Connecticut Post

Alumnus is disappoint­ed by snub

- Write to Dear Abby at P.O. Box 96440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or dearabby.com

Dear Abby: I recently found out that my 20-year high school reunion took place and I wasn’t invited. I’m still occasional­ly in touch with several friends from high school and easy to find on social media.

I did attend my 10-year reunion, although I may not have received an invite myself because I went as part of a group. I wasn’t very popular or close to the “in” crowd in high school, but I was social, albeit quirky. I’m sure it was a simple oversight, but I’m having trouble getting past this. I keep thinking about the trope of the loser in high school coming back to the reunion to shine.

Abby, I feel pathetic because I wasn’t even asked. I’m not sure I could have gone because I have two babies at home, and we are still somewhat COVIDcauti­ous, but it hurts not to have been invited. Any suggestion­s for how to stop feeling slighted?

Unwelcome In Massachuse­tts

Dear Unwelcome: Think back. Did you sign up for the alumni associatio­n when you attended that 10year reunion? I’ll bet you didn’t because if you had, they wouldn’t have left you alone and you would be receiving appeals for money and current informatio­n. I am pretty sure your omission from the guest list was an oversight. To prevent it from happening again, all you have to do is be proactive about making sure you are included in the next one.

Dear Abby: My commonlaw husband and my daughter don’t get along. Even though he is good with kids, she doesn’t want him around her children. The last time we were at her home, he got upset with me. He demanded we leave and went out to the car to wait for me.

My daughter felt he was disrespect­ful. She was upset and asked me what was going on.

I became upset and my granddaugh­ters saw me crying, which got them upset. My daughter then informed me she doesn’t want him around her kids again.

Now, a year later, my husband still will not acknowledg­e any wrongdoing, nor will she. I’m stuck in the middle. He has threatened that if I spend time with her, he will spend time away from home. I am not choosing him over my kids. How can I handle this?

Just Wants Peace

In Canada

Dear Just Wants Peace: Handle this by stepping out of the middle. If you want to see your granddaugh­ters, visit them alone.

If your common-law husband follows through on his threat to spend time away from home, that would be the perfect time for him to do it.

If you can’t trust him while you take a little family time off, then you don’t have much of a marriage — common-law or otherwise.

To My Readers: The eight days of the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah begin at sundown.

Happy Hanukkah, everyone. A joyous Festival of Lights to all of us.

— “Latkas” Of Love, Abby

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