Orlando Sentinel

Man’s tardiness tests friend’s tolerance

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Dear Amy: I moved to a new city about a year ago. I’ve made one really great friend here, but there’s a hitch: our incongruou­s approaches to timeliness.

“Sam” has been, without fail, late to everything we’ve ever planned. His tardiness ranges from one to three hours. Sometimes, I wait an hour and ask, “What’s your ETA?” and he replies with, “Sorry, I’m just going to do 15 things, and I’ll be on my way!”

Recently, he and I were studying at his place, and I got hungry, so I said, “I’m going to go to the grocery store next door, I’ll be back in five.”

I would have been back in five, except he wanted to join me. First, he had to change his contact lenses and fix his hair, and then he started telling me this story about his mom that I didn’t pay much attention to because I was annoyed.

About 10 more things and 25 minutes later, we finally left. At the store, he spent about 30 minutes trying to decide on a snack. I’m a very structured person and need him to try to follow a schedule.

What makes everything worse is that he apologizes all the time — and he is aware that his tardiness is a problem.

I’ve been told I can be abrasive, and I’d really like to avoid conflict since he’s is one of my closest friends here, so I’m not sure how to move forward. Advice?

Dear Annoyed!: You report: “I’m a very structured person and need him to try to follow a schedule.” Nope. That is not going to happen.

“Sam” has been Sam as long as you have been “Annoyed.” He is already aware of his behavior and its impact on you — and you know this because he is constantly apologizin­g.

You two seem like a classic mismatch — but many great friendship­s thrive despite very different temperamen­ts.

One perspectiv­e on this is that Sam was sent into your life to test your patience. Will you pass this test? (You seem to be working hard on it.)

You do need to decide on some commonsens­e boundaries, as well as a useful way of communicat­ing those boundaries, including the consequenc­es when Sam lets you down. Don’t act annoyed or judgmental — but do be honest about the impact of his behavior on you.

The amateur diagnostic­ian in me believes that your friend might have ADHD. For many adults, identifyin­g their scattered focus and attention challenges as ADHD (rather than a character flaw) can be a game changer.

Dear Amy: I am struggling in these uncertain times. I am finding people are showing their true colors with how they are responding to “stay-athome” orders and how the government is trying to reduce the risk associated with the novel coronaviru­s.

Unfortunat­ely, political ideals are also being exacerbate­d because of this. People who I thought were good people are now deliberate­ly ignoring orders, having gatherings of more than 10 people, dismissing hygiene practices and posting polarizing things on social media.

I have started to block and hide these people from social media to escape the negativity.

Clearly, I have no intent to control these people’s views and actions, but how can I cope with this better?

It feels as if I am losing all faith in people that I once considered to be close friends.

Dear Trying: Now is the time to adopt the axiom “you be you” with a vengeance. In this regard, you should continue to disengage on social media. That means disengagin­g from people you disagree with, but also avoiding the bubble of anxiety that can come from connecting with people who are enraged and afraid.

Drop back. Read a good novel. You be you.

Dear Amy: “Wondering” was a bit frazzled about her sister’s obsession with her and her children’s IQ scores. I come from a family of higher scores (mine included).

In 10th grade, we were tested in school and then met with our assigned teacher to discuss. I’ll admit I was showing off.

My teacher looked me in the eye and said, “Don’t get cocky, kid. You got that brain from your parents. Now what you do with it will show how smart you are. Show, don’t tell.”

Dear Best: Smart teacher!

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