The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Husband gets upset at wife always stealing his charger

- Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@creators.com.

DEARANNIE>> I try to be an easygoing husband, but my natural inclinatio­n is to get upset about stupid things. This is a flaw that I’ve been working on, and I have made a lot of progress. However, there is one thing that sets me off, and I don’t knowwhat to do about it.

My wife steals my iPhone chargers.

I know it sounds innocent or maybe even cute, but I assure you that it is not.

I admit that I ampretty militant about charging my phone. I never overcharge it. I let it get down to zero percent battery, charge it to 100 and then unplug it. I believe that this preserves the life of the battery, and it seems to work. As a result, when my wife renders me chargerles­s, my phone battery is on death’s door.

What makes things worse is that when I can’t find my charger, I have to ask — usually in an accusatory tone — my wife whether she has it. Usually, she responds by asking why I’m being such a jerk and either denies borrowing it (completely out of spite) or tells me to chill and not be so rigid about my charger. I’ve done what I do best, throw money at the problem. No dice. I’ve bought her multiple new chargers, but she always misplaces them and uses mine. I’ve thought about identifyin­g my chargers with a piece of colored tape, but I don’t want to come across as an anal control freak. (I am sure I sound like one.)

I know this is not a big deal to most people, but it is to me. I love my wife, but I also love my iPhone and don’t want to choose between them. (Mostly kidding.) In all seriousnes­s, how do I keep my phone and marriage fully charged? — Charged-Up

Spouse

DEARCHARGE­D

UP>> You’ve made my job easy, as I think the colored tape is a great solution to this sticky problem. Though it wouldn’t be fair to your wife for you to indulge every control-freak impulse, you’re entitled to feel strongly about one or two household issues. Even if it’s something that might seem small from the outside, if it’s important to you, then it should be important to your partner.

DEARANNIE>> My husband and I have been arguing over his family. His mother is very controllin­g and causes a lot of problems. Her husband died about 25 years ago, and ever since then, she’s just stopped living. She won’t go out of the house unless she has to go to the doctor, and she does nothing for herself. She is now 86 years old, and this has been going on for years. She had to have a knee replacemen­t 17 years ago, and since then, my husband has done her grocery shopping. She is so stubborn she won’t allow anyone else to do things for her. My brother-inlaw “Thomas” lives next door to her, but he is in very bad health and can barely take care of himself. Thomas is the eldest sibling and refuses to put her in a nursing home.

To complicate things, she doesn’t get out of bed until 1 in the afternoon. My husband’s work schedule has changed, and he now works only on weekends. Since his schedule change, he has gone to the store every Wednesday after 1 p.m. No matter what our plans are, he makes that a priority. We have been working on our house — painting, etc. We have argued over this so much. I get angry because he gets nothing done in our home. I have done everything, even threatenin­g to divorce him. He will not stop doing it. I am fed up.

Two of the other siblings live out of state, but three live in the area, yet my husband is the only one who does anything for her. None of his siblings will go against Thomas and his insistence on not putting her in a nursing home. She would be so much better off to be where she could be cared for properly. No one visits her because they are so disgusted with her. I am at my wits’ end. It’s terrible, but I wish she would just go. She has nothing to do with her kids, grandchild­ren and great-grandchild­ren. I didn’t come into this family until after the passing of my husband’s father, so I don’t know what she was like before. I have nothing but resentment toward her and Thomas. What can I do? — Frust

rated DEARFRUSTR­ATED>> That which we resist persists. You might get better results if you gave up on forcing the situation. Try to be more understand­ing about your husband’s reluctance to abandon his mother. Though she sounds very difficult, she is still his mom, and she raised him into the man whom you married. I’ll bet that his loyalty and tenderness toward his mother are partly what attracted you to him in the first place. At the same time, that doesn’t mean you must silently resign yourself to the status quo. Communicat­e with him that you would like to spend more one-on-one time with him, or work together to make a schedule of things you can both do around the house so there’s no resentment.

 ??  ?? Annie Lane
Dear Annie
Annie Lane Dear Annie

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