The Arizona Republic

Woman runs out of patience with boyfriend’s addiction

- | ABIGAIL VAN BUREN Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Dear Abby: I have been with my boyfriend for five years. We do not live together, nor do we share any children (we have three grown kids from previous marriages). He has been a smoker since he was very young, and when we got together, he said he would like to quit. Well, it still hasn’t happened.

As the child of an addict (alcohol) I understand how difficult quitting can be. Luckily, my father quit cold turkey 20 years ago and never relapsed. Abby, I do not want a future with a smoker. The smell of stale tobacco is unappealin­g. It’s not exactly a breath freshener, and the health consequenc­es are dire.

Am I within my rights to put my foot down? I brought up quitting this week in response to him lamenting that he looks aged beyond his years (which is true). He became very defensive and made me seem like a monster for asking for a real timeline about quitting. He struggles with anxiety and thinks trying to quit will send him over the edge, and I would be the one pushing him. How do I navigate future conversati­ons? Choking in Pennsylvan­ia

Dear Choking: Tell your boyfriend you care about him and about his health, but you can no longer tolerate watching him damage it because of his tobacco addiction. If he doesn’t already know that the smell on his breath, body and clothing is offensive, point it out, and also that secondhand smoke is unhealthy for you. Then tell him he has a choice to make: It’s the smoking or you. The decision is his.

P.S. In this day and age many women – and men – simply “swipe left” if they encounter a smoker.

Dear Abby: I am in a relationsh­ip that is approachin­g the seven-year mark. We dated in our 20s and rekindled in our 40s. We live together, but I’m afraid we are growing apart. Due to health issues, I don’t work; he works second shift. I cry easily and have always been an emotional person.

When there are disagreeme­nts, we can usually work it out. My problem is, I think about the discussion later and have more to say or ask. He then tells me we have already talked about it and he’s not discussing it again. He says I “overanalyz­e everything.” It’s not that. I just have another question or something I left out. Please help me to understand if I am too demanding and should just leave it alone.

Unanswered in Illinois

Dear Unanswered: It isn’t “too demanding” to want to discuss something further. If revisiting the issue would rekindle the disagreeme­nt, your partner is far too controllin­g. If you have a question, there’s no reason why you shouldn’t be able to ask without it leading to conflict. To deny you that opportunit­y seems disrespect­ful.

Give it more time after a disagreeme­nt and decide if it’s really necessary to revisit the subject. When you do, avoid reapproach­ing it in a way that could be perceived as an invitation to another argument.

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