Times Standard (Eureka)

He wants a shave; she wants marriage

- Amy Dickinson You can contact Amy Dickinson via email: askamy@amydickins­on.com and follow her on Twitter @askingamy.

DEAR AMY » I have been in a relationsh­ip with a man for 10 years.

He is 71 and lives in another state (50 miles away), and I am 70. I am divorced and he has never been married.

We both own our homes.

When I had a job in another state, I would come home on weekends, and he would come to my house on Friday and leave on Sunday.

We spent most weekends and holidays together and went on vacations (all at my expense because he lives on a low fixed income, and I make much more money than he does).

Since I retired in October, he is perfectly content to keep our previous arrangemen­t intact.

He does not stay any longer than Sunday unless we have special plans for Sunday night, or go on vacation together.

I want to spend more time with him, but on Sundays he seems anxious to return to his hometown.

He is retired, and when he gets home, he spends his time hanging out at barbershop­s with his friends. Then he comes back to my house most Fridays.

When we are together, he seems content with our relationsh­ip, and we talk on the phone often.

I recently learned from a confidenti­al reliable source that he was asked when he and I are going to marry. He replied, “Never. I have loved only one woman in my life, and if I didn’t marry her, I will never marry.”

I was devastated to hear this because he knows I want to marry him.

Should I confront him with what I have learned, or keep quiet as if I don’t know what he has said? — Anonymous Woman

DEAR ANONYMOUS » Let’s recap: You have been in this relationsh­ip for 10 years. Ten. Years. A decade.

You sound like a successful, smart, independen­t woman. Logic would tell you that a never-married man who reaches the age of 70 without marrying (and spending 10 years with you without marrying) would remain unmarried. And that a man who loves his own home and Monday-Friday barbershop hang-time would either invite you to join him, or would continue to enjoy this arrangemen­t alone, because it works for him.

You have now heard that your guy has loved only one woman in his life — and presumably that woman is not you.

You seem to have surrendere­d your own rights in this relationsh­ip. I’m talking about the right to use your voice, the right to ask questions, the right to state — out loud — what you want, and the right to leave a relationsh­ip if it doesn’t serve your needs.

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