The Columbus Dispatch

Former lover’s dating errors should be shared with friend

- CAROLYN HAX Write to Carolyn — whose column appears on Sundays, Wednesdays and Fridays — at tellme@washpost.com.

One of my best girlfriend­s (we’re in our 40s and 50s) has started dating a former lover of mine.

Because I’m a private person, my friends possibly knew of him — I’m single — but didn’t press for details. They all know him independen­tly through a group affiliatio­n we share.

He became “former” earlier this year because he constantly let me down, from canceling a date as I was on my way, to taking a phone call while I’m talking with him about facing my oncologist about my cancer treatment.

A few weeks into their dating experience, however, he’s already doing the same to her — last-minute cancellati­ons, etc. Her desire for marriage may blind her to how disrespect­ful his behavior can be.

So, two questions: Do I have to crack my own shell of privacy and tell my friend I had a thing with a guy she’s now dating? He’s obviously not mentioned it.

If I wait to see whether it becomes serious, then it’s an even harder conversati­on. I feel really uncomforta­ble about each of the say/don’tsay options.

And do I share with her some of the thoughtles­s and disrespect­ful things he’s done? Not least of which, I think, is dating one of my best friends without a heads-up to me.

Maybe I should talk to him? I don’t like being in this position!

These lose-lose decisions always feel the hardest, obviously, because you don’t see any courses of action you like but inaction leaves you stuck in the limbo of facing an unwanted choice.

But there’s usually a good decision — or a merely less-bad one — to be found by breaking a situation down to its most basic facts.

Here, you have two certaintie­s at the foundation of everything: Your privacy is yours, and your friend’s relationsh­ip is hers.

So your best choice is going to be the one that comes closest to honoring these two facts.

Which means you say as little as possible, and you disrupt the relationsh­ip as little as possible.

You rightly point out that choosing to say nothing will loom larger and get weirder as their relationsh­ip progresses.

That means speaking up might feel like butting into their business but is actually more respectful of their relationsh­ip — and your privacy — than silence. Silence plants a drama mine that one of you is almost certain to step on someday.

— Say/Not Say?

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