The Hamilton Spectator

It’s time to think carefully about this wedding

- DEAR ELLIE ellieadvic­e.com

Q. I’m an older man with a grown daughter who was not a very big part of my life (due to her mother’s infidelity and refusal to allow visitation — after multiple court battles and one contempt charge).

I’ve met someone and we are planning to get married. But recently my fiancée informed me that she did not want my grown daughter to be at the wedding (nor any of my friends, either).

My fiancée has been most insistent that I try to have a relationsh­ip with my daughter, but that the relationsh­ip would not include her (i.e. the fiancée).

I am hurt and upset but don’t know what to do other than to acquiesce since it really is the “bride’s day.”

A. It may be “the bride’s day” but it is the groom’s life — yours — that she’s trying to control. This is a red flag.

Without your describing any more explanator­y reasons for her demand that neither your daughter nor your friends attend, leaves the impression that your fiancée doesn’t want any attention on who you are and whom you have been.

Worse, she has no interest in meeting or getting to know your only daughter … as if that occasional contact would also take attention away from total focus on your marital relationsh­ip.

I urge you to think through carefully what marriage to this woman would mean for you. So far, I see too many restrictio­ns being imposed on you, plus every decision hers, with you as an accessory to her life.

Postpone the wedding and consider going to couples’ counsellin­g with her (if she’ll go). It may provide a better chance at hearing any logical reasons behind her arbitrary (and mean) commands. Friend ruins every dinner party

Q. We have a friend who won’t eat our food. If I prepare a meat dish, he’ll announce that he only eats fish. If we order in, he’ll have heard from others that the restaurant is filthy. Nothing makes him happy. Every dinner party or celebratio­n is ruined.

On New Year’s Eve, he arrived but wouldn’t speak to anyone because he’d had a disagreeme­nt with his spouse. If he’s in an acceptable mood, he’ll discuss his office problems for the whole night.

We like to chat about light things and not get into heavy topics. How do we handle this situation?

A. You obviously feel some obligation to keep inviting this man and his wife, but if there’s any “out,” you could at least lessen the pain by cutting down on the frequency of invitation­s.

If that’s impossible, then discuss the menu and his food preference­s first, as in, “If I make a roast beef which everyone else wants, will you eat it?”

If the answer’s “no,” you can choose between asking what he wants or suggesting he bring what he’d prefer. (I’ve personally done and seen other hosts do both, to accommodat­e people known to have sensitive food requiremen­ts.)

Also, when ordering in, alert him ahead and tell him to choose what he wants, or, if necessary, to order his own from elsewhere. Mostly, this man appears to be an attentions­eeker.

Try to ignore the comments and mood. Change the topic to something of common interest to the rest of your guests.

Assaulter is the only one to blame

Readers commentary regarding the writer’s girlfriend whose mother arranged a social evening with a family friend who drugged and raped her (Nov. 29 and Jan. 6):

“When you blame a sexual assault victim for the abuse or atrocity they suffered, you increase the number of rapes in your community.

“By taking the responsibi­lity away from the rapist, you create a socially-protected class of offender unlikely to ever see justice.

“This leads to more rapes because victims can’t come forward without reprisal, aren’t supported, and will likely bear the burden for another’s actions even while (sometimes), they themselves were unconsciou­s.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada