The Bakersfield Californian

CAROLYN HAX

ADVICE WITH ATTITUDE & A GROUNDED SET OF VALUES

- Need Carolyn’s advice? Email her at tellme@washpost.com; follow her on Facebook at www.facebook.com/carolyn.hax; or chat with her online at 9 a.m. Pacific time each Friday at www.washington­post.com.

Dear Carolyn: I have been with my girlfriend for five years, and while I have loved being with her, we have issues

beyond our control. Four years ago, my girlfriend was diagnosed with lupus, and has periods where she’s too tired to leave her bed. I understand this, and while I try not to get upset, it does sometimes feel like I am in a relationsh­ip by myself. However, I love her and do what I can to accept it.

Recently we had an argument and she said something that made me very upset. Every day — and I do mean every day — she tells me she’s tired or not feeling well. I used to say something like, “I’m sorry,” but I’ve recently stopped because I feel the words have lost meaning, and, as shameful as this sounds, I don’t have the same emotional reaction I did when she first got ill. She said that I lacked compassion and that whenever she told me she wasn’t feeling well, she wishes I would ask if there was anything I could do to help, or, as she put it, “be there for (her) emotionall­y” again. This filled me with both anger and sadness. I feel she’s not acknowledg­ing that I can sometimes be disappoint­ed in canceling plans. I’m also upset that she feels I’m not doing enough to help her — which I feel I am. I try to take care of her when I can.

Yet there are days I just don’t have it in me to be there emotionall­y when she tells me she’s not feeling well. Am I being selfish?

— Boyfriend

Dear Boyfriend: I admire the dedication you’re showing in focusing on yourself, as the area in need of a change.

You were together only a year when hardship arrived. You weren’t married, or (apparently) even engaged. You were still figuring each other out, in other words — still letting your relationsh­ip’s progress tell you whether this was a pairing you wanted for life.

The diagnosis disrupted that process

completely. In one stroke, you went from being a regular person who was at societal liberty to decide whether to take or leave a serious commitment to this woman you were really just getting to know — to becoming the guy who’d be seen as a jerk for leaving his sick girlfriend. That’s a terrible thing for both of you for so many reasons: Aside from the obvious — that your girlfriend has a serious condition to manage — it changed the motivation for your being together from being mostly internal, as it should be, to involving significan­t external pressure. The reason to commit is love, not obligation. You’ve probably witnessed firsthand a person who fell more deeply in love, and then stayed for love, after disaster struck. There’s no shortage of examples, in my experience.

But that doesn’t mean everyone follows that script. Nor does that obligate you to follow it. It’s also plain wrong of anyone to judge you for not doing so.

A support group could help lift the weight holding down your compassion.

Certainly, too, you and your girlfriend have work to do on your communicat­ion.

Specifical­ly, she needs to replace “I’m tired” with articulati­ng what she wants. “Sick” does not mean “always right.”

And you just reeled off for us three articulate self-reflection­s she needs to hear from you directly: on feeling numbed and ineffectiv­e; on your need for freedom to express disappoint­ment; on your frustratio­n with doing your maximum and hearing it’s still not meeting her minimum. Please know this: It is not selfish to have an honest reckoning with your feelings, and there’s nothing wrong with you if you’re unhappy in a relationsh­ip that ... well, any relationsh­ip.

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