Las Vegas Review-Journal

Mother’s live-in beau might upset sons

- JEANNE PHILLIPS

DEAR ABBY: I am going through a nasty divorce. My sons, ages 4, 11 and 12, live with my husband, 1,000 miles away. They will be with me for summer vacation. This will be the longest stay they will have with me, and I’m excited and nervous at the same time.

My problem is, my children do not know I have been seeing someone, and we live together. How should I break this to them?

I have asked “Sean” how he feels about this, and he is scared of my boys. I’m fearful of how my children will react once I introduce them. I am afraid they will want to go back to their father. My soon-to-be-ex-husband said he has told them I left them for a new beau, which is not true. — Treading Lightly in the South

DEAR TREADING: Consider calling your older boys and saying that you will want them to meet “someone special who has made Mom very happy” and you are excited that they will be with you.

Once your boys arrive, schedule plenty of oneon-one time with them. Because of what your almost-ex has told them, it’s important they know they are most important to you, and you did not leave them for anyone.

DEAR ABBY: I’m a 66-year-old married man with two grown kids. I taught high school for 30 years.

A couple of years ago, a young English teacher, “Marci,” was teaching a class in my room, and we became friends. Since then, we have been going out on Fridays after school to have a few beers. We just enjoy each other’s company, but my wife thinks it is weird.

We have been married for 34 years. It doesn’t make sense to me that she thinks I shouldn’t be hanging out with my former co-worker. I have started not telling her Marci will be at the brewery, when in fact she will be. I am recently retired and don’t have many friends other than the people I worked with all those years. Am I being weird or is my spouse? — Confused in Ohio

DEAR CONFUSED: You are not being weird; you are being dishonest. Your wife’s feeling threatened because you are “hanging out” with a younger woman.

Explain that you don’t have many friends other than the people you worked with all those years, and you would like to maintain those relationsh­ips — at least until you can find new friends. If you invited her to come along with you, it might allay her fears.

Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www. Dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

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