The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Being selfish OK since you aren’t married yet

- Carolyn Hax Email Carolyn at tellme@ washpost.com, follow her on Facebook at www.facebook. com/carolyn.hax or chat with her online at noon Eastern time each Friday at www. washington­post.com.

Dear Carolyn: My fiance’s father has offered him an “in” to a job in the investment world, which would offer us great financial security, insurance, etc. My fiance is throwing away a master’s degree and wants to be a carpenter.

I’m seriously considerin­g walking away because I think he is being really selfish given the long-term prospects.

I am a profession­al and have supported us through his two-year master’s program. I am at my end here — what do you think? — Fiance Needs a Job

Carolyn says: You want him to choose a career path that doesn’t interest him just because it would finance a specific lifestyle to which you’d like to become accustomed. How is that not “really selfish?”

I’m making a point, not taking his side — or yours — because the whole idea of “sides” is uglier here than usual. So is the “selfish” tag.

He is deciding who he is. It’s taking him a while, and costing you both a lot to get him there, but those are just details.

The barest fact is that he’s doubting the white-collar path. I think that’s his prerogativ­e, especially as a still-unmarried person, but that’s just a detail, too.

You, meanwhile, have made the who-am-I decision to your own satisfacti­on. That’s great — it’s no small feat to reach that point — but its being an accomplish­ment is also a detail. The barest fact is that you’re settled on who you are and where you want to go next.

So both of you are just being yourselves, doubting and settled. Layering on motives or value judgments or expectatio­ns only complicate­s what is simple.

Laid bare, the question you face is: Can his searching plus your certainty work? Can you, as you are, be happy with him as-is?

Anything can if you both want it to badly enough, I suppose. But you don’t want to love him as-is. You want him to be who you envision, so you’re seeking validation for the idea that he should white-collar himself to your liking. You won’t find it here. I can, though, sympathize with your frustratio­n about the master’s.

I can validate your concern that carpentry is just the next thing he’ll try and abandon. That can exhaust a partner who doesn’t have the temperamen­t for flux.

I can remind you that you get to decide what’s important to you. If financial security is your priority, then no one gets to overrule that ... just as you don’t get to tell him what his priorities are. Partnershi­ps add an asterisk, but you’re not fully in one yet.

And I can underscore that it’s your prerogativ­e to break the engagement, for any reason. Just don’t succumb to the temptation to make him the bad guy.

Maybe we’re ahead of ourselves on the engagement. Being “at my end” means you have to tell him — but instead of saying what you want to happen, let him volunteer what can happen. Then, together, weigh the chances it’ll work. The next step, be it toward or away from each other, goes best if it comes from you both.

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