The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Mom’s life doesn’t include daughter

- Jeanne Phillips Write to Dear Abby at P.O. Box 96440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or dearabby.com

Dear Abby: I’m nearing 57 and single. My mother, who is 78, lives in the same apartment complex. I always try to talk with her. All she wants to do is watch TV and read the paper. She allows me to talk to her for about a half-hour a day, then she has to go. If I visit her, she can only talk to me for a few minutes. Then she has to put the TV on.

I feel like I must beg her to talk with me. When I approached her about it, she said she’s living her life how she wants to (basically without me). Because of that, I have decided to give up and spend only Christmas and her birthday with her. She probably wouldn’t even notice. If you have any advice, I would like to see it.

Her Sad, Hurt Daughter

Dear Sad, Hurt Daughter: A half-hour phone call every day may be too much for your mother to handle. That she has to “limit” your calls to 30 minutes tells me you would like them to be even longer. (Every day!) Rather than punish her by distancing yourself and seeing her only twice a year, limit those visits and phone conversati­ons to twice a week. I think it would be healthier for both of you if you find a way to become less emotionall­y dependent upon your mother. Also, plan some outings away from the apartment complex for you and your mom to share. Dear Abby: My husband and I have been together 20 years. In the middle of our living room sits an albatross of a coffee table. My husband’s girlfriend made it for him in the late ’60s/early ’70s. I think it weighs 500 pounds.

I am finally redecorati­ng the house and I want this table out of my life, but he won’t hear of it. How can I move forward without such resentment?

Hates the Relic in California

Dear Hates: Rather than argue with your husband about the albatross, it may be time to rethink how you use the space. Many men enjoy having an area just their own, a “man cave.” Why not create one for him and put his treasured “love gift” in there, where you won’t have to see it?

Dear Abby: Recently, I went swimming with my husband and his parents. My in-laws took lots of photos and posted them on social media. I was not happy about it because I have gained weight during this COVID period. How do I mention this to them? Should I tell my husband?

Uncomforta­ble in Texas

Dear Uncomforta­ble: By all means tell your husband. Then ask your in-laws to PLEASE take the photos down because you hadn’t realized until you saw them how much weight you had put on. If your relations with them are friendly, they will probably accommodat­e you. Then schedule another “shoot” when you are shipshape again.

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