The Oklahoman

Donation of kidney ends with loss of a friendship

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DEAR ABBY: My friend “Virginia” and I have known each other for 11 years. Five years ago she went into renal failure and was on dialysis for three years. She needed a kidney transplant. Her three healthy siblings refused to be tested as a possible match. I agreed to be tested. After several procedures it was determined I was a “close enough” match, so we decided to go for it.

It has been 18 months now, and I have not seen or heard from Virginia since the day after the surgery. I called her a few times to make sure she was doing well. She never returned my calls. She lives only four blocks away, so I know things are going OK for her. I figured I’d give her some space, but that space has turned into forever. I haven’t heard from her family either. They visited Virginia at the hospital, but didn’t stop in to see me just three rooms away. How could I have been so wrong about someone I knew for so long? My therapist says I’ll have to “adjust to the injustice.”

— Blindsided in New York DEAR BLINDSIDED:

I can see why you are hurt by the abrupt change in your friend’s behavior, and believe me, I empathize. The knee-jerk reaction of someone who hasn’t been through this would be to say what unfeeling and ungrateful people Virginia and her family are, because you literally saved her life.

However, it may help you to better understand what has happened if you consider that while you saved Virginia’s life, sometimes the burden of gratitude is more than someone can bear. For whatever reason, she may carry some guilt about owing you as much as she does, which is why she can no longer interact with you. As to her family, that none of her siblings were willing to be tested as possible matches for her speaks volumes about them and the quality of their relationsh­ips, so stop feeling slighted. Listen to your therapist because she/he has given you some practical advice.

DEAR ABBY: Why is it that when women visit, they’ll take their handbag and put it on the kitchen counter, the kitchen table or on the dining room table? Their handbags have been on as many floors as my shoes. Don’t they think about what they’re doing?

— Grossed Out in the East

DEAR GROSSED OUT:

I think the answer to your question is that the majority of women who carry purses don’t think about this and just absentmind­edly place them on the floor, a table, counter or chair. However, for individual­s who are concerned about the transfer of germs, there is a solution. There are portable hooks they can carry with them that rest on a table or desk so the purse can be suspended if it has a handle. I have seen them advertised on the internet, and they are inexpensiv­e.

 ??  ?? Jeanne Phillips
Jeanne Phillips

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