Albany Times Union

Introvert must be honest with aunt

- ABIGAIL VAN BUREN

DEAR ABBY: My aunt is a perfection­ist who loves hosting get-togethers at her house once a week. I love being at home on a day off, so I can get chores done around the house and catch up on rest. I feel like I’m suffocatin­g when she insists on including me, because it is time away from my home on a Sunday or a holiday.

When I attend, I feel like I’m really there to do the behind-the-scenes things, like dishes, trash, etc., and I don’t get to rela x, visit and enjoy the get-togethers. If I don’t attend or I protest in any way, she gets really upset.

I don’t know how to achieve a win-win for both of us. My aunt has a big heart and loves enter taining people. I’m an introvert, and I’m definitely not an entertaine­r. Being around people makes me feel over whelmed, where it revitalize­s her. Please help.

— Uncomforta­ble in the

Midwest DEAR UNCOMFORTA­BLE: Explain your feelings to your aunt exactly as you have to me. If she’s as big-hearted as you say, she should understand and let you off the hook without becoming “really upset.” From where I sit, you are being treated less as a guest than as a one-person, free kitchen and cleanup crew. You have the right to spend your holidays and weekends exactly as you wish, just as she does.

DEAR ABBY: I recently confessed my feelings to a married man after a year of liking him. We have known each other for five years.

I ignored the signs of his interest in me until this past year. He hasn’t even been married a year yet, but he gives me attention and f lirts with me.

After I told him how I felt, he didn’t tell me where he stood with it, didn’t shut me down or tell me he feels the way I do. But he did hug me four days later, something he has never done before.

What do I do in a situation like this? I can’t let these feelings go.

— Letting go in the West DEAR LETTING GO: What you do in a situation like this is stop chasing a married man. You knew him for four years before his wedding. During that time he not only never asked you out, he courted and married someone else. For your sake, you had better find a way to let those feelings go or channel them elsewhere, because what you want is not going to happen and will keep you from finding someone who is available.

DEAR ABBY: My husband was terminally ill when a Gofundme account was set up on Facebook to help raise money for his expenses. He has since passed away, and after the medical expenses were paid, there’s still quite a bit of money left over. My question is, who does that money belong to? My mother-in-law says the money should be split between me and my stepdaught­er. I think the money belongs only to me. Please comment.

— Maria in California DEAR MARIA: Please accept my sympathy for the loss of your husband. Before grabbing the money, ask yourself what your husband would want. Would there be any reason not to share it with his daughter? If the answer to that question is no, then listen to your mother-inlaw and do as she suggests.

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