San Francisco Chronicle

Husband demands access to woman’s emails, texts

- By Jeanne Phillips

Dear Abby: My husband and I have been together for 20 years. I have never cheated on him or given him any reason to believe I have. But he is constantly on my Facebook account. He also reads all my emails and text messages.

I have nothing to hide, but I feel foolish standing by him as he reads my messages. I feel like a student in a principal’s office waiting to be reprimande­d for something I did wrong or said. If he doesn’t read my personal messages when I am up, he waits for me to go to sleep and reads everything. I have not answered messages that friends have sent me because he reads them, deletes them and then doesn’t tell me I got a message. He gets mad at me if I tell him I don’t want him looking through my messages because he says I must be hiding something. I have changed passwords only for him to demand that I give them to him. His actions are making me extremely stressed. Is this normal behavior?

Stressed Somewhere in the U.S.A. Dear Stressed: No, it is not normal, and it’s no wonder that you are extremely stressed. Your husband’s behavior is extremely controllin­g, and it is a reflection of the extent of his insecurity. Your situation is unhealthy, to put it mildly. Has this sort of thing been going on for the last 20 years? If not, it could be a precursor to domestic violence. For your own sake, talk to someone at the National Domestic Violence Hotline about what is going on. Its tollfree number is 8007997233. The website is www.thehot line.org. Dear Abby: I just started my first fulltime job, and my boss is amazing but a bit overprotec­tive. Last week, our marketing director, “Amy,” reached out and asked me to organize an envelopest­uffing for invitation­s to an event my department is hosting. This event was not organized by my department. It was being handled by the marketing and membership teams. My boss thought it was unreasonab­le for me to have to do that. I didn’t mind, nor did I complain, but my boss was upset and confronted Amy about it.

Amy apologized and helped me send out the invites, but since then she has been cool to me. It feels like others in the office have also withdrawn somewhat (although I suppose I could just be imagining this). I really wish my boss hadn’t said anything. On one hand, I appreciate her standing up for me, but I don’t want my coworkers to think I’m lazy or a complainer, especially because I’m new here and at the bottom of the totem pole in the office. Should I just let it blow over? Should I say something? Any advice would be welcome.

Not a Complainer Dear Not a Complainer: Your boss may have stepped in because there were tasks she wanted you to spend your time doing that are more important to her than stuffing envelopes.

Tell Amy privately that you were glad to help with the invitation­s, and you never complained to anyone about having been asked to do it. It may clear the air.

Then have a talk with your boss about chainofcom­mand rules, including whether you must get an OK from her before helping out other department­s.

I feel like a student in a principal’s office waiting to be reprimande­d for something I did wrong.

Write to Dear Abby at P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or www.dearabby.com. Universal Press Syndicate

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