Times-Call (Longmont)

Wife wants husband to stop being a nosy parker

- Amy Dickinson Contact Amy Dickinson via email, askamy@ tribpub.com.

Dear Amy: My husband is taking a company “buyout” this summer, thus retiring from his job.

The concern I have is that he is nosy! He has done things in the past that have upset me and my children (he is their stepdad).

He seems to think he is entitled to go through their rooms and poke through their things, under the guise of cleaning.

He has taken toys out of my son’s room and given them to our grandchild­ren without asking. He rearranged my daughter’s room while she was at school, and she came back home to a completely rearranged room.

While helping my daughter’s boyfriend, I caught him going through a box of papers in the back of the boyfriend’s car. I told him that these things were none of his business and his reply was, “It is if I make it my business.”

My kids have given us no cause to go through their rooms — no drinking/smoking/stealing or other causes for snooping.

My daughter has since graduated from college and is heading toward graduate school.

My son (who will be 21 soon) works and currently lives with us.

I’m concerned that when my husband’s retired and at home, he’s most likely going to be going through things he has no right to rifle through.

I know that if I confront him with this worry, he’ll get angr y, as he always does.

Any suggestion­s?

— Pre-retirement Jitters Wife

Dear Jitters: Evidently, there isn’t any way for you to advocate for your children’s ver y reasonable right to privacy without your husband becoming angr y, so let him be angr y.

I can’t think of any loving spouse who enjoys confrontin­g their partner about a recurring and challengin­g issue, but if you are too afraid of your husband’s anger to address his entitled and disrespect­ful habit, then this is a real red flag regarding your relationsh­ip.

I could imagine that your son might want to install a lock on his bedroom door, but given that he does not actually own the house (or his bedroom), the better option would be for him to search for other housing. In the meantime, you should urge him to store anything deeply personal or private off-site.

And yes, ever y time you witness your husband violating your (or someone else’s) privacy, you should call him on it. If you are too afraid of his anger to talk to him about this, then this is not someone you should be cohabiting with in retirement, when he will have much more time on his hands.

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