The News-Times

Man’s gift to neighbor deemed ‘weird’

- Jeanne Phillips Write to Dear Abby at P.O. Box 96440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or dearabby.com

Dear Abby: I went for a jog the other morning, and when I returned home I discovered I was locked out of my house because the garage door keypad wasn’t working.

I had left without my cellphone or a key, so I tried to contact my wife through our Ring doorbell.

My wife told me she’d phone a friend and my mother to see if they could deliver a key.

In the interim, I fidgeted with the garage door keypad and discovered I could remove the battery.

I knocked on the door of a neighbor who’d previously popped their head out and asked to use their cellphone and also asked if there was any chance they had a replacemen­t battery, which they did.

My neighbor invited me inside to call my wife and wave off a key delivery.

I later stopped and bought a thank-you card, a replacemen­t battery and $20 in Amazon gift cards with the intention of gifting all three to my neighbor. My wife thinks the gift cards were unnecessar­y and a “weird” thing to give my neighbor.

The neighbor and their partner are in their late 30s or early 40s, seemingly financiall­y well enough off, and I thought a gift card was a universall­y accepted gift. I thought it would be a nice gesture without being too over-the-top. Was I too generous? Or is it too forward of an offering?

Saved In The Midwest

Dear Saved: Your offering wasn’t weird, too generous or over-the-top. The gratitude you were expressing was from your heart and a reflection of how desperate you felt at the time.

Your wife should have stayed out of it.

Dear Abby: Forty years ago, I had an affair with a married man.

When he broke up with me, I didn’t think I could live through it, but I had a 2-yearold daughter from another relationsh­ip and I had to hold it together. A few years later, I met and married my husband of 35 years.

Three months ago, I received a message on Facebook saying, “If this is who I think it is, how are things?” I know I never should have, but I answered. My former lover lives hundreds of miles from me, but we text almost every day. I am just realizing how narcissist­ic he is, and I need to end this.

My husband and I have had problems over the years, but we have raised three very successful children and have three beautiful grandkids. It was nice to hear how my ex always loved me and how we are soul mates — saying everything I wanted to hear. But now that I’ve been dragged down that rabbit hole, I need to get out and quit falling for his lies. Please help.

Muddled In Massachuse­tts

Dear Muddled: If this emotional fling continues, it will destroy the life you have created with your husband of 35 years. If there are issues in your marriage that made you vulnerable to your old lover, I urge you to deal with them.

Please reread the first paragraph of your letter, then GHOST AND BLOCK THIS PERSON. You owe him nothing — not even a goodbye.

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