Post-Tribune

Letter writer harasses woman for decades

- By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter@askingamy Copyright 2023 by Amy Dickinson Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

When my wife was a teenager, a 20-something man she knew in her social circle became obsessed with her. He kept calling her and would mainly whine about his life. He started talking about marriage, although for her, he was an annoying acquaintan­ce.

She finally told him to stop contacting her. He then started in on her friends and family. When she and I became engaged, he started contacting me and my friends and family.

He wrote lots of long letters about how miserable he was and how terrible she was and why can’t they just be friends. This went on for years. We have bunches of letters he wrote. Finally, he stopped writing, and we hoped he had finally moved on.

But he started up again. We’re in our 60s now. His letters are the same as before, and full of delusions about how things used to be.

We’ve contacted lawyers, but they’re not interested because he hasn’t made any violent threats and because we haven’t seen him in person in years. What can we do?

— Conflicted

According to you, these letters don’t contain threatenin­g language and don’t cross the line into harassment. Are you sure? You have expressly asked not to be contacted, so you should do more research to see if the content of these letters is over the legal line.

Writing and sending these letters might be a venting exercise for this unstable person — and you merely receiving them

Dear Conflicted:

but never responding may cause him to taper off.

Go to the post office and speak with your local postmaster. Ask about your options for refusing this mail. Ask if they are able to withhold delivery of mail from this particular sender, or if filing a form called PS 1500 (which applies to sexually explicit material), might be possible.

They might advise you (not your wife) to read these letters to make sure they have not changed in tone (keep them in a file), or for you to order an ink stamp that says, “moved, no forwarding address” or “return to sender,” and send the letters back unopened. If you do this, take a photo of these letters to have a record of when they were delivered.

I work for a well-known company in an office environmen­t that was very busy and stressful — before the pandemic hit.

All of the workers in my category have been working from home for almost three years now. I have adjusted and find that I am just as productive as before — and much happier. In addition to the convenienc­e of working from home, I have saved 10 hours of commuting time a week, as well as a substantia­l sum that I would have spent on clothing, lunches and commuting.

My company is now urging all of us to return to the office. I’ve heard through the grapevine that they will start really cracking down. I’m wondering what I should do.

— Happily Working

Dear Amy:

Dear Happily Working: Communicat­e with your manager to see if there is flexibilit­y in this dictate for a productive and seasoned worker like you. Are you willing to go into the office at all?

According to a recent article in Forbes magazine, your company is part of a trend of workplaces insisting that workers return to the office.

There are few labor laws that protect your preference to work from home. The marketplac­e, however, is on your side. Adzuna, a search engine for jobs, conducted “a year-overyear analysis of advertised job vacancies across the United States and found that from November 2020 to 2022, job postings grew by more than 6.2 million. Yet less than 2% were for office-based roles, whereas ads for remote roles rose by nearly 10%.”

It might be time for you to hop back into the job market.

Dear Amy: “Sad Sister in WY” described her brother’s girlfriend as “fixing” his looks in a number of ways, and then critiquing the way he used to look.

You described the girlfriend as controllin­g and lacking tact. Unfortunat­ely, I identified with the girlfriend. I realize I’ve been criticizin­g the way my husband used to look. I see now how rude that is.

— I’ll be Changing

Dear Changing: I appreciate how this insight came about, as well as your honesty in admitting it.

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