The Norwalk Hour

Beau cannot afford birthday dinner

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

Dear Abby: Every year my girlfriend and I take each other out for dinner on our birthdays and bring a gift. This year, even though I am currently experienci­ng financial hardship, I bought her a gift and offered her dinner.

At the restaurant, she ordered the largest portion of what she wanted. She stated it’s what she always orders in that restaurant. I responded that she always takes half of it home, and that I had offered to buy her dinner for that night, not for two days. She got very angry and said I was ruining her birthday.

She then said she’d pay for her own meal. I declined her offer and paid, but now I’m wondering if I was wrong. She did pay for half the appetizer, which I didn’t want or eat, and she left the tip. Should I have told her before we went out to dinner that I was on a tighter budget?

Losing in Las Vegas

Dear Losing: If money is tight, you should have mentioned it long before her birthday rolled around. Yes, she should have been aware of it before you invited her to dinner. Because she wasn’t, I can understand why she might have been put off by what she may have interprete­d as a snide comment rather than a cry for help.

Dear Abby: I am in my early 40s. I have reconnecte­d with a girl I dated in high school. Things are wonderful. I have come to understand that she was “wronged” by other men more than once in the years in between.

But I have also learned it was happening during our relationsh­ip as teens.

I cannot stop ripping myself in half for not realizing it was happening and doing nothing to stop it. I wasn’t damaged; she was.

I am hesitant to do anything that makes her revisit her pain, but it is something I can’t let go of. I am not sure how I should proceed in the present, so that I don’t let the past damage a future that seems so bright.

Cautious in Michigan

Dear Cautious: If you plan to proceed with this romance, the two of you should get at least six months of couples counseling from a licensed profession­al.

A lot has happened to you both in the intervenin­g years since high school.

There was nothing you could do to stop anything that happened. She was a willing participan­t in those failed relationsh­ips. Your future with her will be brighter once you know each other better as adults.

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