The Columbus Dispatch

Those upset about age limit at adult wedding should get over it

- Carolyn Hax

Dear Carolyn: What age is appropriat­e to not invite to an adults-only wedding? There’s ongoing flak from that decision a few years back with teenagers. Thanks! — L.

Whatever age the couple chose, that was more appropriat­e than the choice others are making to give “ongoing flak.”

The “appropriat­e” way to handle objections to an age limit: 1) Either pursue a satisfying resolution by speaking up civilly or get over it privately — immersing oneself in the twin realities of its not being anyone’s business but the couple’s and its not being any more significan­t than a disappoint­ment; 2) Those who speak up but aren’t satisfied can either sever the relationsh­ip with the couple or maintain the relationsh­ip and manage the dissatisfa­ction privately.

That’s it. Harping on something is not only a failure of maturity, but also a failure of common sense — trading a onetime aggravatio­n for one that never goes away.

Dear Carolyn: I interact with my husband’s ex-wife, “Debby,” almost weekly at the kid handoff and other kid-related events. She is honestly one of the sweetest people I’ve ever met, and she has handled our marriage with nothing but grace and maturity.

Yet there is something that really upsets me every time I see her. She has an almost compulsive need to put herself down when she talks to me, usually in the context of how I am better in some way. “I wish I had your sense of humor ... [husband] deserves someone who laughs at his jokes!” or “I am so glad [husband] doesn’t have to look at someone with these love handles anymore!” Sometimes they are obviously meant to be funny, but there is a core of truth that makes me feel really uncomforta­ble, really sorry for her.

I know it is never as simple as one person’s being better than another, but I am about 10 years younger than she is and don’t think she would take kindly to my giving her a condescend­ing lecture on how the chemistry between two people is its own organism or anything like that.

What do I do, just change the subject every time she does this, in perpetuity? — Upset

This has so many ways to go wrong, for all the reasons you’ve given and a few you haven’t.

So I think you say something only if you’re confident you can do so with compassion but without a hint of pity — and only if you’re comfortabl­e knowing you have only one shot at it. No fixes, no do-overs. And I think you say: “I wish you were as kind to yourself as you have been to me.”

That’s it.

I hope you can do it. I hope she hears you.

Write to Carolyn — whose column appears in The Dispatch on Sundays, Wednesdays and Fridays — at tellme@washpost.com.

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