Los Angeles Times

Only move is to move on

- Send questions to Amy Dickinson by email to askamy@tribune.com or by mail to Ask Amy, Chicago Tribune, TT500, 435 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60611.

Dear Amy: My boyfriend of 12 years and I are supposed to move into a house together at the end of this month, but there are problems.

Until now, we’ve lived separately. He has a house a half-hour away from mine. Both of us have grown children. While my children have known him for almost all of the 12 years, his children do not even know I exist.

This is an ongoing issue between us. Two weeks ago, he took his oldest daughter (who is 27 and married) to see the house we’re buying. He told her to pick out any bedroom she wanted.

He didn’t tell her about me.

I was very upset and said that he should tell his kids about me immediatel­y. He got mad at me and hasn’t spoken to me for 10 days. I know from past experience that he is waiting for me to apologize.

I’m worn down by all of this and very depressed. I’ve invested a lot of money putting my house on the market, I’ve accepted an offer and the closing is scheduled. Am I making a huge mistake or can this relationsh­ip somehow work?

Fretting

Dear Fretting: Because you have made the shocking choice to accept an offer on your house and invest in another under such dicey circumstan­ces, I’m going to leave my sometimes cozy perch, grab my megaphone and tell you, no, no, no, no!

This relationsh­ip will never work. Take this current crisis as a wake-up call. Do whatever is necessary to extricate yourself from this house deal and start fresh. Do not communicat­e with this man again. His refusal to acknowledg­e you to others effectivel­y negates your very existence. Please, start your life anew.

Dear Amy: My father is in his mid-80s and in poor health. Mom died several years ago.

Dad has always been miserable. He never really had a kind word to say to anyone, complained almost constantly and basically has always been a mean and miserable guy.

At my workplace in the past six months we have had five elderly parents of coworkers pass away. Collection­s were taken, cards sent and services have been held for these family members. That got me pondering the demise of our dad and how I will not have the same kind of grief as my co-workers. Two of my brothers have already indicated they will not attend any kind of service for him.

How do people have and hold funerals or services for family members that were not loved? When co-workers express feelings of sorrow to me am I being a hypocrite because I will not have much regard for his loss? Some insight would be appreciate­d.

Not Sad for Dad

Dear Not Sad: There is no requiremen­t to hold a service after your father’s death. It isn’t all that unusual for families to have small private services — or no service at all.

When co-workers express their sympathy, focus on their actions and intent. If you don’t want to discuss the back story behind your relationsh­ip with your father, you respond, “Thank you so much for your concern. It means a lot. We aren’t holding a service (or ‘we’re having a private service’).”

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