Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Ex wants to hide former relationsh­ip

- Ask Carolyn

Dear Carolyn: I’m one of those rare people who actually stayed friends with an ex-boyfriend. We do much better platonical­ly than we did in the year-plus we were together romantical­ly, and I consider him pretty much my best friend. We now live over an hour apart so we don’t see each other as often, but we text, DM or talk on the phone almost daily and meet for dinner several times a month.

I knew my ex was seeing someone, and next weekend at a party we’ll finally get to meet.

My ex says “right now” he doesn’t plan to tell his girlfriend that he and I ever dated but wants to break it to her gradually. I don’t understand what there is to “break” to her, we weren’t engaged or anything and have been over as a couple for years now. This makes me really uncomforta­ble, but as long as I don’t have to tell any out-and-out lies, I guess I should go along with it. Thoughts?

Lie of Omission: No no no, please be his friend, and badly needed spokespers­on for his spine, and tell him this is a terrible idea: “Lying to her by omission is a stupid way to start a relationsh­ip. Show her enough respect to be honest. If she freaks out that you’re friends with an ex, then she’s probably not someone you’d want to be serious with anyway, because the friends you choose are about your values.

“Besides – how is she going to like it when she finds out you kept this from her?”

He plans to tell her “gradually.” That is unintentio­nally hilarious.

Really. Don’t let him slide into a completely idiotic decision; at least make him actively choose and defend it.

Dear Carolyn: My partner and his brother have decided to go in on a new car for their sister, who has been driving around in an unsafe jalopy for a while. She can’t afford to buy her own for a number of reasons that all boil down to poor financial management.

This is really generous and brotherly of them and I would support it, but I’ve been driving a crappy old car for years and can’t quite believe my partner is prioritizi­ng his sister’s need over mine. Granted, there is a big difference between unsafe (her car) and simply embarrassi­ng (mine), but there is also a big difference between one’s duties to one’s sibling and one’s partner. Right, or am I being a jerk?

Family of Creation: Do you two have joint finances? Are you life partners?

If so, then you have absolute standing to say that while you recognize the generosity of this gift to his sister, you’re uncomforta­ble with him not running it by you first – especially given that your own car is an accidental monument to fiscal restraint.

Even if you have separate finances and not-yet-determined roles in each other’s futures, then you can make the same case if such a big expenditur­e affects you both – for example, if it impinges on his ability to contribute to your shared expenses.

Or you can just say your “can’t quite believe” line out loud and sort it from there. Better that than silent resentment.

 ?? Carolyn Hax ??
Carolyn Hax

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States