Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Little blue pill stash gives rise to suspicion

- By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter@askingamy Copyright 2022 by Amy Dickinson Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Dear Amy: Some time ago, while getting some aspirin from my husband’s work backpack, I noticed an unfamiliar pill in with the capsules. I palmed it and later looked it up online.

I was expecting to find a narcotic. Turns out — it was a form of Viagra.

I confronted him about it, and he said he takes them to work so he can “be ready for me” when he gets home. Not only did I call bull on this, but I insisted that he leave all those kinds of pills with me to distribute to him at the right time.

Yet weeks later, I found a whole bottle of a new prescripti­on of the same stuff in the bag.

Again, we had the same confrontat­ion and the same excuse/explanatio­n.

I insisted again that the pills must stay with me.

Now just this week, the bottle of “happy pills” kept in the cabinet are missing a few. He’s taking them to work again!

I have had a myriad of “womanly” problems in the last two years and have been recovering from multiple surgeries. I haven’t exactly been hot to trot for quite a while.

If he isn’t getting it from me, is he getting it from someone else? Am I being paranoid?

— Worried

Dear Worried: If you are hunting through your husband’s belongings, have confiscate­d medication, and have placed yourself as his at-home pharmacist, I’d say you’ve moved beyond paranoia and into policing.

My cursory research about this kind of medication indicates that it might not work in quite the way your husband implies. It is not medication to take before leaving the office and your evening commute home.

You imply that you and your husband are not currently sexually active. So, if he is taking medication to reverse ED, but then not having sex with you — then why is he taking the medication at all? At this point, I think you might be experienci­ng the opposite of paranoia, which is denial.

In conclusion, if he isn’t “getting it” from you, and he’s definitely taking this medication, then you should assume he’s getting it from someone else.

You and your husband have more discussion­s ahead regarding the future of your relationsh­ip.

Dear Amy: My husband and I have been very happily together for 15 years and have successful­ly raised a blended family of independen­t and successful young adults, who are now (happily) out of the house and on their own.

My husband and I, however, seem to have hit the “blahs.” We are both extremely engaged in our work and extended families. While still affectiona­te and interested in each other, at night, we fall into bed, exhausted. I can’t think of the last time we really connected.

Any advice?

— In the Doldrums

Dear Doldrums: You two should start to be deliberate in your actions — small and large — until you figure out where you left your mojo.

Start by greeting each other in the evening with a moment of connection, eye contact and a kiss. Put your phones away during dinner.

If you are too exhausted to be spontaneou­s, schedule your next intimate encounter: “How about you, me, a swig of Courvoisie­r? Meet me Friday night!”

Dear Amy: I didn’t like your advice to the competitiv­e high school girl (“Lonely at the Top”), who kept beating her best friend at sports her friend liked.

You might let Lonely know that her friend “Maria” is annoyed because Lonely is planning to participat­e in an activity that Maria is clearly passionate about (ice hockey), just for “fun.”

Is that her true motivation? Maybe Lonely should acknowledg­e that her fun would be found in another chance to compete against Maria, as Lonely will again excel, and Maria will have to eat her dust again.

That is passive-aggressive behavior. Surely there are other sports, clubs, activities for Lonely to pursue, without competing with her “bestie”?

— Humble at The Bottom

Dear Humble: I have a feeling that ice hockey, “Lonely’s” next pursuit, might be her comeuppanc­e, but I don’t see any reason to discourage a talented athlete from trying to make any team she wants. If her athletic pursuits take a toll on her friendship, she’ll have to “play it as it lays.”

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