Daily Southtown

Grandma frets over possible middle name

- ASK AMY By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter@askingamy — Abuse Survivor Copyright 2024 by Amy Dickinson Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Dear Amy: My 24-year-old daughter is expecting a baby boy. She told me that she plans to use her biological dad’s name as her baby’s middle name.

Her dad, “Tobias,” and I divorced when she was 6 and her brother was 4. At the time, the literature advised divorced parents to never say anything unkind about one’s ex.

Thus, I did not tell my daughter how horribly I was abused, both physically and verbally, his serial adultery, as well as his alcohol and cocaine use that drove us to near bankruptcy. He mercilessl­y targeted me, but never harmed our children. After lots of therapy I still cringe when I hear his name.

My daughter has a good relationsh­ip with her father. I’m happy about this, but I can hardly bear the thought that an innocent baby will have the name of a person I consider to be a monster. Your thoughts?

—K

Protecting a child’s regard for her father while she is young is the right thing to do – as long as you know that the child is safe.

Now that your daughter is an adult, you should be more forthcomin­g. There are valid reasons to disclose your ex-husband’s history of addiction.

Drug and alcohol abuse might explain (but not excuse) some of his outof-control behavior during your marriage. Addiction might answer some unanswered questions your daughter has held from her own experience­s with her father.

And addiction does seem to run in some families, so

Dear K:

your daughter should be told about it.

You should answer any question honestly, but in my opinion you should keep in mind that a child benefits from an attachment to a parent (even a deeply flawed one), while an adult has the duty and responsibi­lity to make their own decisions about their own relationsh­ips.

So no – don’t describe her father as a “monster,” even though his behavior was monstrous. This would not necessaril­y lead to her picking another middle name for her child and would box both of you into a corner.

You should separate the conversati­on about your past from the middle name conversati­on because when it comes to their child’s name, the parents get to choose, and if you don’t like the name they choose, then … too bad.

Dear Amy: I’ve been with my boyfriend “Anthony” for three years. We met in college and moved in together after graduation.

I adore him, and he and I are very compatible and very kind and loving toward each other.

Anthony recently told me that he doesn’t see himself ever getting married. His folks divorced when he was a child and each remarried other people. I have never heard that there was any discord there, and Anthony seems to have a decent relationsh­ip with his parents and stepparent­s.

When Anthony made his statement, he spoke as if we were just casual pals, sitting around and talking about hypothetic­als.

I am shattered to learn this and don’t know what to do now. Your advice?

— Sad

You and “Anthony” live together. You are romantic cohabiting partners. His tone might have sounded casual, but I suspect he said this quite deliberate­ly. He is telling you something extremely important about where he stands.

If you are itching to get married, you really need to have a very serious conversati­on about this. Does he see staying with you in an exclusive committed partnershi­p for a very long time? Is he interested in having a family?

I’m sorry you are going through this. You have some tough conversati­ons and choices ahead.

Dear Sad:

“At a Loss” described the fact that her husband seemed to resent her closeness to her adult children. You are right: his behavior is concerning.

Now that At A Loss is retired, her social relationsh­ips are important for her safety and wellness. Abusers work hard to alienate their victims.

My ex-husband did this. A healthy, caring spouse would not avoid his own children or seek to alienate her from her own.

Dear Amy:

Dear Survivor: This husband seemed quite jealous over his wife’s affectiona­te attachment to her children. This does not bode well for their future.

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