Los Angeles Times

A premarital stalemate

- Send questions for Amy Dickinson to askamy@ amydickins­on.com.

Dear Amy: I am close with my niece, who recently got engaged. Her fiancé was up front, by saying he didn’t believe in marriage. She was up front, too, saying that if he ever wanted to buy a house, her name would not go on a mortgage if they weren’t married. Not that she would break up with him; she would stay but would want a lease agreement rather than be on the mortgage.

Recently, he got serious about buying a house and my niece stuck to her guns — either get married or sign a lease. He proposed.

Now he says his grandparen­ts have to be at the wedding. But they are almost 5,000 miles away and too old to fly, so he is insisting they get married where the grandparen­ts live.

Amy, my niece’s father has advanced Parkinson’s disease and can’t possibly travel that far, either.

Excluding her father from the wedding is unconscion­able. I think he is purposely creating obstacles because he doesn’t really want to get married.

My niece has asked me for advice. What should I tell her? Worried Aunt

Dear Aunt: My perspectiv­e about this couple is that they use negotiatio­n, rather than consensus, to advance their relationsh­ip. If this is the way they operate and communicat­e, your niece needs to be prepared for future stalemates, especially surroundin­g large life events that are already stressful. Have they talked about having children, how to share their expenses or future care issues having to do with their parents?

Her fiancé’s choice doesn’t seem to honor her or her family relationsh­ips. In fact, unless he can suggest or agree to a compromise, his choice seems hostile.

Fortunatel­y for you, this doesn’t concern you directly. When your niece asks you for advice, you could be both honest and circumspec­t, and say, “You two seem to see this as a stalemate on the location for your wedding, but I see it as being bigger than that. Have you had your premarital counseling yet?”

Dear Amy: I recently received a postcard from the sheriff ’s department stating that a neighbor is a registered sex offender.

The notificati­on said his crime was committed 30 years ago and that he failed to register properly when he moved here. It does not state where the original offense occurred.

I’ve been on a neighborly first-name basis with him for several years in our community, and he has always seemed nice enough.

We waved and exchanged a “Hi” yesterday for the first time since I received the notice. I assume he knows all of his neighbors have received it.

I hate to display my ignorance, but what, if anything, has changed with receipt of that postcard? Wondering Neighbor

Dear Neighbor: What has changed is your knowledge that your neighbor committed a crime against another person 30 years ago.

You can learn as much as is legally allowable by using the sex offender database to search your neighbor’s record.

The postcard notificati­on is specifical­ly designed to inform people, so that you may then make your own determinat­ion regarding a relationsh­ip with this person in your community. So, after you do some research, the rest is up to you.

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