Dear Margo | 09/02/2009 11:00 pm
Dear Margo: What to Do When a Daughter Is Without the Compassion Gene
What To Do When a Daughter Is Without the Compassion Gene
Dear Margo: I thought I’d write to you since I have nowhere to turn. I’ve been divorced for 14 years and had two children from that marriage. I am now married to my new husband and have a son with him. The problem is my daughter from my first marriage, who is mad at me because I refuse to attend parties and get-togethers that involve my ex-husband and his mother. The stress I experience in their presence is unbearable. I am literally nauseated due to the mental and physical abuse he put me through while we were married. I cannot bear to look at him, and when he looks my way, he has this big grin on his face. His mother hates me because I divorced him, and she glares at me whenever she sees me but doesn’t acknowledge me.
I have explained to my daughter how I feel and even offered to attend her parties after they have left or see her another day. What should I do? I know her father is enjoying the fact that I get sick if I have to attend these functions. And his mother never had anything to do with my children while we were married, and now is trying to take over during all the get-togethers. When we were married, he always threatened that he would take my children away from me if I wouldn’t perform certain perverted acts with him. Now I believe he’s found a way to take them away from me even though they are now adults. Help. I cannot lose them now. — Sandy
Dear San: Your grown daughter sounds as though she has the understanding of a Chihuahua, no offense to that breed of dog. Does she know of the abuse? If she doesn’t, she should be informed; and if she does, which I suspect is the case, she must be on her dad’s payroll. Rather than being submissive and going along with this garbage, I would read this kid the riot act and tell her you are not subjecting yourself to being at the mercy of your abuser and his witchy-sounding mother. If she has so little regard for your feelings that she has a hissy fit because you won’t play "Let’s Pretend," I don’t think you’ve "lost" much by skipping the affairs at Ulcer Gulch. — Margo, furiously
Could Things Get Any More Complex?
Dear Margo: I am a college student, taking some time off. I’ve been conversing with a married transsexual woman I met online, and I have a desire to meet her in person. She and her spouse, also transsexual, are polyamorous and are more than happy to have another romantic interest. Due to my state’s economy, I have no job prospects, but I do have enough saved so that travel expenses would not burden me. However, I am wondering how I should go about breaking the news to my parents. I don’t want to lie, but I am also not convinced they need to know everything yet. — Exploring
Dear Ex: Frankly, if you were to tell your parents, I’m not sure what you would tell them. This is certainly one of those situations where you can’t tell the players without a score card — or a birth certificate — let alone trying to explain it to someone else. I’m not sure you would even know with whom you’re, um, having the pleasure. I doubt that this is a good idea to begin with, but that is not what you asked me. You are right, however, that it would not be wise to announce to your folks that you’re off on a sexual adventure with two transgendered people and their polyamorous friends. They would likely keel over, so just say — if you really decide to do this — you’re going to visit some friends you met online. — Margo, confoundedly
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Dear Margo is written by Margo Howard, Ann Landers’ daughter. All
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171 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
LW1 perhaps you could bring along a male companion, need not be a boyfriend and preferably a big fella, to neutralize your exe’s smug looks. Just ignore the ex MIL.
LW2 On the one hand your open to… hmm, let’s say, "a long strange trip," but on the other hand you cannot tell your parents a white lie? I don’t buy it. I think this letter is BS.
Van, I’m with Linn on this. Not only should the ex-wife NOT have to subject herself to stress by being in the same room with the ex-husband and former MIL, but it’s even worse to turn every event into a possible confrontation or possibly even assault. You can bet there would be charges brought, lawsuits, even more pain and agony. The easiest and healthiest thing for her is to just never see those who have caused her so much pain already.
So, because the guy wanted a sexual encounter that automatically means he should be able to lie without any guilt? Wow.
I phrased my sentence wrong, AR…I was reading what was written by others as: ‘If the guy wants a sexual encouter, it automatically means he has no problem with lying (assuming in this case, that a person who is sexual is a liar). Personally, I don’t think it’s his parents business & any omission of his is not a lie at all. I just read it as being said that a person who is sexually adventurous has no ethics/morals. Now that I look at my sentence, it really didn’t convey that meaning at all, wow.