The Norwalk Hour

Daughter doesn’t want commentary

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

Dear Abby: I am a 29-yearold woman in a healthy, loving relationsh­ip with my boyfriend of 2 1/2 years. We talk about marriage and kids and are committed to each other. We know we are each other’s special one. He recently bought a home, and we live together. My issue is with my mother. I feel she won’t be happy with me until I’m married and have children.

She and Dad met and were married within six months, so to her, any relationsh­ip that lasts longer than that without marriage or an engagement must not be the real deal. It has been extremely frustratin­g over the past couple of years. She slips in judgmental comments all the time and clearly doesn’t respect my relationsh­ip with the man I have chosen.

If I try to defend my life and our relationsh­ip, she says I’m too defensive and must be unhappy. If I say nothing, which has been my approach for the past six months or so, her snide comments continue. Help!

It’s My Life in Colorado

Dear I.M.L.: It’s time to draw the line. Tell your mother you know she loves you and is concerned for your welfare, but you do not plan to marry anyone on her timeline. Then say, calmly, that her comments are hurtful, and you need her to quit the needling, or she will be seeing a lot less of you. Be prepared to follow through.

Dear Abby: I have wrestled with this for a year. I thought I had a good friend. I had a pacemaker implanted, and eight months later I broke my elbow. Both times I was hospitaliz­ed. Not once did she come to see me or send a card, even though she is a card lover. I overlooked it until my son’s death made me rethink our friendship. She sent me some fruit but didn’t make one call to see how we were doing, no visitation, nothing. She didn’t send a sympathy card either.

I now regard her as selfish, and I can no longer bring myself to be friends with her.

Am I wrong? Are my feelings valid?

Abandoned in Florida

Dear Abandoned: Sometimes people feel extremely uncomforta­ble about what they should say or do when an illness, an accident or a death arises. That your friend made herself absent when you needed her support is unfortunat­e. Not knowing her, I can’t guess her reason, and neither can you. So before YOU abandon HER, you should ask her that question.

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