San Diego Union-Tribune

Nurse and boyfriend are

Driven apart by COVID-19

- © 2020 Universal Uclick

Dear Abby: I am a nurse in New York City. My boyfriend lives in Philadelph­ia. During the height of the pandemic, we didn’t see each other because I worked on a COVID unit and contracted the virus. His sister became very controllin­g and kept urging him not to see me, which brought me great pain. I was extremely lonely, and for months, the only people I saw were my coworkers.

At the end of May, my boyfriend and I began seeing each other regularly. Because he sees me, his sister refuses to see him, which makes me very sad. His mother died two years ago.

When his family tries to plan things, his sister either comes late or doesn’t show up. If I’m invited, she says she doesn’t want to be in the same room as me. I spend a lot of time with my boyfriend and his older father, who he now lives with. His father has never expressed that he feels uncomforta­ble around me.

I feel like we have to plan things around this sister. I want my boyfriend to spend time with his family, but she’s extremely controllin­g when everyone else in the family seems excited to see me. What do I do?

Uncomforta­ble Situation Dear Uncomforta­ble: I am assuming that if you are again working that you are tested regularly for COVID and therefore in no danger of giving the virus to anyone. Because there has been so much misinforma­tion spread during the pandemic, many people are being extremely cautious — and rightfully so.

If you had a good relationsh­ip with your boyfriend’s sister before the pandemic began, recognize that she acts the way she does because she’s afraid for her life, so stop personaliz­ing it and judging her for it. She has a right to protect herself, even if it seems irrational to you.

Dear Abby: As a grandparen­t, I feel the Christmas gift my husband and I received last year from our granddaugh­ter was a gift of a lifetime. We have enjoyed it all year. It was a gift of memories, written on 12 cards to be opened on the first day of each month. She had inserted each card into an individual envelope, designated with which month it was to be opened. She put them in a box wrapped with a bow and placed it under the tree.

The excitement generated while anxiously awaiting a new month’s arrival so the new memory could be read created enthusiasm among the entire family. In each envelope were experience­s we had forgotten or never realized had made an impact on her life.

A gift like this requires only time and 12 pieces of paper. The concept could even be reversed so it would be from grandparen­t to grandchild. Few of us grandparen­ts need material gifts, but the caring, thought and love shown by this gift will remain with us all our lives.

Wanted To Share,

Fresno, Calif.

Dear Wanted To Share: What a precious gift. I have long advocated that the most meaningful gift we can give each other is the gift of self, in the form of time, attention, a handwritte­n letter or a phone call. Your granddaugh­ter’s concept of a “Memory of the Month Club” was ingenious. I congratula­te her for it, and I hope it inspires others.

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.

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