Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Widower is persistent in his advances

- Ask Carolyn

Dear Carolyn: Recently, an old college friend lost his wife to cancer. He now says he wants us to be together, but I’m not interested. I’ve tried to deflect his advances to be nice, but he’s very persistent. I know he’s still hurting from his wife’s passing and feels alone raising three young kids, so I want to be kind in my rejection. What do I say? How does one reject or break up with a perfectly good person without being hurtful, with compassion and kindness? – Old Friend

Old Friend: First, rid yourself completely of the idea that turning down someone’s romantic offer is inherently hurtful or unkind. We owe people civility and respect; we don’t owe them ourselves. So think of it that way: He is asking you to give yourself to him, and you don’t want to. What’s wrong with no? Why are you supposed to “be nice” and “deflect his advances” when it’s your life we’re talking about?

What you say, next time this comes up: “I am not interested in a relationsh­ip.” Kind remarks about his value to you as a friend can help but aren’t required. Only clarity is.

If he remains persistent after said clear statement, then tell him that’s not acceptable: “I said I was not interested. Respect my ‘no.’ ”

Enforcemen­t beyond that is through your companions­hip – meaning, you withdraw his access to it if he declines to show due respect.

That a husband and father of young children has to go through this is terribly sad. But his sadness doesn’t give him any claim on anyone else. In fact – this could fill another answer entirely – his reaching for you so persistent­ly is so likely to be influenced by his grief that even if you were interested in him romantical­ly, I would recommend your remaining at a platonic remove indefinitely. He’s got a lot of pain to sort out and a lot of healing to do. If he succeeds at panic-courting a stepmother to his children, then I foresee all five members of this reconstitu­ted family living to rue that day.

Once you’ve found your words here and given him a straight answer, maybe you’ll find yourself feeling empowered and truthy – in which case, I hope you’ll both be ready for truth-telling about the perils of mixing romance with grief, pressure and need. This can include brainstorm­ing with him – as his friend – ways he can get village help with his kids, a crucial way to ease any urgency he feels to find candidates for the role.

Dear Carolyn: My nephew is getting married soon but my spouse and I weren’t invited to his wedding. Are we still obligated to send them a gift as many other family members are insisting?

Obligated?: You have no such obligation, and the people insisting you do aren’t even obligated to give a gift themselves, even though they were invited, because the whole point of a gift is that it’s given freely. Invitation­s are not dunning notices. You can always give gifts, too, just because you want to.

It is also wrong for other family members to get into your business – so I hope they gave you their wrong answers about gifts because you requested their opinions, and not because they butted in.

A girl can dream.

 ?? Carolyn Hax ??
Carolyn Hax

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States