Dear Margo | 10/30/2009 12:15 am
Dear Margo: When Idiot Strangers Speak
When Idiot Strangers Speak
Dear Margo: Why do people feel the need to make comments about unusual numbers and sexes and looks of families? I am a mother of three daughters, one son and a stepdaughter. Invariably, when we’re out, someone makes a comment. Before the birth of my son we would hear, "That’s a lot of weddings" and "Are you going to keep going until you get a boy?" People would actually ask me if I wished one of my children were a boy! When I found out my fourth child was a boy, I began dreading the inevitable, and sure enough people did not disappoint. "Finally got that boy, huh?" I am so thankful to have my children and would have loved them no matter what the sex. Other mothers of large families also tell me of times they’ve been told, "You have your hands full" or "You already had a boy and a girl, why’d you keep going?"
People also comment on my children’s looks … which one they find more aesthetically pleasing and their heights and age differences. A co-worker of mine who has a biological child that appears to be of a different race always gets asked if she’s the child’s nanny. And all of these comments are made right in front of the children. Please remind your readers that families come in all different sizes, colors and ages, and that a simple "You have a beautiful family" will suffice. — Lucky To Have My Children in N.Y.
Dear Luck: What can I tell you? Some people are dumb and think it’s fine to say whatever they’re thinking. I believe a suitable way to show your displeasure with such inappropriate musings would be to knit your eyebrows together, give them the fish-eye and say nothing. Sometimes silence is a killer. — Margo, responsively
Taking a Break and Waiting it Out
Dear Margo: When I began dating my boyfriend, he would remark occasionally that he would never love again, that he had no heart to give anymore. His ex-girlfriend, whom he was with for four years, did quite the number on him when she dumped him. I was hurt to hear him say those things, and now, nine months later, I realize it might be true. He’s admitted he doesn’t love me, but that he "cares." He’s not very tender, he doesn’t like to kiss, and he has never hugged me (the only exception being when we lie in bed to watch TV, he puts his arm around me).
What doesn’t make sense is that while he has admitted to not being in love with me, he can be caring and thoughtful. He claims to be a very emotional person, but I have never seen any evidence of that. He is sweet, a gentleman, brilliant and entrepreneurial, and has taught me a great deal, both intellectually and emotionally. I am stupidly in love with him, but I am desperate for someone to hold me and tell me they love me. I have no idea what to do. I have never felt this way before, but knowing that he doesn’t love me has left me broken. — Downtrodden in Florida
Dear Down: I sympathize with your dilemma. It sounds as though this man has much to recommend him, but he has basically told you he doesn’t have it in him to love again. I suspect he won’t feel this way forever, but for now the situation is no good for you. Perhaps suggest that you two take a break so he can figure out whether he needs you in his life. If you stick around with this arrangement, he will break your heart. — Margo, sensibly
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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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157 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
oh, i am not chick flick averse. not at all. i’m really shitty movie averse. HJNTIY is one of the worst movies i’ve ever seen.
the girl with me, who picked it, hated it as well… WAY too long and boring and ugly in every way. awful.
we joked that the subtitle of that movie is "Bitches Be Crazy" … murky, questionable messages … terrible performances and inept technically in every way. geez, that movie sucked.
on the other hand, Ghosts of Girlfriends Past is way better than it has any right to be. go see that 10 times before HJNTIY.
don’t try to play the chick flick card. i guarantee i’ve got you beat. :)
Letter #1: Margo is right on.
Letter #2: Given your comment about watching TV in bed, it’d seem he’s still totally into sex. He’s in a pity party. I’ve been stung/burned too, but you don’t linger on taking it out on others. Unreciprocated love is a frustration and aggravation nobody needs; eventually you will get tired of it and break up. If he won’t take measures to see and change, you have no future with him; it’ll be continued status quo and you’re already frustrated with it.
Ltr.2: I’m going to borrow a line from Maya Angelou.
"When people tell you who they are, Believe Them."
LW #1 - Margo is right. People can be stupid and while it can be troublesome, you really can’t get around it.
LW #2 - oh sweetie - leave him. You may be stupidly in love with him, but if he can’t give back don’t you think you deserve better? Maybe he’ll wake up, maybe he won’t - but it seems you have and you know what to do. Yeah it’ll blow and you’ll cry alot but there is someone out there who WILL hug you and say ‘I love you’, and you deserve it
Sorry, but the story about a guy in recovery from a blighted romance is just a story. He is not capable of loving this woman, so give it up. Don’t wait for his transformation, because it won’t happen. What can he tell her? Of course, it’s easier to say that another woman’s disdain created this guy’s lack of love for his present partner. He could claim that his mother rejected him, whatever! No way, my dear. If you think you love him, consider spending the rest of your life with someone who doesn’t cherish you. All his fine manners and attributes do not make your situation better. Move fast and leave.
As for the mother who is upset by strangers’ remarks, I can empathize with her, because, to this day, I receive such comments, and I have grandchildren. My children have olive skin, dark eyes and hair and I am fair-skinned with light eyes, and when they were young I was asked whether I was their nanny, where did they get their suntan, and all those intrusive inquiries. I have a few snappy answers, because I don’t tolerate fools, even schoolteachers who commented on how "dark" my childen were. At times, I’d ask these awful people:"Yes, aren’t they beautiful? After all, we light skinned people loll in the sun to get a suntan, and they were born with it."
Though it is painful to receive such rude, even cruel comments, I try to remember that they are jerks who don’t know how to behave. And, they treat children as objects, which reveals an ugliness in them, not in my family.I also remember that they are ignorant, and if they are parents, I wonder whether they understand how to treat others. Pick your battles, and don’t waste time on such people!
In my mind, my family comes first, and when I reply, I make that clear!