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Dear Margo | 02/26/2009 11:00 pm

Dear Margo: What to Do When Everything's Out of Whack

An unhappy wife staying with her husband for the sake of the children and a confused woman who is ignored by her boyfriend get advice from Margo Howard
Margo Howard

What To Do When Everything’s Out of Whack

DEAR MARGO: I have been married for 21 years to a man who’s a member of a cult posing as a religion. It attracts a lot of rich celebrities, but also people who really can’t afford what it costs. My husband has given them tens of thousands of dollars over the years. When my parents died, I paid off $30,000 of his credit card debt from my inheritance. We have a child with a very expensive health problem, and because we’re both self-employed, we have terrible health insurance.

For the past three years my hubby has not wanted to have sex. He confessed six years ago to going to strip clubs, but I thought he’d kicked the habit. He never says "I love you" or displays any affection. I have kept myself thin and attractive, but recently put on 15 pounds. I am 49 years old and have a lot to offer, but feel I need to stay married for the sake of the kids. The youngest is 14.

If you know anything about religious cults, you know they are a weird bunch of money-hungry kooks, and his particular group badgers him to come to "events" and buy expensive books and tapes. All of it is a crock. They call at all hours of the day and night. By the way, he has an addiction to online computer games and plays them whenever he is home — ignoring the family. I’m not getting any younger. —- LONELY

DEAR LONE: Let us make a list. On the negative side you are married to a man whose "religion" requires money he cannot afford to give — and which does not seem to be improving his life. You have used some of your inheritance to clean up his credit card bills. Your child has expensive health care needs and lousy insurance, but your husband still supports his "religion" — and strip clubs. For three years (!) there has been neither sex nor affection. Furthermore, he ignores the family because he is addicted to computer games. Now, on the positive side … well, there is no positive side. I am not a believer in staying hitched, like two mules, for the sake of the children. They benefit not at all from a loveless home with at least one extremely unhappy parent, probably two. And you are right about not getting any younger. —- MARGO, CORRECTIVELY

The Dog Ate His Homework and the Hurricane Wrecked Your Romance

DEAR MARGO: I have been "dating" a man for the past three months, and he constantly uses his job as an excuse not to see me: "Too busy." Granted, he owns his own business, and after Hurricane Ike I can understand that he has to fix things up, but this is ridiculous. We barely have any contact at this point; whereas, we used to at least e-mail and talk on the phone. Now we don’t even have that. Am I being stupid for staying with him and continually accepting his excuses and giving him chances? —- STUPID IN HOUSTON

DEAR STU: Honey, you are dating … he is trying to extricate himself. I always look at someone’s behavior. It is one thing to be super-busy and quite another to be incommunicado. I would chalk this up to experience — and not a great one, at that. Too bad this man could not have handled things in a more direct fashion. —- MARGO, RESIGNEDLY

Dear Margo is written by Margo Howard, Ann Landers’ daughter. All letters must be sent via e-mail to dearmargo@creators.com. Due to a high volume of e-mail, not all letters will be answered. To read more about Margo Howard, click here.

COPYRIGHT 2009 MARGO HOWARD
DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.

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77 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Ms. Dee
Men are such a joy, aren’t they?  To both of these ladies, I would only say that it took me awhile, but the prospect of growing old alone has become such a peaceful proposition compared to the chaotic upheaval of sharing it with a man.  I know many women who’ve been very happily married to the same man for their whole lives, but I wouldn’t trade places with any of them.
By Ms. Dee on 02/26/2009 11:21 pm
Laurie Morgan
Inconsiderate people are unpleasant in every shape, size and gender.  I guess it’s good that you’re at peace with being alone, because I don’t know any self respecting individuals — male or female — that find such bitterness and generalization attractive.
By Laurie Morgan on 02/27/2009 2:39 pm
Nancy Pea

who says she is bitter? maybe she is just happy to be where she is in life. i know i am. it doesn’t mean i hate ALL men or think they should all be written off the face of the earth. but some of us just don’t need them as much when we get older as we did when we were younger.

it’s a proven fact that most mature women if widowed or divorced in their later years will not remarry. but most men if they have been married for long periods of time have to remarry. they are just lost. usually they remarry within a year of divorce or death of their mate. so i wouldn’t think ms. dee is bitter or negative. just truthful! (and there are a lot more of us out there than you might think Ms. Morgan).

By Nancy Pea on 02/27/2009 11:56 pm
rocky rocky
That is a certainty!
By rocky rocky on 02/28/2009 5:51 pm
Ms. Dee

Yo!  Ms. Pea.  Thanks for guarding my back! 

I’ve been on my own for almost ten years now, and every now and then, when I’m off on some bold adventure, I can’t tell you how glad I am I didn’t have to confer with anyone who’d poo-poo the entire undertaking.  ‘Cause usually things work out better than even I expected!  And if I do hit a snag, I have the privacy to work through it without any smirking recriminations.

I haven’t closed my mind to the possibility that someone might walk into my life, and some sort of mutual admiration (dare I say, love) would develop.  But for the first time in my life, seeking and finding that sort of thing isn’t the highest priority.  And I’m honestly enjoying the peace and quiet. 

By Ms. Dee on 03/02/2009 9:02 pm
Nancy Pea

your very welcome since i can say i have been there just like you, i thought we should present our case and everybody would have to be happy with it.

bitter? not me. just realistic. i worked for a furniture store here in reno for 10mos. i saw men my age coming in with women (or should i say girls) my daughter age or YOUNGER. their wives call them "daddy" and "papa". they have kids my grandson’s age and they all look like barbie (seriously).

in all the ads i saw on places like cupid.com and others all the men my age (i’m 49) want teenyboppers or women with barbie doll figures. i gave up on dating after my last marriage because nobody could stand up to his generousity and gentlemanly ways (when he was sober). i’m sorry i like an old fashioned man that will wine me and dine me. i was raised old school. i will gladly do my part to take care of my man, but only if he takes care of me first. no dutch treat, no holding my own door open, no carrying my own groceries. sorry if i’m from a different time. but my own daughter and her friends feel the same way. so maybe i’m not a dinosaur after all!

you keep up the good work and i hope you find that guy. i just don’t want to be bothered. i have to much to do and not enough time to play the games anymore.

By Nancy Pea on 03/04/2009 5:51 pm
Ms. Dee
You’re right, Laurie.  I should’ve said "some men…"  Certainly, the two Margo’s asked us to consider sound exhausting to me.
By Ms. Dee on 03/02/2009 9:05 pm
Laurie Morgan

I appreciate your reasoned response Ms. Dee!  Still, I wish you would have said "some people."  Either way, you and I can agree that the kinds of struggles Margo’s letter writers are trying to endure are not worth it.  That’s not a symptom of living with men though, it is a symptom of living with someone you shouldn’t be with in the first place. 

Healthy coupledom is built upon compatibility, but our society has built up this expectation that struggling with a significant other is normal.  It’s not.  Dear Abby had some terrific words about that this week.  So many of these advice seekers want to know how to keep a disaster together when that shouldn’t even be the goal.  They really should discard the desperation and give peace a chance, whether single or with the right person.

By Laurie Morgan on 03/03/2009 12:05 pm
Ms. Dee
"discard the desperation…" perfect.  That’s  what I wish I’d said.  Thanks.  I’m not sure that makes me any more attractive to "any self-repecting individual" but that’s the process I’m working with at this point in my life, and I highly recommend it.
By Ms. Dee on 03/03/2009 12:46 pm
Nancy Pea
ms. dee, you and me both. at this point i would rather be happy alone than miserable with some man. i have my children, grandchildren, friends and relatives to keep me company. the only thing i would need a man for is to take me out to eat and a movie and those i can do for myself now anyway! sorry men, your loss!
By Nancy Pea on 02/27/2009 11:52 pm
Ms. Dee

Well, I know I’d rather be happy than miserable, whether there’s a man around or not.  That’s been my challenge.  I always seem to wrap my happiness around theirs, until I completely lose track of where mine comes from.

But you’re right.  When you have children and grandchildren and a few precious friends…and I’m lucky enough to still have my mother!  So it’s not like there’s no love in my life.  And I’m fairly certain it’s a win-win.

By Ms. Dee on 03/02/2009 9:16 pm
Nancy Pea
that was my problem also. i would give them everything EVERYTHING. after my family of course. but i would make sure they had the best gf/wife/fiancee/etc and in the end they thought i was too much. i just am too caring and too giving and then too taken advantage of. this way i have everything i need and no worries about being taken over by somebody else.
By Nancy Pea on 03/04/2009 5:53 pm
Lila Kuh
Ms Dee and Ms Pea, I have to share this: I had a great-aunt who went straight from her father’s home to her husband’s home.  The husband turned out to be a philanderer but her family and husband expected her to turn a blind eye to it and continue to be the charming hostess for the sake of his career, and that is what she did - for decades.  Such were the expectations of that family and that era.  She was widowed in her 70s and lived on her own for the first time in her life.  Eventually she found a new love and her family, highly embarrassed, pleaded with her to "let him make an honest woman of you," but she never did.  She had her own home, her freedom, AND her boyfriend for the rest of her life - life on her own terms.
By Lila Kuh on 03/04/2009 7:21 pm
Ms. Dee
Thanks for this, Lila.  What a GREAT great aunt.  What a dear, sweet heart of a woman.  Thanks for sending this to me.
By Ms. Dee on 03/04/2009 7:42 pm
Rain in Minneapolis
Ms. Dee, you are on to something!   Marriage isn’t for everyone, and being free to truly live your life as you please is my idea of true happiness.
By Rain in Minneapolis on 02/28/2009 10:58 am