The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gamer boyfriend scores low points visiting mom

- Jeanne Phillips Dear Abby

Dear Abby: My daughter and her boyfriend have been together for four years. Despite being almost 30,heisveryim­mature and constantly distracted by either his phone or his video games.

Abby, he travels with his PlayStatio­n everywhere he goes. When he comes into our house, he sets up his console in the living room, puts on headphones and plays games all day and night. If the fami lyasksto use the TV for a few hours, he will sit on the sofa and take a nap or pull out his phone and continue gaming.

I know nothing more about him than I did the first month I met him. He is rude, boorish, self-centered and has a criminal record (drugs). They live in another state, and for my daughter’s sake, I try to accommodat­e him. When I asked for them to “visit us, not our TV,” she became very defensive.

Isthisthen­ewnorm? Must I provide aTV in their room for when they stay? When they went to visit his family who live near us, he took the system to their house for the three-hour visit.

How do I deal with this addict ion?Mydaughter now wants to bring him along while we have our mother/daughter lunch and manicures. It’s like he’s 3 and has to tag along. He has no friends. When she goes out for a night with her girlfriend­s, we are expected to “baby-sit.” I’ve never encountere­d anything like this. Please advise me. — Done mothering in Pennsylvan­ia

Dear Done: I’ll try, but first you will have to admit your part in creating this problem. You have to learn to say no to your daughter and her“boy” friend. If you want to watch television for a few hours during their visit, remember it’s your home and you don’t have to apologize for it. If you want a mother/daughter lunch and manicures, and she wants to drag him along, say, “No, this is our mother/daughter time. An hour or so alone with you is not too much to ask.”

The solution to your problem is to stop allowing your daughter — and her socially inadequate boyfriend — to dictate what’s happening under your roof and in your life. Until you put your foot down, nothing will change. Dear Ab by is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.

com orP.O. Box 69440, Los

Angeles, CA 90069.

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