Naming a kid after a cad
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 and I divorced when she was 6 and her brother was 4. I did not tell my daughter how horribly I was abused, both physically and verbally, or that his alcohol and cocaine use drove us to near bankruptcy. He mercilessly targeted me but never harmed our children.
My daughter has a good relationship with her father.
Should I tell her about her dad so she can pick another middle name or remain quiet?
K
Dear 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 to your daughter.
Drug and alcohol abuse might explain (but not excuse) some of his out-of-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 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 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 and would box both of you into a corner.
You should completely 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, too bad.
Dear Amy: I’ve been with my boyfriend, “Anthony,” for three years. We met in college and moved in together after graduation.
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 fairly shattered to learn this and don’t know what to do now.
Your advice? Sad
Dear 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 very important about where he stands.
If you are itching to get married, you really need to have a 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.