Miami Herald (Sunday)

Marriage falls apart as husband ignores his wife

- JEANNE PHILLIPS Contact Dear Abby at www. DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Dear Abby: My husband barely speaks to me. We both work full time and are facing the empty nest very soon. At home, I have to initiate even the smallest of small talk. He’ll never say “Good morning” or ask “How was your day?” Although I work hard to keep the house the way he likes it, he speaks up only to criticize the few times I don’t meet his standards. There’s never a word of acknowledg­ment when I have accomplish­ed other elements of housekeepi­ng.

When I laugh at the Sunday comics, he doesn’t even ask what’s funny. As a result, I have become defensive. Then he accuses me of being “dismissive of his feelings.” He says I don’t communicat­e with him, but when I do, he barely responds, so over the years I have basically shut down. We have been to counseling, and maybe it’s time to go again. Do you have any perspectiv­e to offer? — Unacknowle­dged in the South

Dear Unacknowle­dged: It is de initely the right move to return to counseling. But when you do, this time speak up for yourself loud and clear. If you do, it may change the dynamics of your relationsh­ip because when he accuses you of not communicat­ing, he is blaming the victim. Once you have said your piece, let the marriage and family therapist mediate what is certain to be a longoverdu­e discussion.

Dear Abby: I am a 25-year-old man currently dating a 39-year-old woman. We have been dating for 2 1/2 months. We have talked about our age difference a couple of times, but apart from that issue, every other aspect of our relationsh­ip is going well, including communicat­ion, intimacy and maturity.

We are not super interested in having children, and we both have expressed interest in adopting a child if we were to have one somewhere down the line. Despite this, I have heard from family (my parents, mostly) and close friends that I’m making a terrible mistake by dating a woman so much older.

They say it is not practical to marry a woman so much older because it will present major health and aging challenges as time goes by. This is the argument that most influences my feelings. Should I break up with her and tell her that the age difference is the reason? I feel I should decide soon so as not to waste her time. — Not Just a Number in

San Francisco

Dear Not Just a Number: You have been seeing this woman for only 2 1/2 months. The relationsh­ip is still new. That you are discussing marriage and children seems to me to be premature. My advice is to slow down. Let time dictate whether this romance develops further.

Discuss the flak you are getting from your parents with your lady friend. But the 14-year age difference does not necessaril­y mean that she’ll have health challenges that you won’t. Decide together whether the age difference is a deal-breaker.

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