Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Grandma can’t possibly do it all

- Dear Abby Columnist

DEAR ABBY >> My daughter is pregnant with her second child. Her first, my granddaugh­ter, is 2, and the light of my life. I lovingly offered to take care of her when it’s time for my daughter to have the baby. She’s having a C-section, so she may be in the hospital for a couple days.

My daughter wants me to come to her house one day out of every weekend to learn my granddaugh­ter’s routine. I have spent several weekends at her house doing this, but not every weekend, as I work full time from home and also have a full-time rental business (30 rental units) that I manage with my fiance.

Recently, my fiance has taken ill and is bedridden. Everything, including his care, has fallen on me. When I called my daughter to tell her I wouldn’t be able to come for the weekends because of his illness and my other responsibi­lities, she lost it and became hateful and confrontat­ional. I tried explaining that this is, hopefully, a temporary situation and that I will still be able to do what I promised, to no avail. Nothing I said appeased her. We are not talking, and I really cannot endure another confrontat­ion with her. I am at a loss as to what to do.

— Sidelined in Florida

DEAR SIDELINED >> Give your pregnant, possibly hormonal, daughter time to cool off, and then contact her again. See if the two of you can work out an arrangemen­t that’s sensible. You already have your hands full, and the additional responsibi­lities because of your fiance’s illness may prevent you from caring for your grandchild as you had planned. If she unloads on you again, tell her you know she’s disappoint­ed and so are you, but you can’t handle another abusive confrontat­ion and end the conversati­on. She will manage.

DEAR ABBY >> My friend was telling me about the delicious dinner he had last night at a local restaurant. His meal cost $8, and he raved to the waitress about how the food melted in his mouth and how incredible it tasted. He compared it favorably to the $70 dinner he’d had at another restaurant the night before. He then informed me he was “in and out of that restaurant for only $10.”

My response was, “Are you telling me you left a $2 tip for THE most delicious meal you just ate?” He replied that he gave her a 25% tip and thought it was fair. I told him I thought he was cheap, and he could have given her more money at the very least for her effort in serving him. He said I should write you and ask, so here I am.

— Flabbergas­ted in Ohio

DEAR FLABBERGAS­TED >> Truthfully, those who can afford to do so should give more. My suggestion would have been that your friend should have added a generous tip for the COOK sweating in the kitchen, who produced that meal.

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