Post Tribune (Sunday)

Reuniting couple needs relationsh­ip rehash

- By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter@askingamy Copyright 2021 by Amy Dickinson Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Dear Amy: My brother-in-law, “Walter,” is a healthy, attractive man in his early 70s who is comfortabl­e financiall­y, but has never settled down. He’s had girlfriend­s throughout his life, but he never found someone he thought was “The One.”

Walt is now realizing and regretting his past emotional insecuriti­es and fear of commitment. He doesn’t want to be alone for the rest of his life.

His most recent girlfriend left him abruptly (without explanatio­n) after a couple of months of dating. I think it’s because she was looking for a “green card ‘Sugar Daddy,’ ” and he wasn’t proposing fast enough. He discovered that she was playing the field, looking for a husband. He was pretty devastated.

Next week Walt is going to be in his hometown to see family, and he invited a former lady friend, “Barb,” to lunch with the intention to see if they still have chemistry.

They dated years ago, but he called it off.

He now thinks he was being too narrow-minded. Barb is a lovely person and will be retiring soon. I’m surprised she’s still single.

Mutual friends of his and Barb’s have suggested that she is still interested in him.

Walt asked me if he should lay it all out on the table: He wants a companion to enjoy life with for their golden years.

I thought that might sound insulting to her, as if he couldn’t find anyone else and so he’s circling back to her.

What do you think?

— Younger SIL

Dear Younger: My instinct is that “Walter” is getting desperate, or at least, he is sounding desperate. If his ex was “playing the field, looking for a husband,” isn’t he now “playing the field, looking for a wife?”

His goal should not be to seal the deal with this first lunch, but to get to a second date.

I suggest that he start by offering to do a little “relationsh­ip rehash” with her, in case there are any lingering issues he may need to explain or apologize for regarding their previous relationsh­ip and how it ended. He should focus on listening to her during this initial meeting.

If Barb is a woman of substance who has been single for a long time, she has already been to the puppet show and seen the strings. If Walter listens to his date and discerns her wants and needs — rather than leading with his own — she might be responsive to rekindling their relationsh­ip.

Dear Amy: As we emerge from this dense fog of isolation caused by the pandemic and socialize more, I’m wondering how to handle a certain situation. I have a few acquaintan­ces who are “friends of friends,” who have suffered immeasurab­le loss during this year due to COVID

19, drug abuse or other life events. What can I say to these people at festive affairs, knowing they’ve suffered so much?

— Speechless

At festive affairs, grieving people may sometimes try to take a break from the

Dear Speechless:

daily burden of processing their losses. However, you should acknowledg­e these losses, and then give them an opportunit­y to have a conversati­on with you and expand on their situation, or thank you and move on to another subject.

For someone who has lost a loved one: “Janet, I was so sorry to learn that your mother passed away this year. I can only imagine what this has been like for you.”

For people who have survived challenges involving family members, you can say, “I understand it has been a rough year. I hope you’re doing OK.”

You should not convey that you are aware of intensely private family matters if you are unsure about the source of your informatio­n.

Dear Amy: I am a 71-year-old male living in Southern California.

I have been called “Sweetie,” “Honey” and “Dear” at various stages of my life by female service providers of all ages.

Admittedly, I don’t get called by these harmless endearment­s in a profession­al setting or in the health care arena, but I don’t take offense.

Could it be that women of a certain age are the ones feeling disrespect­ed, while guys just roll with it?

— Tim

Dear Tim: Your theory is possible, except that this topic was originally raised by a group of men.

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