Loveland Reporter-Herald

Friendship falters over shunning

- Amy Dickinson Ask Amy Contact Amy Dickinson via email, askamy@tribpub.com.

Dear Amy: My friend, “Cynthia,” and I have been close for 24 years. For most of that time, we have met for lunch once a week (when possible). We are both women over 60.

I have a 22-year-old granddaugh­ter, who is gay.

Cynthia has decided that I am “too accepting” of gayness in general and has told me that she can no longer be my friend.

She has gay family members that she shuns; she told me she wanted me to shun my granddaugh­ter. I will not do that.

Cynthia has four grandchild­ren under the age of 10. Any of them could be gay.

I asked her if we could agree to disagree, and she refused.

My granddaugh­ter has not asked me to shun anyone who is anti-gay.

My friend has many fine qualities, and I enjoyed her company.

I realize I am much better off without her hatred in my life.

Was it wrong of me to be willing to “agree to disagree” in order to remain friends with Cynthia?

Is that disrespect­ful to gay people?

— Worried

Dear Worried: Many people make choices to tolerate someone whose views are diametrica­lly opposed to their own. i believe there are valid reasons to do this, among them: the hope that you can influence the person to change their thinking. Some people also tr y very hard to loving ly accept those whose views they abhor, as a form of radical acceptance. Also, deep and long-term friendship does mean that we see and accept that our friends are flawed, just as we are.

Where this goes awry is when your friend demanded that you adopt her hateful views. in the end, she rejected you for refusing to hate. In my opinion, this shows how irredeemab­le she is, and why you are now wondering why you walked even part way toward her.

I’ d say that you should allow your guilt about your own acquiescen­ce to be your teacher. To be a true ally, you must reject hatred, and not “agree to disagree,” when the matter at hand involves human beings who are simply being human.

I think you should feel very sorry for this former friend of yours, as well as relieved to be shunned by her. No doubt, you are in ver y good company.

Dear Amy: I am par t of a referral group that is comprised of profession­als. We meet weekly.

One of our members is an attorney who wears badly fitted suits.

He is in his early 30s and is in great shape.

The attorney is supergreat, but I want to advise him to get a better suit, which would be more fitted, etc. I have seen his photo on his social media, and he looks somewhat dumpy (for lack of a better word).

I myself am in a different profession, and I am a lot older, but I believe that because of his profession, he needs to look less frumpy.

I have met his wife and she is ver y fashionabl­e, but I don’t know them ver y well.

My instincts are NOT to say anything since he is a bit sensitive.

What should I do? Nothing? Say something to his wife?

— Not Really a Fashionist­a

Dear Not Really: A business referral group is a networking group whose ultimate purpose is to refer potential clients to one another. So, if you’re a dentist and someone in your personal or profession­al circle is looking for a lawyer, you might pass along your fellow member’s business card and offer a positive referral.

Does his baggy suit af fect his exper tise?

Do your age or hairstyle af fect yours?

The answer, I guess, is mainly not.

Your group might host seminars or work sessions, reviewing fellow members’ social media profiles and of fering suggestion­s about how to improve their public posture. In my opinion, this would be the time to offer gentle, helpful wardrobe suggestion­s (and to accept suggestion­s in return).

Outside of that context, you should keep your views to yourself.

Dear Amy: “Upset DIL” wrote about the extremely unbalanced way her mother-in-law was handling her estate, essentiall­y giving ever ything to one brother over another brother, who had previously been promised ever ything.

I would not have believed this, except this is exactly what my mother did!

In retrospect, I see her as a real game-player. As she got older, she wielded these family objects like swords.

I learned that the best response was not to care. — Older and Wiser

Dear Wiser: “Not caring” is tough to achieve, but it is a game-changer.

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