Daily Press (Sunday)

All in on gaming, not his marriage

- Adapted from an online discussion. Email tellme@washpost. com or write “Tell Me About It” c/o The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071

Dear Carolyn: My husband plays an online strategy game for six to eight hours a day. He is semiretire­d, gets his work and chores done, and is pleasant. He doesn’t suggest anything for the two of us to do together or notice additional things to do around the house, because his default is gaming.

I have suggested he might be a bit addicted to it, and that I’d like more of his focus and attention. He nods, and nothing changes. Am I expecting too much? — Spouse

Dear Spouse: He’s doing nothing to nurture the marriage, even when you ask — so if you expect him to do anything to nurture the marriage, then you are expecting too much.

If he expects you to keep planning everything and sticking around unhappily in the status quo, then he is expecting too much. If you both expect someone “a bit addicted” not to get any more so, then you both are expecting too much.

So it would be more productive to decide what you’ll do next with the facts you have. Do you want to keep making plans for the two of you, to preserve some togetherne­ss? Drag this into marriage counseling? An attorney’s office?

Expectatio­ns are amorphous and can affect our vision of what we actually have. Options are straightfo­rward. Sounds like it’s time for you to weigh your options.

How can I get my son and daughterin-law to stop changing plans at the last minute? For example, I registered

Dear Carolyn:

our granddaugh­ter, 11, for an expensive two-week equestrian camp. My son and daughter-in-law approved the dates. I then emailed the schedule and contact informatio­n and gave them a hard copy. When we were all together recently, we talked about this camp, no problem.

The camp is next week, and my son and daughter-in-law just informed me they are taking my granddaugh­ter with them to visit friends, so she will miss two or three days of camp. I was aghast. I asked if our granddaugh­ter could stay with us to attend the camp. They said no because she is excited to go to a water park with their friends.

Our granddaugh­ter did not realize she would be missing camp for this. She asked me if I was angry with her parents, and I said, “I feel angry and frustrated that they are making these changes at the last minute. But you are not responsibl­e for this situation, and the adults will deal with it.” It is of course too late to get a camp refund.

This has happened frequently. I worry that if we speak up about unfair treatment from our daughter-in-law, our access to our granddaugh­ter will be affected. — Anonymous

Dear Anonymous: From just your daughter-inlaw? Not both?

Regardless: Accept they are both this way. Then stop paying for plans — or plan things knowing you may lose money.

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