Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Friends, family don’t like boyfriend

- Carolyn Hax

Adapted from an online discussion.

Hi, Carolyn: Years ago, right after college, I had a boyfriend who was disliked by most of my loved ones. Levels of objection ranged from slight to significant, and it caused friction with my family and in my social circle. He eventually dumped me, and with distance and perspectiv­e I saw that he was obviously a terrible match for me – and one who treated me poorly in public, which is why people disliked him so much.

Now I’m in my mid-30s and have a lot more confidence in my judgment, but I find myself in the same situation again. My mom, my siblings and two of my closest friends do not like my boyfriend of about a year. He is very kind to me, but he has a polarizing personalit­y – a little sarcastic, mostly in a self-deprecatin­g way – and they’ve each told me in so many ways that they hope we don’t end up getting married.

I feel comfortabl­e making my own decisions, but I keep returning to the memory of that past relationsh­ip, which it turned out was a total mess that everyone could see but me. To make my question very simple, how can I tell whether everyone’s objections to my boyfriend are worth a hard look?

For context: I have disliked plenty of my friends’ significant others, but I believe the relationsh­ips are right FOR THEM.

– Nobody likes my boyfriend

Nobody likes my boyfriend: I take your point that not everyone is going to like everyone’s choice of mate, and that what matters is that the relationsh­ip works for you. But since you’re asking: What’s with your taste in polarizing people?

This is only the second time you’ve made an unpopular choice, yes, and that’s too small a sample size. But since you’re to the point of asking whether and how to trust your own judgment, you might as well do the work as if it were a bigger pattern.

Are you trying to stand apart from others? To show you’re different? Are you passive – i.e., the people you date are just the ones who happen to seek you out?

Whenever you have to ask yourself, is this the guy/girl for me, it’s worth asking some bigger questions about who you are and what makes you happy – with a therapist, if you’re able and so inclined. Explore what your emotional comfort zone is, what your happier relationsh­ips have looked (with family and friends, too, not just boyfriends). Reflect on what you get out of these relationsh­ips with “one-person people” – i.e., men who don’t mix well with others.

Maybe you’ll find that seeing it as a pattern is just a false alarm. It’s still good stuff to know.

If there is a pattern, though, it can be a dangerous one: partners with mean streaks who drive your friends away.

Re: Boyfriend: I think she should ask, “Do you just not like him or do you think he treats me poorly?” If it is the second, ask for specifics. I have friends whose boyfriends I don’t like, but who are good boyfriends so I stay quiet. It is when a guy is treating a friend badly that I will speak up.

– Anonymous

Anonymous: Good point, thank you.

Email Carolyn at tellme@washpost.com, follow her on Facebook at facebook.com/carolyn.hax.

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