The Mercury News

Forgivenes­s before mourning

- Contact Amy Dickinson via email at askamy@ amydickins­on.com. Amy Dickinson

DEAR AMY » My husband died a few months ago. He was very well respected. Everyone thought very highly of him.

We were married for over 50 years.

About 40 years ago he had been working with a woman who lived in another city. He and other co-workers would travel to her city for work.

We had been married for 10 years and had three children.

I went to an award dinner held in their honor.

The morning of the dinner, he was in the shower and the phone rang in our hotel room. When I answered it, the person on the other end used her name, instead of mine.

My husband said that the person knew that they worked together and assumed she was there before leaving for the dinner.

Shortly after that, there were a couple of other incidents that made me suspicious.

A few weeks passed, and he said he wasn’t going to work with her anymore because he was starting to have feelings for her.

I brought up all my suspicions and accused him of having an affair.

He was upset and told me that nothing had ever happened between them. I was not able to forget. I never could totally forgive him. Now that he has died, I am thinking of this more than ever. — Stuck

DEAR STUCK » Your theory about why you are stuck might be correct. Additional­ly, my take is that you might now be (unconsciou­sly) justifying your inability or unwillingn­ess to forgive your husband over the course of 40 years — and so you are doubling down and ruminating about it, now.

Surely, his long-ago admission would have been very hard for you to take, but it seems to me that he did everything he should have done: he was honest with you, he stopped working with her, he continued on in the marriage to you.

I believe that you would find some liberation now if you worked your way toward forgivenes­s — forgiving him for his transgress­ion, as well as yourself — for holding onto this so tightly.

We humans are saddled with complicati­on and frailty. We do hurt one another. The ability to forgive is such a gift — I hope you can give it to yourself, now. A grief group or therapist could help you to sort this out.

DEAR AMY » “Discourage­d Dater” expects dates to text her.

I am a mom to three young men, and they just can’t seem to find women who don’t want to text all day long — 24/7.

They actually have jobs in which they need to work, but these needy profession­al women want to be joined at the hip as soon as they meet.

Seems to me if you’re chatting all day long, then why bother getting together; there’s probably nothing left to say. — Baffled Mom

DEAR BAFFLED » Thank you for offering this perspectiv­e.

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