San Francisco Chronicle

Mom can’t accept news that divorced, adult daughter is lesbian

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Dear Abby: My daughter recently told me that she has met someone and the someone happens to be a woman. My reaction was, of course, shock and anger, although I have suspected for years that she is a lesbian. She is 43 and was married for 10 years. She has two children and has been divorced for about 11 years now. She dated a few guys, but either had no luck with them or it didn’t last. I don’t know how to handle this; I’m against people being gay. I see it as unnatural and think they all have issues. I don’t treat gay people different from anyone else. I do keep them at a distance. Now I don’t know how to proceed with our relationsh­ip. Please help.

Shocked and Angry Mom Dear S. and A.: I’ll try. While you may be angry, because you have long suspected that your daughter might be a lesbian, you cannot now claim to be shocked. One reason gay people have “issues,” as you put it, is because they have to endure opposition and nonaccepta­nce from the family members they love. Your 43-year-old daughter has spent years not being who she really is — possibly to please you — and now has realized she must be her authentic self. If you want any relationsh­ip at all with her, apologize and tell her you overreacte­d. Tell her you love her and explain that you may need time to fully accept this. Wish her well and hope that she forgives you. Dear Abby: I’m a 31-year-old mother of two — a 3-year-old and a 2-month-old. My children have the same father. We coparent, which has its ups and downs (more downs). We have been friends with benefits for five years, longer than we were a true couple. Recently I found out he has introduced our kids to another woman he’s dating. I feel hurt because I have feelings for him that I can’t let go of. How do I keep from falling apart from the loss of the only relationsh­ip I know? I know it’s over, but I can’t help hoping we will get back together.

Hopelessly in Love

Dear Hopelessly in Love: Because you must interact with him regularly, it may not be easy. A step in the right direction would be to stop stowing your own emotional life in the deep freeze waiting for him to come back. Because it may take a dose of reality to regain control of your emotions, ask him to level with you about why your relationsh­ip didn’t lead to marriage. Something important was missing or it would have happened when you had his first child. His response to your question should give you clarity.

Dear Abby: I’m a man in my mid-60s. Recently, I had to put my elderly cat, Taffy, to sleep. I loved her. When the vet asked if I would like some of her ashes, I didn’t want to take them home. Instead, I filled a jelly jar with her fur. (She had long hair and I had, for a year, been stuffing the fur I removed from her brush every night into a shoe box.) As a memorial to my beloved Taffy, I added some of her favorite kibble to the hair jar, and it now sits on her favorite window sill. You be the judge — cute or creepy?

Cat Fancier in Florida

Dear Cat Fancier: It is neither. It is the way you have chosen to cope with a painful loss, and you shouldn’t be judged — or judge yourself — harshly for it. My condolence­s for your loss. Write to Dear Abby at P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or www.dearabby.com.

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