing “wrong” with this — it’s the way you’re built!

If you are issuing the invitation, you get to dictate the terms, so you can say: “Let’s meet up at the Corner Café — but just the two of us, OK?” If somebody else is making the plans, you can ask if others will be there. Understand that if you are meeting a friend at a bar, there is a likelihood that others may join you.

Send questions to Amy Dickinson by email to ask amy@amydickins­on.com.

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