Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Friends are no fan of boyfriend

- Carolyn Hax

Dear Carolyn: My boyfriend and I are going to visit some friends who have invited us to join them at their lake house. A few months ago, my friends told me my boyfriend is “tough to like.” I realize his sense of humor isn’t for everyone, but his direct candor – while harsh - is one of the traits I find attractive about him.

I’d like to buffer any difficulti­es with my friends, but I don’t want to tell my boyfriend not to be himself, nor do I look forward to telling him he isn’t completely liked. Any suggestion­s on how to approach this? – Guests Rubbing on Hosts No no no no no. Noooooooo.

Do not, ever, take on the role of buffer for someone in a relationsh­ip. To quote Finn in “Adventure Time,” “That road you’re on? Leads to nowhere.”

When you are with someone, the combinatio­n you create has to stand or fall on its merits, and that includes with your friends, your family, your home life, your profession­al life, your personal habits, your hobbies, your values, your goals, all of it. It’s not always going to be perfect, obviously, but if you have to exert a special effort to curate scenes and manage personalit­ies and schedules just to keep the whole thing from blowing up, and if you’re already explaining/excusing/justifying yourself and your interest in him, then you’re going to exhaust yourself – especially over time - and sow resentment on both sides. Special orchestrat­ion is a sign that something is Not Going to Work.

If this is the right guy for you, then he will be the right guy in unvarnishe­d form with your friends – or he will cost you these friends and be worth losing your friends for. Or he’s not worth losing friends for and you break up. Those are your healthy choices.

Take your consequenc­es upfront.

Re: Guests: Quoting Finn? Oh my glob, that’s awesome. – Adventure Timer

That whole episode, “The Suitor,” was like seeing my entire relationsh­ip belief system in “Adventure Time” form. I was giddy.

Re: Guests: Another possibilit­y: Your friends will grow to like your mate. Two of my closest friends married men who irritated the heck out of me. But they treat my friends wonderfull­y, are a perfect match for them, and make them wildly happy, so I sucked it up and spent time with them. And now, while they still grate on me, I see the great qualities that my friends see in them and have grown to like them independen­t of my original friends. Hopefully your people can get to that point. – Anonymous

It’s important to this other possibilit­y, too – thank you for suggesting it - that Guest not try to buffer the guy: If Guest and he are a good match, then the friends need to see that, and they will see that only through Guest acting naturally with him.

Guest can also say to the friends, “I know you don’t like Boyfriend, but I do, so I hope you’ll give him a chance.”

Email Carolyn at tellme@ washpost.com, follow her on Facebook at www.facebook.com/carolyn.hax or chat with her online at noon Eastern time each Friday at www.washington­post.com.

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