Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

How much do I disclose on a date?

- Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@creators.com.

DEAR ANNIE » I’m a 60-year-old male about to reenter the dating world. I’m being treated for Kahler’s disease — multiple myeloma — with a daily maintenanc­e of a low-dose chemothera­py pill. I have no outward appearance of having cancer, and there have been no lifestyle challenges.

At some point, this disease will relapse and eventually be terminal. When is the time to bring up this difficult subject?

I think being open and honest early on is best. Some of my friends say it may appear I’m playing the sympathy card or disclosing a very personal subject too soon.

Others say to wait and see if a serious relationsh­ip starts developing and then disclose it. That option seems to me like I’m hiding something and not a way to start a healthy relationsh­ip.

What is your opinion on this subject?

— Unsure What To Do.

DEAR UNSURE » If being open and honest feels best to you, then your future partner will appreciate that and like the fact that you are trustworth­y from the beginning. Any potential love interest who thought you were playing the sympathy card by telling them about what you have gone through is not a good potential partner. Better to weed out people who won’t love ALL of you sooner rather than later so that you can find the right love.

DEAR ANNIE » I’ve been reading and enjoying your column for a while now and see a lot of letters from individual­s who long for a relationsh­ip with toxic parents but don’t know how or whether to set limits with them, cut them off or try to forgive them. A good example was the column from April 15 from “Trying to Heal,” who grew up in an extremely abusive household with a functionin­g (mean, abusive) alcoholic for a mother.

I am an academic psychiatri­st and therapist who has been writing about how to handle such situations in a way that is very effective if a patient can get up the nerve to do it. It involves researchin­g the family over several generation­s using a “genogram” to come to an understand­ing about how shared mental conflicts, leading to the problemati­c interactio­ns, develop in family members in response to historical circumstan­ces and the procliviti­es of the involved individual­s.

The goal is for the client to develop empathy for the parent’s obnoxious behavior, which is often far more ambivalent and regretful than it may seem to be. I have come up with several strategies for helping people get past the parent’s defensiven­ess to discuss the problem in a way that leads to active problem-solving rather than fighting. The goal is not to “fix” the parent but to “fix” the relationsh­ip.

I don’t know if you’d be interested, but I think you would be. I’m sure you get many self-help book authors trying to get plugs, but I believe my approach is very different from what’s out there. For cases that do not involve a history of sexual or severe physical child abuse, I have a book out for the public that outlines the procedures involved. It’s called “Coping With Critical, Demanding, and Dysfunctio­nal Parents.” For the more severe cases (I specialize­d in people with borderline personalit­y disorder), a therapist would be needed (I also have books out for therapists).

Thank you, and keep up the good work!

— David M. Allen, M.D.

DEAR DR. ALLEN » Your approach is fascinatin­g, and your use of a “genogram” sounds very clever for understand­ing parental abuse. Thank you for sharing your insights.

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