The Arizona Republic

Bathroom etiquette leads to disagreeme­nt

- Tell Me About It Carolyn Hax – Who Was the Bathroom Jerk? – Possibly Estranged Email Carolyn at tellme@wash post.com, follow her on Facebook at www.facebook.com/carolyn.hax or chat with her online at noon Eastern time each Friday at www.washington post.c

Husband thinks wife was a brat for snapping at him, and not just closing the dang door herself. Wife thinks husband was inconsider­ate for just walking out leaving her naked with the door open.

Depending on the nature of mirror activities – hair, makeup, contact lenses – it could have been two seconds or 90 seconds before wife even realized the door was wide open.

Husband thinks wife was a brat for snapping at him, and not just closing the dang door herself. Wife thinks husband was inconsider­ate for just walking out leaving her naked with the door open. Both are offended and think the other owes them an apology.

Person Leaving closes the door out of respect for Naked Person. Duh. All he had to do was say, “Oops, sorry!”

He didn’t. Instead, he turned on Wife. The question now being, what’s up with that?

Hello Hax! From reading your columns and chats over the years, I’ve understood that to keep up a relationsh­ip, sometimes one side has to bear the burden and keep on “talking into the void” even if they may not get a response.

My question is: How long do I keep this up? I’ve never had a close relationsh­ip with my brother but we’ve always kept in contact. It is always me reaching out – via calls, text, emails. After 37 years, I’ve had enough. I know if I stop, it will be him responding probably once or twice a year (if I’m lucky). So do I let it go and stop trying?

There’s no right or wrong time to stop. The only thing that matters is whether you think the energy you’re investing is (still) worthwhile. Some people can keep “talking into the void” for their whole lives, with no response, just on the chance they will eventually break through – or to feel certain they did all they could.

In your case, your brother is responding, yes? So you could decide your conversati­ons and the (albeit weak) connection they sustain are worth the nuisance of initiating.

Others will not see the value in doing that, and will come instead to a point where the steady effort to make contact feels more harmful to them than the idea of letting go – with each attempt at contact serving only as a dispiritin­g reminder of what they don’t have.

Any choice, to keep it up forever or drop it, or drop the effort temporaril­y and resume when you’re ready, is as valid and justified as a person deems it to be. I wish I could give you a more definitive answer, but it’s really your math to do.

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