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Dear Margo | 07/08/2009 11:00 pm

Dear Margo: My All-Time Most Unusual Letter

Margo Howard

My All-Time Most Unusual Letter

Dear Margo: My best friend "Anita" told me a year ago that a woman had come forward to say she was her half-sister from a relationship their father had in his early 20s. Everyone welcomed "Penny" into the family, no questions asked. They included her in family events, photos — you get the picture. A month ago, Anita asked to come over and I could tell she was upset. When she arrived, she told me of the most horrible betrayal. She came home from college a day early only to find her dad and Penny having sex! Seems the "daughter" story was a cover so that her dad could include his stripper mistress in all the family activities. Anita called her mom immediately after catching them; Mom went home to confront Dad and Penny; and in the most cruel, sick way, he said he wanted to flaunt his "daughter" to the family because he was making up for lost time in the sex department, and had also bought her a car and paid for credit cards in her name. Anita’s mom has filed for divorce, and she and her brothers and sisters refuse to have any contact with their father. Anita has been going to counseling and was told that her father was pathological. She has decided to change her last name to her mother’s maiden name to avoid the shame caused by her father. This is a small area and everyone knows. I feel bad for my friend and have tried to be as supportive as possible, but some issues only a professional can deal with. She knows I am writing to you to warn others of wolves in sheep’s clothing. There should have been DNA testing, but the family trusted both of them. It is all so sad. — Aching for My Friend

Dear Ache: I suppose a DNA test would have been prudent, but I doubt that many men would move in a daughter-age stripper-mistress and try to pawn her off as a long-ago love child. This father/husband sounds embittered, sadistic and malicious, not to mention totally devoid of any humane feelings for his family. They are well rid of him, and I suspect, down the line, he will get his. Your friend is doing exactly the right things, and something useful you might do is keep reminding her that no one thinks less of her or her family. This story is all about her sleazebag of a father. — Margo, disgustedly

There Was an Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe

Dear Margo: I’m going to take a lot of flak for this opinion, but I must vent. I am so tired of women complaining of their tough lot in life because some man has left them and their five children. I am always seeing pleas for help from the single mothers with multiple kids. What are these women thinking? Some have no means to support themselves, never mind children. One accident I can understand. It happens. Maybe even two. But five? I know that bad things happen to good people, but use birth control, women! He’s not going to love you more if you give him a basketball team. In these hard times, it’s going to be even tougher for all concerned if you have a pack of children. I know I sound cold- hearted, but I work with preschoolers and see, daily, the results of women having children they don’t really want and can’t afford. — Climbing Down Off My Soapbox and Waiting for the Backlash

Dear Climb: I can’t say I disagree with you, but here’s the thing: Outside voices (yours, mine, Planned Parenthood’s) are not meaningful or relevant to women who are careless, negligent or thoughtless. And ordinarily, it is the woman who is controlling this situation, one way or another. If you want to be proactive on this issue, I suggest you work with your local school board to perfect a powerful sex ed program that stresses the facts of life. And I don’t mean birds and bees; I mean the responsibility that comes with a child. It is, of course, too late for the single mothers who already have the children. — Margo, practically

***
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.

COPYRIGHT 2009 MARGO HOWARD
DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.

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

Margo Howard
You are one of the lucky ones, and your mom sounds like a gem.
By Margo Howard on 07/09/2009 9:34 am
Nichole Parris
Thank you, I think so too. :)
By Nichole Parris on 07/09/2009 12:28 pm
C Hardy

Ok to LW1 - wow is all I can say. 

LW2 - I kind of see where your coming from.  There are women out there who have kids thinking it will save their marriage and before they stop they end up with multiple kids and their marriage is worse off then it was before.  They have relied on their husbands for everything that when he wants out they have nothing, no job, no money, but they have all the kids.  Child Support and Alamony only go so far…

I have a friend, thankfully she never married this guy, but she has 2 kids with him…they didnt have a great relationship but they were living together and apparently he trusted her…she told him that she was on birth control, knowing she wasnt, when she got pregnant with the 1st kid, that he really didnt want, then with the 2nd one, she put a hole in the condom…He wasn’t nice to her and cheated and beat her all the time, why she would want to bring kids into that kind of relationship is beyond me, BUT my point is that she did this, having 2 kids, thinking it would change this man and IT DIDNT.  They are now no longer together b/c of his abuse & she is a single Mom raising 2 boys getting very little child support from him.  She does have a full time job but she is still barely making ends meet.  I am not saying she should have never had those kids b/c they are beautiful children but the reasons she had them were wrong…There are a lot of women out there like that, more then some other women would like to admit.

By C Hardy on 07/09/2009 7:42 am
C Allen
The choice is: get an education and be able to support yourself. One of the most valuable lessons my mother taught me was that an education is just as important for a woman as it is for a man. Not only does an educated mother help educate her children…but she can also be self-supporting and take care of her children financially when necessary. How do I know? My children’s father didn’t support them after we separated and the only thing between us and living under a bridge was that I could hold a job that could support us. We weren’t rich. We did without a lot of things. But my children had food, clothing, and shelter.
By C Allen on 07/09/2009 8:11 am
Amy Walsh
I think education is MORE imporatant for a woman than a man.  A man without a degree can still get a $40-50,000/year job but there are very few women without degress that can do that.
By Amy Walsh on 07/09/2009 9:36 am
Christi  Rader
I’m not sure that letter #2 was talking about women who got married, had a couple children and then were left. She’s talking about women who went out and got pregnant, many of them by multiple men, and then wonder why these losers left them. I see the same thing happening. Some women obviously didn’t have good rolemodels in their lives, many of these women who fall into this have mothers who are the same way. It is very sad to see. My niece’s mother came from a woman who was married 3 times, had six children by 4 different men. Now she has my niece with my brother, and another girl with a new guy who is in and out of their lives. We don’t even get to see my niece. I would have to say it would not suprise me if this wasn’t the last guy or baby. Some women view children as a way to try and keep a guy around, which does not work. And they think that they will be supported, either by the child’s father or by the state. It is all very sad to see. Women need to have more pride and think about themselves and these innocent children.
By Christi Rader on 07/09/2009 8:38 am
Kristine Lincoln
I can not help but agree with this writer, HOWEVER I am a single mom with 3 children.  After being happily married with all 3 of the kids to end up in a messy divorce that left me with the children so my cheating ex-husband could live his fantasy life with his stripper mistress.  The children were planned and I have a good education and have worked my whole life and yet I struggle every day with the decision to pay the light bill or pay the rent this month.  With the fact that yes child support is in order, I have yet to recieve it since he will not get a legal job to support the family he once so sincerly wanted, leaving me to fend and fight to breathe.  So i guess I am responding with this, there might be some underlying reasons why the single mother who seems she does not want or cant afford her children.  I understand there are single mothers out there who are having children for a welfare check or for purposes of keeping a man, I get that.  But please do not stereo type the tired single mom who may seem a little owly when dropping kids off, she may just be tired and needs a break from life for a moment.  It is not always the womans intention to have 5 children and be a single mom.
By Kristine Lincoln on 07/09/2009 8:40 am
Rachel M
I have a cousin who’s ex worked under the table not to pay her. But they do effect their benefits for Social Security so they will have to live with their decison at retirement age when they get lower benefits. They can not contribute to an IRA without a legitimate income having a living off the books. Another thing no pension for them since they can not build up one with a company. As I see it they only bite themselves when they really need the money since most people can not work at retirement. I do not feel sorry for these losers who do not see far ahead. Karma is a b____.
By Rachel M on 07/09/2009 2:24 pm
Allison In Wonderland

I think letter #2 Margo is right on. We as a society of women have fought for so long to have equal rights, yet many times we do not want to take accountability for that which we can control, like getting pregnant and using common sense. I know so many women that whine because they have multiple kids and ended up with deadbeat dads. Some of those women have three or four kids each with a different man. I am not talking about the woman that is with her husband for 20 years and then all the sudden he decides to go through a midlife crisis or whatever, I am talking about the women who live recklessly and constantly say, "Well he got me pregnant and left" or whatever. I work in a field that puts me in contact with these kind of woman on a daily basis and their stories are so similar and yet they never seem to get it. And it is frusterating and I can see why the writer needed to vent.

Letter #1 I do believe is true, I have seen worse.

By Allison In Wonderland on 07/09/2009 8:49 am
Margo Howard
You are right - the letter is on the level. The writer and I had a back and forth. (Bless e-mail.) And because of my lead time for my newspaper clients, I write three weeks ahead … but I always get in touch with the writer when I choose a letter and form the answer. If you do this work for a while, the question, "Do you make this stuff up?" just makes you want to say "Ha! You have NO idea what people can get themselves into."
By Margo Howard on 07/09/2009 9:41 am
Matilda Chester
Yes, a similar thing happened to my husband’s parents as well, the other woman "needed help" so they took her in, gave her meals and money, etc.  Needless to say, my m-i-l was livid when she discovered the truth.  I don’t think she’s recovered from that to this day, not that I can blame her.
By Matilda Chester on 07/09/2009 11:26 am
Rachel M
That is just cruel and inhumane.
By Rachel M on 07/09/2009 2:25 pm
Washington  Cube

I know it’s true.  I’ve known worse.  What is BAFFLING me is how people are writing…"I suppose it could be true." God, I wish I could go back and live in your world.

 Things like this destroy families from the inside out.  They are left sitting on Mount Saint Helena staring at blackened tree stumps asking, "What happened?"  I always wonder about the other women in these stories.  The stripper girlfriends.  I have seen some women do horrible things knowing full well they were destroying a family.  You can state the obvious, "moola," but sometimes the pathology goes deeper than that.

 Anita?  If your father predeceases you, go to his grave.  Dig down a solid two feet. Fill the hole with motor oil, resod it and torch it.  Have the cemetery need to call in a emergency oil well crew from Texas where they need dynamite to put it out. Make headline news at six "Mysterious fire at local cemetery. May burn for days." Toss so much of the old coot’s soot up into the heavens it’s like volcanic ash and you’ll have pretty sunsets for a year.

By Washington Cube on 07/10/2009 2:09 pm
Tiffany Milligan

My best friend is a prosecutor for felony domestic violence cases.  One of her victims, a very pretty, somewhat simple but sweet girl of 26, has 5 kids and one on the way.  She’s taken the man who’s impregnated her with all of them to court multiple times on various counts, has gotten restraining orders against him, has broken up with him, etc.  Bottom line: the court system can’t keep him off the streets, he won’t leave her alone, and this current pregnancy happened when he came to her house (violating the restraining order) and, in her words, "just took it, because that’s what men do."  Women with means and education have the ability to acquire birth control and get themselves out of bad situations—even then, it doesn’t happen 100% of the time because of factors beyond their control.  So imagine the difficulty of someone without enough money to leave their neighborhood and without enough education/world perspective to know that his behavior is unacceptable.  She doesn’t even think of what he did as rape.  Figure out why women are in the situation they are in and try to help, if it really upsets you. That doesn’t mean giving them money if you’re opposed to doing that—often they just need a female role model to empower them.  The girl whose situation I described has a mother who begrudgingly went to court with her during her abuser’s most recent trial.  She regarded it as a "waste of time", surely because she has been treated similarly her whole life by men.  That’s why they call it "the cycle" of poverty, the "cycle" of abuse, etc.

By Tiffany Milligan on 07/09/2009 9:16 am
Margo Howard
The court system is a whole other problem. And your point about the "cycle" is valid. We need education and outreach, and the understanding that, in some cases, certain people will be beyond help. This is the sociological version of the economists’ mantra that "The poor will always be with us." It is the way of the world; every single one of us will never be educated or  living at a decent economic level.
By Margo Howard on 07/09/2009 9:46 am