Post-Tribune

Mom tires of being friend’s clerical assistant

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

Dear Amy: My good friend and I each have three children in the same classes who also participat­e in some of the same extracurri­cular activities.

As parents, we are flooded with informatio­n about deadlines, events and requiremen­ts. We parents share tips and help one another. But my friend seems to be taking advantage of this.

For years, she has barely bothered with the emails and handouts detailing key informatio­n. Instead, she relies on me to tell her what she needs to know — which I’ve been doing from the kids’ kindergart­en through college applicatio­ns.

If I say the info is listed online at a website, she’ll ask for the link to the page. For something particular­ly complicate­d, such as Eagle Scout projects or college applicatio­ns, she’ll ask me to walk her through every step — often requesting documentat­ion of links or resources. It’s extremely time-consuming. If I say I can’t remember, she’ll hound me to look through my notes.

She’s smart, healthy and capable. Her husband is involved and helpful. We have similar work loads. Why does she do this?!

I’m all for pooling parent resources and helping a friend, but after 18 years of this, and with two kids still coming up through the ranks, I’m tired.

She justifies the dynamic by saying, “It takes a village!”

This villager is wondering how I get her to start doing her own research, without coming off as an unhelpful friend.

— Tired

Dear Tired: It does take a village. But sometimes, the villagers take up their torches and storm the castle.

You’ve been your friend’s clerical assistant for over a decade. If you want to stop now, you’ll have to calmly and resolutely retrain her.

Unless she has a learning or literacy challenge, I’d say that she has demonstrat­ed a genius-level aptitude for manipulati­ng you.

Here’s how to get out of doing her bidding. You say, “Whew, I’m tired. I’m going to let you get your children across the finish line. You can do it! I’ve been your faithful villager, but now I’m going to accept my merit badge and retire.”

Dear Amy: Am I obligated to attend a wedding shower and to give a gift?

My husband’s niece has postponed her wedding for many months due to COVID-19.

They are now going to marry on a tropical island.

My husband has been invited, but my daughter (age 15) and I have not been invited.

My husband will be spending over $3,000 just to get there and stay in a hotel for three days.

He still wants to give a generous gift.

Now my mother-inlaw is planning to give a shower in honor of her granddaugh­ter.

If I don’t go, I feel like my husband’s family will be upset with me.

If I do go, do I have to give a gift?

It seems like a lot for a wedding I wasn’t even invited to.

— Cold Showered

Dear Showered: If you are not invited to the wedding, you shouldn’t be invited to the wedding shower. That is basic logic, as well as basic etiquette.

So first you’d need to determine if you are actually invited to the shower.

If you are invited and don’t want to attend, you should simply have something else to do that day. Don’t act out, don’t huff and puff over the indignity of it all — just, be busy that day.

If your husband’s family has the gall to be upset with you over this, this is just a pain they will have to learn to live with. Stay cool, polite and respectful. Your husband is representi­ng the family at this wedding. That will have to be enough.

Dear Amy: Your response to “The Not so Prodigal Daughter” bothered me. This was from a stay-athome mom who resented her sister’s choice to pursue a career in the arts.

You said that she could also pursue a career in the arts if she wanted to. Do you not understand that being a stay-at-home mom is a full-time job?

— Upset

Dear Upset: Many stay-athome moms further their education and pursue new opportunit­ies while raising children. My mother did it, I did it, and your mother probably did it, too. This is a choice parents can make if they are motivated to do so.

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