Lake County Record-Bee

Rekindled romance has everything except passion

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DEAR AMY >> I am a 65-yearold woman. I rekindled a relationsh­ip with a man I have known for over 50 years. He and I dated briefly six years ago, and I was totally into him.

We stopped seeing each other because he was financiall­y irresponsi­ble. I could not see myself paying for everything with no help from him.

Fast-forward to 2022. He reached out to me.

He’s still single, I am single, so we decided to try this again, this time with my eyes open and asking questions.

I moved to my family home, made renovation­s, and my financial situation is good because I don’t have a mortgage.

He lives in an apartment, but is planning to move closer to me.

We are heading into seven months of this reconnect, and I am very happy and content with him, but I am not sexually attracted to him.

We hold hands and kiss, but there is no sexual passion. We sleep in the same bed. I feel like he is a very good friend and I want him to be with me forever, but I feel guilty because of the lack of sexual intimacy.

I enjoy sex and want to have it in my life.

I feel I am being very selfish holding onto him, knowing that there is no passion.

What should I do?

— Not Feeling It

DEAR NOT FEELING IT >> It sounds as if you are in good shape, in terms of your life choices and lifestyle.

You don’t mention whether your guy’s negative characteri­stics that led you to reject him several years ago have changed at all.

My theory is that in your previous relationsh­ip with him, you were temporaril­y blinded by the hotness.

Now — your eyes are very much open, and the walls you built that drove you to reject him previously are still up.

Sexual compatibil­ity is all about trust and abandon, and although you like and love this guy, the trust isn’t there.

To answer your question, yes, it is selfish of you to be in a romantic relationsh­ip without disclosing what’s really going on with you.

Talking honestly could lead to a rekindling of your attraction, but even if it doesn’t — your guy deserves to know the truth about how you’re feeling.

DEAR AMY >> “Concerned Sibling” was worried about a sister, who was grieving her husband’s death while ignoring her role as executor of their father’s estate.

Being an executor can be overwhelmi­ng. It is helpful for people to know that they can renounce their role as executor and turn the job over to someone else.

— Been There

DEAR BEEN THERE >> Thank you. In my state, a notarized form filed with the court can complete this process.

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