Times Colonist

Quiet pal will perk up when she meets right person

- LISI TESHER Ask Lisi Was once a ‘Bonus Child.’ Lisi Tesher is an advice columnists based in Toronto. Send your questions to lisi@thestar.ca

Dear Lisi: My friend is beautiful, smart, funny, kind and generous. She’s an incredible friend and I love her so much. But she says she “doesn’t like people.”

I met her at a course we both took after university. We sat next to each other and started chatting. I admit, I was the one who initiated the conversati­on, but she was a quick win. Like I said, she’s very funny and personable.

But I’ve seen her completely switch off, and it’s sad. For example, we went travelling one spring. We hopped in a gondola to go up a mountain for a spectacula­r view and planned on hiking down. An older couple joined us in the gondola just as the doors were closing. They were laughing and having so much fun. I struck up a conversati­on with them and had a most enjoyable ride.

My friend didn’t say one word. I don’t want her to be afraid — I want her to shine her light on the whole world. I also know that she wants to find a nice guy. How will this happen if she literally goes mute?

I want to help her overcome her fear and anxieties.

Wishful Friend You are a good friend to be so concerned, but your friend is who she is, and that’s not going to change unless she wants it to. For now, just be her wingwoman. When she meets the right person, she’ll come out of her shell. She did for you.

FEEDBACK Regarding the mom concerned about her daughter’s friend (Dec. 21):

Reader — “While there may be nothing untoward happening at home to make the friend want to get out, please consider that there is also every possibilit­y that something is amiss.

“When I was younger than nine and into my teens, I visited friends whenever possible and did everything within my means to be an asset to my friends’ parents. I knew many of them had tight finances and I was fully aware that feeding and housing me cost them money.

“I would help clear and set the table, do dishes, clean the kitchen, the floors, vacuum and help with laundry. I pottytrain­ed my best friend’s youngest brother and read the younger children bedtime stories.

“I helped with shopping, put away groceries, cleaned the bathrooms and performed other assorted chores. I genuinely wanted to help (it was a real morale booster to be appreciate­d and thanked for my help), but I also did it because I knew by being an asset, the parents would invite me to stay.

“My mother and father were disinteres­ted parents, and as the youngest of four children, I was too often at the mercy of my siblings. My parents were alcoholics and abusive (both sexual and physical), but this was not known outside of my house. My parents were so uninvolved that it fell to my eldest sister to sign my report cards, and no one ever showed up for parents’ night, my graduation­s, nor my wedding (only my brother attended the latter).

“So perhaps this woman and her daughter are providing a safe haven, attention and muchneeded love and security. I cannot imagine how I would have turned out if my friends and their parents had not taken me in under their wing.

“I would encourage your readers to welcome and shelter those who seem to need refuge and a good meal because you never know what is going on behind closed doors.

“I do not exaggerate by saying it likely saved me and if not me, it at least gave my mind and body a chance to recover and heal and likely saved my sanity.”

 ?? ??

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