The Columbus Dispatch

Mother should be cautious in plan to rescue daughter

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

My daughter is in a relationsh­ip with her high school boyfriend. They are now living together in a different state with no relatives nearby. My daughter, 25, is a people person with a bubbly personalit­y and makes friends easily. Her boyfriend does not. He prefers to stay home, work every now and then, and stay up all night playing video games online.

She is a hard worker with a well-paying job and owns her own home. However, she comes home to this situation.

In fact, when they are home together, there is no communicat­ion because he is doing his “own” thing while she just sits and becomes depressed. He tells her to go out with friends but she refuses.

This is the only boy she has ever dated and he is smothering her. I am going for a visit soon and want to talk to her about everything. Please advise me how to start the conversati­on.

He is smothering her with suggestion­s that she go out with friends?

Unless there’s a backstory here of manipulati­on and control by the boyfriend that you’ve skipped over, no one’s suffocatin­g anyone.

Your daughter has agency. She’s merely squanderin­g it alone in a chair feeling sorry for herself while the man she incompatib­ly clings to plays video games.

That’s a problem, certainly — it’s just a very different one from the one you want to rescue her from.

It’s also a rescue only she can perform. There’s a good chance she’ll do that in her own time, when it finally occurs to her there’s a better life to be lived.

There’s also a good chance, though, this “aha” moment will strike her only after she’s even more deeply invested than she is now — through marriage, a jointly owned home, a child.

So there can be a role for someone like you, who has enough distance and experience to see the risks more clearly. You just need to play this role with great care not to pin everything on the terrible boyfriend chosen by your wonderful child.

To remain grounded, repeat to yourself as needed: She’s half of this. She chose this. Then respond to any unhappines­s you perceive in her only as it relates to her. Not, “What did he do to you” or “Why do you put up with him,” but instead, “You don’t seem happy about (factual statement). Or, “Is something bothering you?” No lectures, no advice unless asked — except perhaps, “Don’t do anything that doesn’t feel right.”

She’s an adult who is equipped to take care of herself — even if she isn’t doing the best job of it right now. Let her tell you what she needs.

— Frustrated Mom

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