Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Child’s accusation­s against cousin cause rift in family

- ABIGAIL VAN BUREN Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or visit www.DearAbby.com

DEAR ABBY: My brother and sister-in-law recently told me their 5-year-old son claims my 9-year-old son touched him inappropri­ately on several occasions. Understand­ing that any parent believes what their child says, I asked my son if he has ever touched or done anything inappropri­ate to anyone. His response was, “Why would I do that?”

My husband and I asked our son about it on several different occasions and got the same answer. Not wanting to pressure him to the point of coercion and force him to admit to something he did not do, I accepted his denials.

My brother and his wife are convinced my son did these heinous things to their son. What more is there for me to do? My son and I are now being shunned and barred from being around any of my brother’s kids. —

Shunned In Colorado

Dear Shunned: A young child might make a statement like the one your nephew did to get attention, get the other child in trouble or because he is being touched inappropri­ately by someone else. This certainly bears further exploratio­n, and the people who should do that are your brother and his wife.

If your son ends up being guilty, then you and your husband must investigat­e where this behavior came from and get him profession­al help. Until this is resolved, keep the children apart.

Dear Abby: The other day, I was checking numbers in my phone. It has been years since I purged any, so I sent out a few texts with just the person’s name. Later, I woke up around 3 a.m. and couldn’t get back to sleep, so I checked my social media.

I returned two emails, then saw I had a response to one of my texts which read, “???” So I texted back my name. Next thing I knew, my phone was ringing. The last thing I wanted to do was have a 3 a.m. conversati­on with this person — or any person, for that matter.

In my opinion, a phone call is different from a text. Calling me at 3 a.m. was inappropri­ate, bordering on rude. The other person contends I shouldn’t have texted if I didn’t want to talk. What do you think? — Text Etiquette In The South

Dear Text Etiquette:

What I think is that you owe the person an apology for having disturbed him or her in the wee hours of the morning and, while you’re at it, explain that you didn’t think your text would be seen until after sunup.

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