Albuquerque Journal

Husband gives his spouse ultimatum

- DEAR ABBY Abigail Van Buren Contact Dear Abby at DearAbby. com or P.O. BOX 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069

DEAR ABBY: My husband has a poor relationsh­ip with our son and his wife. They want nothing to do with him and don’t want him around the grandchild­ren. My husband tells me I should stick up for him and tell them what they’re doing is wrong, and that he would never do or say anything bad in front of the grands.

My son and his wife have made their decision. If I send them a text or visit them, it causes fights in our house because he is not welcome. Now my husband is demanding that I choose: Stand by him and have nothing to do with the kids, or choose the kids and have nothing more to do with him. How fair is it to have to make a choice like that? — TORN IN FLORIDA

DEAR TORN: Fairness has nothing to do with it. Your husband is trying to blackmail you into running interferen­ce for him with your son. It’s time to decide which is more important — having a relationsh­ip with your son, his wife and your grandchild­ren or remaining with your controllin­g, unpleasant husband. Keep doing what you’re doing and call his bluff, because disengagin­g from you could be more complicate­d — and expensive — than your husband realizes.

DEAR ABBY: I am writing because my wife has lost interest in her appearance. I love her, but I cannot figure out a way to tell her she has become obese. She seems to think her appearance is just fine.

I know I can’t say anything without her getting extremely upset, so I’m in a quandary about how to get her to understand that obesity is not only a danger to her health but also looks awful. — WORRIED HUSBAND

DEAR HUSBAND:

The message might be less unwelcome if you concentrat­e solely on the HEALTH aspect of her weight gain. Encourage her to see her doctor, begin exercising (with you, if necessary) and adopt a healthy diet for BOTH of you “because you love her, and want to enjoy many more happy years together.”

DEAR ABBY: A relative recently moved to my state and wants to get together more than I care to. This person had more than a year to prepare for the move, and now is overwhelme­d, needy, whiny and complainin­g constantly.

I’m now being asked for informatio­n regarding many of the personal services I use. My relative talks over me and doesn’t listen, so conversati­on is difficult. Aside from not initiating calls or answering my phone, have you any suggestion­s about how I can limit my interactio­ns with this person? — KEEPING TO MYSELF

DEAR KEEPING: If your relative has a computer or cellphone, email or text a list of resources they can use to acclimate to the community. And after that, be “busy.”

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