Post-Tribune

He’s upset she used to date black men

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Dear Abby: I have been dating someone for about six months. We fell in love very quickly and spend almost every second together.

Our relationsh­ip has hit a rough patch ever since he found out that I have dated African-American men. He can’t seem to get over it, but he keeps saying he wants to try to make it work. He says cruel things sometimes when he gets mad, and it seems to be on his mind constantly. I don’t know what to do or how to make this better. We fell in love, but it seems to be spoiled because of my past.

This isn’t a big deal to me. I have always dated people I thought were good people. He seems to view it as disgusting. What should I do? — Rocky Road in the South

Dear Rocky Road: Give him a hug and let him go. You are the sum total of your experience­s and your upbringing, and the same is true of your boyfriend. He comes from a background of racial prejudice. When a person is raised that way, the mindset can be very difficult to change.

Dear Abby: I’m writing to you in the hope that you will share something with your readers. When I travel, I stay in hotels and it never ceases to amaze me how inconsider­ate my fellow travelers can be. Late at night, the drunken party animals carry on, often until the sun rises. Then families with small children invade the halls, and the kids race up and down the halls screaming.

Behind every one of those closed hallway doors there may be a person who is trying to sleep. Fellow travelers, please be considerat­e! Walk softly and talk quietly in the halls.

And parents, please teach your children manners. This includes not playing noisily where people

are trying to sleep. — Sleepless Near Seattle

Dear Sleepless: I have experience­d the same difficulti­es that you have while traveling. Here’s how I deal with it: I pick up the phone and notify the front desk or security if there are rowdy drunks keeping me awake after 10 p.m.. If the problem persists, I ask to be moved to a quieter room.

As for the screaming children chasing each other in the hallways — I have been known to poke my sleepy head out the door and ask them to please quiet down. Maybe I have just been lucky, but they usually do.

Dear Abby: I was married to my high school sweetheart, “Linda,” for 37 years. I am a widower now, going into a new relationsh­ip. “Susan” and I are going slow, but we may end up living together in my home.

How do I integrate pictures of Linda with Susan being there? I have one of Linda and the kids, one of the two of us, and a painting of Linda and me together. Eventually, I will want one with me and Susan.

How do I make this work? — Lightning Strikes Twice

Dear L.S.T.: I am a great believer in verbal communicat­ion. Like many other things in relationsh­ips, this should be discussed and negotiated. Talk to Susan about it and see if she would be comfortabl­e living in your home with these pictures on display. If you plan to combine households, Susan may have some photos of her own she would like to display.

Many women wouldn’t object to a picture of you and your late wife. However, the portrait might be a bit much. Perhaps one of your children would like to have it.

We fell in love, but it seems to be spoiled because of my past.

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