The Mercury News

‘Questioner’ meets an ‘obliger’

- ADB ACy Amy Dickinson — Leigh askamy@amydickins­on. com.

DEAR AMY >> My husband is a great guy, who also happens to be a “questioner,” as per Gretchen Ruben’s book “The

Four Tendencies:

The Indispensa­ble Personalit­y Profiles That Reveal How to Make Your Life Better (and Other People’s Lives Better, Too) (2017, Harmony).

I understand that he processes things by questionin­g them, but it can be a bit much. We’ve talked about it, but a zebra can’t change its stripes, while I’m left wishing he’d at least develop an awareness of those stripes.

This morning he came into the kitchen while I was eating breakfast and working a crossword puzzle, and he asked if it was going to rain all day. Then he asked what time that night’s party was taking place. Then he asked why it would start so late. Then he asked if it was because the couple was working that day.

Meanwhile, I was trying to find a four-letter word for: “you’re driving me crazy.”

I admit, I kind of snapped. Then he left the room, muttering that he didn’t want to be around me if I was going to be “like that.”

It annoys me that this type of interactio­n always comes down to him being the nice guy, me being the grouch. But isn’t he being a bit rude too?

— Don’t Ask Me DEAR DON’T ASK ME >> I appreciate the fact that you have conducted your own inquiry into your husband’s personalit­y type. Categorizi­ng him as a “questioner” gives you some insight.

I wonder why he hasn’t done the same in order to understand you better?

You also don’t say what category you fit into. Perhaps you are an “obliger,” which according to this metric means that you, for instance, might feel compelled to immediatel­y answer questions just because they are asked without regard to your own self-interests. Then you “snap,” because you resent the interrupti­on.

The most obvious solution is for you to discipline yourself enough to say, “Honey, can you hang on for a minute? I want to concentrat­e on this until I’m at a stopping point.” (Pre-empting him with a neutral attitude will help you to avoid being “like that” later.)

And your husband will need to discipline himself enough to delay his queries until you are ready to give him your attention.

(By the way, according to Rubin’s theory, I am also an “obliger,” and I often wish I wasn’t.)

DEAR AMY >>My father adored my mother for their 53 years of marriage until she died, and he grieved her loss until the day he died. And I was happy for him when he started asking women out for dinner about four months after her death. Several months later, he asked out an old acquaintan­ce, and they immediatel­y became loving partners. I thought it was a testament to his love for Mom that he wanted to love again.

I believe that the human heart has an unlimited capacity to love. My advice to Widower is to let your heart be your guide.

DEAR LEIGH >> This is beautiful. Your attitude is a tribute to both of your parents.

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