The Hamilton Spectator

Should I share why friendship ended?

- LISI TESHER ELLIE TESHER AND LISI TESHER ARE ADVICE COLUMNISTS FOR THE STAR AND BASED IN TORONTO. SEND YOUR RELATIONSH­IP QUESTIONS VIA EMAIL: ELLIE@THESTAR.CA OR LISI@THESTAR.CA

Q Years ago, we were three friends; we raised our daughters together. Our daughters are now grown, and we haven’t really seen each other much over the last 10 years. One of the friends, A, has made an effort to become closer to me again. The other friend, B, thinks it’s great we are getting the band back together.

I went out with A several times without B over the past few months. Each time, I was embarrasse­d by her terrible manners. We went for pedicures — she was rude and demanding to the women who worked there. We went for lunch and she was rude to the waiter. We went out shopping and she was rude to the sales clerks. She under-tips and returns used items to stores. Wherever we go, she tries to get something for nothing or a discount.

She just inherited a large sum of money so being frugal is not the point. Recently, we went to Ikea and she stole something. I gently confronted her; told her I saw her hide an item and not pay for it. It was a silent ride home.

I have kept all of this to myself and decided I would quietly withdraw from this friendship. It was A’s birthday recently, and I declined to join them for a celebrator­y dinner.

Now B is giving me the cold shoulder. I think A made up a lie to explain why I wouldn’t come for dinner and why l have stopped seeing her.

Should I tell B what’s been happening with A? Or wait for her to figure it out for herself?

Old Friends, Bad Habits

A If A is not the kind of friend you’d like to keep, you don’t owe it to her to hang on. You were friends when your daughters connected you. They’ve grown and the connection is no longer there. I’m sure it was nice to see each other and reminisce. But if there’s no common thread, it’s OK to walk away.

The same goes for your friendship with B. As for A’s antics — she knows you know. Short of turning her in for shopliftin­g, you can’t change her bad behaviour. B will figure it out soon enough, and she’ll either roll with it or walk away.

FEEDBACK: Regarding the married woman thinking about her youth (Jan.18): Reader: “You gave bad advice to ‘Confused’ based on the informatio­n provided. I realize the original letters are much longer and condensed for publishing purposes, but I presume the basics are accurate.

“Confused had a long ago female-female sexual relationsh­ip. Now, she is happily married to a man and has two children. She expressed complete satisfacti­on with her current life but has been thinking about her past and wondering if she should tell people.

“Being young, vulnerable, coming out of a breakup, wanting connection, summer love, being open to exploring are all the reasons why she had that relationsh­ip.

“No one needs to be told. It’s her private informatio­n, and there is no reason to tell anyone, even her husband. She stated it was in the past, no concerns about her heterosexu­ality, none about the marriage. Why upset a good marriage with informatio­n which might topple it? Some people, men particular­ly, have a hard time accepting their spouse’s past. It bothers them and taints the current relationsh­ip.

“One must accept that one’s partner has a sexual past. There’s no need to discuss it with anyone unless you decide you want to. But be aware that once you tell one person, you have no control over who else will find out. It could get back to people you don’t want knowing, including your children and your parents.

“I have 32 years of experience as a sexual health nurse and was trusted with ‘secrets’ that no one else would ever know.”

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