The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Woman gets crowded out of bedroom

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

Dear Abby: My boyfriend, “Paul,” and I have been together for 18 months. We are both divorced and each have two children. Mine are in college. His are in elementary and middle school. They stay overnight with him on the weekends.

When they are there, I go home and sleep at my place. Over the last few months, Paul has asked me to stay the night when they are there; however, he wants me to sleep on the couch because they sleep in the bed with him. A few weeks ago, he announced, “I’m going to talk to them about you and me sleeping in my bed together and see if they are OK with that.” Since then, I have heard nothing.

Is it acceptable for children to sleep in the same bed with their parent? And, is it acceptable for children to decide if Paul and I sleep together?

Confused in Kansas

Dear Confused: The answers to your questions are “Yes,” and “No.” In some cultures, it is common for families to share the same sleeping accommodat­ions. In our culture, it is less common but not unheard of.

As to your second question, Paul may be uncomforta­ble raising the subject with his children, or they may have told him they like the status quo and he hasn’t communicat­ed that to you. But they are not the ones who should make that decision.

Dear Abby: Twenty years ago, I had a falling-out with my siblings and my mother.

I was in an abusive marriage. They wanted me to leave, but after seven years of his brainwashi­ng, I was convinced that I was unable to live without him. My siblings invited me out to visit them and proceeded to browbeat me into leaving him. After three nights of six-hour sessions of being berated and hearing I was a terrible mother for staying with him, it was almost a relief to go home to my husband.

I haven’t spoken to my family in 20 years. I escaped that marriage five years ago, and my mother and I slowly began rebuilding a relationsh­ip over Facebook. Three months ago, she passed away.

One of my siblings unfriended me and my daughter from my mother’s Facebook before they posted that she passed away. I heard the news from one of my friends who was also FB friends with my mother. Someone I know is saying I should reach out to my siblings and try to rebuild a relationsh­ip. What are your thoughts?

Like An Only Child

Dear Like: That your siblings would unfriend you and your daughter from your mother’s Facebook page so you wouldn’t know she was gone was cruel. If you want to reach out to your siblings, by all means do so, but before you do that, please talk with a licensed mental health profession­al.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States