An engagement could happen without ‘nagging’
Dear Amy: This summer, my boyfriend and I will be celebrating our seventh anniversary as a couple.
We have been living together for a year. He's 32, and I'm turning 26.
I am ready for the next step: engagement. While he says he wants to be engaged, too, he doesn't seem to be taking any steps to get us there.
Can I get him to propose without nagging him? — Unengaged Upstate Woman
Dear Unengaged: You were quite young when you and your guy first got together, and you are now at an age where many people feel pressure to tie the knot.
As emotionally loaded as the prospect of marriage is, the ability to discuss marriage openly and with comfort now will predict other important conversations later. A therapist once told me, "People 'nag' when they don't feel heard."
Having a conversation is not the same as nagging, as long as both of you talk and listen and feel heard and understood.
If you want to create a timeline for engagement, you should say so.
If you and he want to adhere to the concept that the man must ask the woman to get married, and if you agree to a timeframe, then he would have time and space to create a special "proposal" moment.
Dear Amy: I have an issue with my brother. I feel somewhat used in the relationship, but I don't want to cut him off because he's the only living relative I have.
I never hear from my brother unless he has plans to be in my city and wants a free place to stay for the night.
I'm afraid that if I press the point and tell him that I feel like I'm being treated as free room and board whenever he feels like it, I'll end up never seeing him. — Used Sister Dear Sister: You don't provide details about what your experience is like when you see your brother during his visits. Is he asking to stay with you because he wants to see you? When he does stay with you, does he interact with you and your spouse, or does he treat your home like a pit stop? Does he ever reciprocate? Does he express gratitude?
If you changed your perspective even slightly, you might enjoy and appreciate your own generosity and hospitality, and get more pleasure out of this relationship, flawed as it is.