The Oklahoman

Work assignment abroad makes waves back home

- Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069. Send your queries to “My Answer,” c/o Billy Graham,

I took an assignment with my company that posted me to Hong Kong for two years. My adult children, ages 21, 26 and 29, were supportive, although my youngest was not especially happy about it. We video chat with our kids, trying to stay involved as much as possible. We have also visited multiple times. It’s not always ideal, but we try. We have also offered to pay for them to visit us as often as they would like.

My company has asked me to stay one more year because I haven’t completely finished what I was sent here to do. I’m inclined to do it. My youngest child, however, is so angry at me for even considerin­g it that she won’t talk to me. She refuses to come and visit, and is punishing me for needing to stay an additional year. Am I choosing my job over my children? Yes, you are, but there’s a practical reason for it. Also, your adult “children” aren’t children anymore, even though your youngest is acting like one. As a career woman, if you feel you should stay in Hong Kong to complete your assignment, that is what you need to do.

I am responding to the letter from “Unsure in the West” (Oct. 9). You advised that you “see nothing wrong with what she did” in opening a box in a grocery store and eating some of the contents before paying at the checkout. You should know that legally, eating or using the contents of an unpaid item in the aisle is considered “shopliftin­g.” The perpetrato­r can be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.

I am a certified protection profession­al. While the intent may not be to “steal,” retailers — whose industry loses billions of dollars to theft each year — require that items in their stores be paid for before they can be used or eaten.

An employee of mine was assigned to work in a major grocery chain. He took a bottle of eye drops and used them while he was in the aisle. He had taken the exact change from his pocket and was holding it in his hand as he walked to the checkout. Before he could get there, he was arrested by store security. As a courtesy to me, the chain agreed to reinstate him if he passed a lie-detector test determinin­g his “intent to steal.” (He passed the test.) I strongly recommend that the practice of using or eating items before paying for them never be condoned.

I apologize for saying otherwise and thank you for your letter. Other readers also responded to that column citing firsthand experience­s working in the retail field.

Several of them mentioned that it is impossible to correctly charge for food that is sold by weight if someone has eaten some, such as fruit. Others said that customers sometimes get to the register to pay and realize they have left their wallet at home, or their credit card is rejected.

A reader also suggested that if someone wants to pay for food after consuming it, that’s what restaurant­s are for. In restaurant­s, if the customer can’t pay, there are dishes to be washed.

UNIVERSAL UCLICK

You’re right; most of us like to be liked. And sadly, we may even do things we know are wrong (like lying about ourselves or doing things we know aren’t right) in order to get someone to like us. But such “friendship­s” are seldom lasting. The Bible rightly says, “What a person desires is unfailing love; better to be poor than a liar” (Proverbs 19:22).

You have taken the first step to break away from this by realizing what your motives actually are. All too often we do things like this without even thinking — but this only makes them worse. Instead, face your apparent hunger to be liked by everyone, and realize how harmful it can be. The Bible says, “Give careful thought to the paths for your feet and be steadfast in all your ways . ... Keep your foot from evil” (Proverbs 4:26-27).

The most important step you can take, however, is to turn to Jesus Christ and commit your life to Him. God loves you more than anyone else ever will, and He wants you to become part of His family forever. Once you understand how much God loves you, your hunger to be liked by others will begin to fade.

God also will help you deal with temptation — and especially the temptation to impress others and get them to like you. When that temptation comes, face it ... flee from it ... and thank God that He loves you and is your constant friend.

TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

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