Los Angeles Times

Not quite a happy reunion

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

Dear Amy:

I recently reconnecte­d with a man I was engaged to many years ago. We have not gotten together in person because we live several hours away from each other and are both in our 70s.

The problem is that he blames me for a breakup that happened 50 years ago! (His perception is incorrect, by the way.) We do love one another and spend hours texting.

It is a “virtual romance,” and we are happy with that, but his constant reference about how I destroyed his life gives me a debilitati­ng migraine, and I can’t function afterward for 24 hours!

I have told him that I’m not responsibl­e for how he lived his life after we parted, but he simply says that he’s sad, and then we move forward, only to have the same outburst happen within the next day or two.

How can we resolve his anger management issues without breaking up again? Frustrated Old Lady

Dear Frustrated:

I’m not sure I can help you to help this man resolve his anger issues. That’s his job.

Is he experienci­ng some cognitive decline? Does he have untreated anxiety? Is he drinking when he does this? If so, he should take on the responsibi­lity of taking care of his health.

His reasons for behaving this way are actually immaterial.

Imagine that, instead of being yelled at textually, you two were actually in the same room when he did this.

What would you do? How would you react? I imagine that you would leave the room when he raged. And then — once you had left the room — you might reconsider being in the relationsh­ip at all, because it has become a Groundhog Day reenactmen­t.

Imagine further that you had a friend or family member witness one of these rages. That person would say to you, “Myrtle, this is abuse. Look at what it’s doing to you! It is damaging your health.”

Abuse does not only happen in person. It can happen online, through text, on the phone or via Zoom, FaceTime or postal mail.

I suggest that when this happens again, you respond: “I want our relationsh­ip to succeed and proceed peacefully. I completely dispute your memory of this. But regardless, I’m telling you now that if you ever communicat­e with me this way again, I really will break up with you. Do you understand?”

If he responds in any way other than to acknowledg­e and apologize, then you should break up. If he acknowledg­es and apologizes, but then reverts to his previous behavior, it’s over.

Dear Amy:

I have a relative, “Steven,” whose father passed away on Steven’s birthday.

Five years have passed, but yet it still feels odd when texting or writing out his card with a big “Happy Birthday!” While I want him to enjoy his day, I know the feelings are mixed with guilt of celebratin­g his birth on an anniversar­y of his father’s passing.

What are some appropriat­e messages I could use in lieu of the standard “Happy Birthday”? Wondering

Dear Wondering:

This is tough. I suggest that you convey: “I understand this might be a day of big and mixed emotions for you, but I hope you find good ways to celebrate. I’m always thinking of you, and I carry many very happy memories of your father.”

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