Porterville Recorder

Couple’s name game about to welcome a new player

- Jeanne Phillips Dear Abby Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

DEAR ABBY: Our daughter has been married for three years to a wonderful guy she dated for 10 years and loves dearly. Because she doesn’t like his last name, she chose to maintain her maiden name. He understood this soon after they started dating.

She’s now three months pregnant and facing a dilemma about what to name their child. She’s adamant that a hyphenated name is unacceptab­le. They have tentativel­y discussed a complete name change for themselves and the child. Her husband was adopted, and she feels there’s no reason his surname must be carried on. He’s OK with keeping his last name but would consider a new one if she suggests something he likes.

We’re concerned this issue will drag on without being settled until our grandchild arrives. We recently offered limited advice hoping they can work this out between themselves.

Any suggestion­s you could provide to help resolve this would be appreciate­d before our grandchild is born nameless. — FAMILY DILEMMA IN TEXAS

DEAR FAMILY: My suggestion is that as helpful as you might wish to be, this is something your daughter and son-in-law must work out by themselves. “What’s in a name” is plenty, and because this dilemma is emotionall­y loaded, you should stay out of it.

DEAR ABBY: I’m undergoing chemo/ immunother­apy for cancer every three weeks. For quite some time now, my husband has been going out most days from 12:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. He does not say where he is going, and when he comes home, he says hardly a word. He is angry with me for the least little thing, and being around him gets very unpleasant because he shouts and throws things around.

I need to know what’s going on, why, and if it is innocent — because he won’t say where he’s going and for what purpose. Am I justified in being upset and distressed about this? I am at a point in my life where I need support.

How should I approach him about this without incurring more anger and putting myself in a worse situation than I am already in? I would appreciate any guidance you can give me. — SUSPICIOUS IN NEW YORK

DEAR SUSPICIOUS: Has this been going on since you were diagnosed, or do your husband’s absences predate it? Because he becomes angry and defensive when you ask what is going on, stop trying to confront him. Your husband may be angry with you for getting cancer, be incapable of giving emotional support or be stressed to the max and need private time to decompress. Or he may be cheating.

If you can afford it, hire a private detective to provide the informatio­n you need. I am so sorry for your pain. At a time like this, the last thing you needed was additional worry.

DEAR ABBY: My husband and I have been having the same disagreeme­nt for nearly the entire 20 years we have been married. He likes having his family (anywhere from two to five people) stay overnight at our house for three to four days every year. I’m an introvert. I need some alone time, and I’d prefer they stay at a motel.

I do not like waking up to other people, family or not. He grew up in a large family, while I did not. He actually threatened me with divorce if I was going to make him tell his family they can’t stay here. I am 58. I haven’t worked in eight years and I have no skills.

He says I’m being selfish since it’s only once a year. He provides well for us financiall­y and is a wonderful husband except for this one obstacle. How do I get over my anxiety about this? -- DREADING IN TEXAS

DEAR DREADING: The most effective way to deal with an anxiety issue is to talk about it with a licensed psychother­apist. Because your husband provides well for you financiall­y, you can afford to consult one. If you do, it may help you learn how to get moments of alone time in which to recharge while the relatives are there.

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