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Margo Howard | 09/17/2009 12:00 am

Dear Margo: This Is Not 'The One'

Margo Howard

This Is Not "The One"

Dear Margo: I am a 30-year-old man with a college degree, a good job in these hard times and a girlfriend of six years who is starting her professional life soon. I love her, but now I am having doubts about our future. Part of the job training she’s getting is halfway across the country, so we would have a long-distance relationship for the next year. Furthermore, while we have a strong bond, there are several things having to do with religious and political issues on which we’ve never seen eye-to-eye (she’s the conservative, I’m the liberal). These things have never been a problem between us, but what concerns me is how our future children would be brought up.

Another thing that drives me batty is that she is 32 years old and still relies on her parents for almost everything. They’ve paid for countless things for her, and she will be getting monthly assistance from them while across the country. She also has a lot of debt that I’m worried about dealing with should we get married.

I’ve thought of marrying this woman, but then I think, with our differences, maybe we’re just destined to be friends. However, I was great friends with her sister even before I met her, and I fear that if I were to end my romantic relationship with her, my connection with her sister and her husband (one of my best friends) would crumble. I don’t know what to do. How do I best handle this? — Concerned in Colorado

Dear Con: Six years is a long time to spend with a woman who can’t manage money and depends on her parents, and whose views on important matters are not in sync with yours. You cannot marry this girl just so you won’t disturb the friendship you have with her sister and brother-in-law. I offer you two predictions: You won’t remain friends with your girlfriend, but neither will you lose the friendship of her sister and brother-in-law. As a general rule, it is not good policy to go ahead and marry someone who "drives you batty." — Margo, sagaciously 

Hey, Good Lookin’

Dear Margo: I am in my early 20s. Like most young women, I get a fair amount of attention from men of all ages when I am out. My question is, what is an appropriate response? One of my good friends will stop and entertain men who hit on her, regardless of where she is.

I think her actions are absurd. When guys whistle at me or yell out to me as I am walking on the street, I simply ignore them and continue on. This is what my mother taught me was acceptable behavior. I don’t find it necessary to give random guys who gawk and comment the time of day. Am I being rude? I am appalled by her behavior because most of my female friends act as I do. How should I handle these situations? – Anonymous

Dear An: I am not sure that "most" young women are showered with attention from strange men when they are out and about, but onward. I am also not sure what you mean when you say these men who are unknown to you "hit on" you and your friend. From my own experience as a younger woman (McKinley occupied the White House then), I can tell you that when construction guys would whistle or hoot and holler, I would wave and keep walking. I would not have classified that as being "hit on." If you are talking about strange men stopping you on the street to talk, you are correct to raise an eyebrow and continue on your way. As for your friend who seems to have the time of day for all comers, when you are with her just keep going. You cannot control her behavior, but you don’t have to join in. — Margo, civilly

***
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.

Every Thursday and Friday, you can find "Dear Margo" and her latest words of wisdom on our home page at www.wowowow.com. Or better yet, click to sign up for an instant email alert that will send a message right to your in-box every time a new "Dear Margo" column is posted on wowOwow. 

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

Laura Ward

#1 don’t marry her and he’ll have to put up with the consequences of losing everyone else. Or marry her, he gets to keep the others, but be married to her.

#2 I was beautiful once. Now I’m 54. When you get those street compliments, just smile sincerely and wave back. Definitely do not stop and pay them attention. Because of that, I was never asked for my phone number and I never had a complimentor pursue me.

By Laura Ward on 09/16/2009 11:44 pm
Dawn Smith

Laura,

You’re still beautiful so stop that !! When guys bugged me for my phone number I’d give them the number to the police station.  Guys are guys and women complain when they are hooted and hollered at and when they’re not they get all depressed and eat a gallon of ice cream. Go figure !!   Didn’t letter #1 sound familiar?

By Dawn Smith on 09/17/2009 2:27 am
Laura Ward
No, maybe I sound bitter, but the older I get, the less chivalrous men are. Wonder why…Yeah, at 54 I can pass for 45, but I can assure you, getting old sucks and there’s absolutely nothing you can do about it. Great seeing you comment again. Haven’t seen you comment anywhere where I’m at…
By Laura Ward on 09/17/2009 2:55 am
Dawn Smith

Laura,

I pick my battles. I have my opinions and thoughts but lately some of the things I’ve been reading don’t intice me to get involved. As far as men, we grew up in a different time. I am more than capable of opening and closing my own car door but when my man does it for me I like it. It’s called being a gentleman.

By Dawn Smith on 09/17/2009 12:33 pm
Laura Ward
By chivalry, in my last job, we older ladies used to notice how the guys (young and old) would offer to pick up lunch for the younger girls (under 30) but "forget" to make us the same offer. Our company was directly across from a place where you had to cross a busy highway. We all appreciated having our lunch picked up. Some of my recent interviews have been humiliating too. Once in a while I get to see my competition. Why they group interview, I’ll never understand. But there’s difference in how the younger applicants are treated over the older ones. About six months ago, a young guy who was interviewing both of us, met her first not realizing I was an applicant too when his smile got wiped off. I know I still look good…for my age…but that was so embarrassing. Maybe the guy didn’t want an employee 20 years older than him. She got water, I didn’t. She got a 30-minute interview, I got 7 minutes. But whatever…like I said, guys are getting less chivalrous as I age, but I notice the same men have their chivalry in place with younger women. I suppose this doesn’t advise the woman who wrote Margot, but I say she should lighten up about cat calls and attention from men. If she wants to ignore them, fine. If her friends wants to be appreciative, fine. They both miss the attention when it’s gone because of what it means
By Laura Ward on 09/17/2009 5:59 pm
Nancy Pea

i can understand what you are going thru with those interviews and the discrimination that you are dealing with. i just turned 50 myself two months ago and i get told i look younger. but i never believe flattery. i don’t go by what they say, but what they do! i have just stopped dating period. i asked a guy out. i was about 4 or 5yrs older than he was. never did he open the door for me or do any of that stuff. he had other habits that bothered me, but that was the straw that broke the camels back. now we are just friends and we both do better that way. lol! i was raised in a time when a gentleman did everything for you and frankly i like that. i raised my daughter (who will be 30 in march) the same way. so far she has only encountered a few that don’t do the job right and is single because of it (she dumped them usually). she didn’t mind footing the bill once in a while if they did their job from the start. one of my best friends always said "p—— ain’t free, so never give it away!" usually if a man is cheap he is alone, unless the woman was raised wrong or just wants things to go her way so she pays (i did that for a while when i was in my mid-twenties because of how my ex husband had treated me, but i got over it. lol). i just think that some of the boys growing into men now aren’t taught how to be gentlemen by their mothers. my son is always a gentleman as i brought him up to be.

as for the young males in the work force. you know that men think with the brain in their pants. so you know they are going to go for the cute girly girl that applied the same time as you. who knows the idiot might have thought you were her mother. obviously he wasn’t bright. needless to say, working for him would have been a pain and you would have had to go thru the process of filing discrimination charges. i worked for a company where the big boss was my age, but the little PETTY supervisors were all in their late teens and early 20’s. before they had been made petty tyrants, they were busy hating those above them. then they get promoted and love being little assholes with big mouths. 

in that one company, i got told by an 18yr old wet behind the ears child that i had potential i wasn’t using. i told him (and i didn’t care how sarcastic it sounded) "i have more potential in my little finger than you will in 20yrs. i have worked long and hard to get where i am, sonny (he looked like he swallowed an avacado pit when i said that)! i have experience, which obviously you will never see because you refuse to look!" then i walked out and went back to work. of course i got laid off after 90days. but it was a sucky job, with low pay and to many cooks to spoil the soup! so i didn’t miss it at all, but i sure loved telling that brat the "what for!"

i stopped bothering with them and at this point in my life i don’t miss the attention, just the money spent on me. lol!

By Nancy Pea on 09/17/2009 7:54 pm
Laura Ward
They have movie scenes where the beautiful girl gets 10 men to help her with whatever. Then you have the other woman, less pretty, or older, left to struggle. It’s funny in the movies. It’s not funny in real life.
By Laura Ward on 09/17/2009 9:47 pm
Nancy Pea

yes and sometimes in real life it goes differently thankfully. i never thought i would get my soul mate and then when i did it almost killed me. but i had him for that wonderful year and a half before he turned back to the alcohol and became abusive. but at this time i know even if he became sober i could never go back to him because he would need those meds for bi-polar ppl. but he would never take them. i’m sure if you stop looking for somebody nice that is when they will come along. a lot of guys do not worry about what a girl looks like. i found that having a really good sense of humor helps. being old, fat and disabled doesn’t bring them to my door, but making somebody laugh does. i just choose not to deal with it, because of my disabilities i have no sex drive and such a physical activity would be painful for me. so i choose not to put myself in that position. so i’m not bitter, i know what men (and women too) want. i just cannot fullfill it. so it’s wouldn’t be nice for me to lead somebody on. but if you have no limitations, i see no reason why you cannot get anybody you want.

altho, i did notice that men our age have lost their minds and want younger women. it’s embarrassing. i worked in a furniture store for ten months at the customer service counter in the back of the store. 3/4 of the men coming into the store to buy furniture for the beautiful new houses they were buying very cheaply (compared to california, i’m in reno, nv) were mostly with younger wifes, gf’s, etc. some of them actually call their husbands/lovers etc "daddy"! it really made me sick. these barbie dolls getting older men with money to get them the house, car, kids, alimony, child support and then when they have all that they dump the guy and marry the hot pool boy. then we get the leftovers. on all the dating services i tried most of the men, if they did want their own age, still wanted barbie dolls. slim, trim and ready for action. i just couldn’t be that for them. so i gave up. also i was still getting over my ex husband. so i didn’t have it in me. 

just be proud, self confident and see yourself as pretty and they will too. good luck, don’t give up and i’m sure you will find the one for you!

By Nancy Pea on 09/18/2009 12:40 am
Laura Ward
I have a wonderful boyfriend, it’s finding a job I’m having trouble with. But it looks like my boyfriend is creating a job for me and that should stop the humiliating job interviews (and jobs) with younger men. Thanks for the advice!
By Laura Ward on 09/18/2009 12:55 am
Nancy Pea

sorry i missed the point of your post. duh, lol i’ll blame it on my fibromyalgia. i had a temporary fibro fog when replying.

as for working with your bf, just remember seeing each other day in and day out can cause problems. sometimes too much time together is just as bad as not enough time. just remember you need time away from each other and you know if he fires you, you will definitely get pissed and want to break up. also some bf’s that become bosses turn into petty tyrants (or are already, but you don’t see it because you don’t work with them). so good luck on the job with him. i’m sure it will turn out wonderful! 

By Nancy Pea on 09/18/2009 2:19 am
Laura Ward
We’ve been working on projects together for the 7 years we’ve been together. I helped him start up two companies already including working and founding the current oil company he’s the president of. Unfortunately, there was a young CEO who wanted someone with a degree so I was out after a year. There’s also a suspicion that since he’s British, he doesn’t like Hispanic people. Then I was hired by a former employee of that company and 200 of us were laid off a year ago including him at the new company. So now I get to go on humiliating interviews until something comes up. I’m very computer literate, so I do the office management stuff, HR, purchasing, AP/AR, website maintenance, graphic artist/page layout, etc. But my competition in this bad economy are younger women with college degrees who would normally take junior management jobs, not office manager or executive assistant jobs. By the way, I’ve been to Reno, NV. Nice town! Fun town!
By Laura Ward on 09/18/2009 2:40 am
Nancy Pea

i’m originally from the san francisco bay area. but i really love it here. i just hate summer. the heat really hurts me because of my fibro and lupus. but i absolutely adore the winter. it’s like i was made for snow. lol! i can even drive in it. i have been here since 2003 and will stay here as long as my grandson is here. i help my daughter raise him. you might want to visit reno again as it’s changing a lot. also they need revenue bad so you can get in for rock bottom for hotels, shows and dining. especially sun - thursday. unfortunately, it’s also getting very developed and built up. if there is a mountain somebody will cover it with houses, shopping malls and strip malls. as soon as my grandson gets old enough for kindgergarten we plan to move to fernley a town 30miles east of reno on hwy 80 where his daddy and grandparents live. it’s still pretty rural. all it has so far is a walmart. lol!

well, i’m glad that you and him get along well in business. at least you already know that it will work out. best of luck on the job working out. i would love to own my own answering service. but i will never have the capitol or find one willing to sell. but i can dream about it.

By Nancy Pea on 09/18/2009 2:54 am
Beep Beep
I have fibro and lupus as well so wanted to give you a virtual (hug) :)  I’m fat now thanks to prednisone!  And yes, men now forget to help me with my groceries…
By Beep Beep on 09/18/2009 4:31 am
Nancy Pea
thanx virtual hug back. but see i always have a man to help me with my groceries. he is my 31yr old son. i never have to lift a finger. he is a true gentleman. he is always helping take care of me a long with his sister. he is mentally disabled and has never wanted to live alone or anything. so we all live together. my dr has not prescribed prednisone. the last time i had it (in the mid 80’s) it was for broncitis and it made me so sick i couldn’t keep down water (same with erithromycin). but i learned how to get aorund it. what does the prednisone do? i have taken methyl-prednisonealone for itchy rashes i used to get. but haven’t in quite a while.
By Nancy Pea on 09/18/2009 4:40 am
Truth 1746

Prednisone is given to help w/ flairs, swelling in the joints, and things like that. It’s a steroid that’s pretty powerful. I hate taking it and won’t unless absolutely necessary.  (It’s the go to medicine most Drs. use at the first sign of Lupus or a flair.) It comes in a five pack and the ones I get are in a plastic case. It can also make you test negative for ANA. I had that problem when I was first being diagnosed. One Dr. kept prescribing  it for me and kept testing me for ANA. He was like it can’t be Lupus, you keep testing negative! Well… DUH, of course I do.  (I don’t see that Dr. anymore because of that.) That stuff makes me so sick, I’d rather deal with the flair. 

 I’ve got Lupus, Fybro, and now my Dr. is insisting I’ve got RA in my hands. I told him I had enough to deal with and I wasn’t accepting any more illness! LOL! The RA can go take a hike as far as I’m concerned.  

 

 I’m sorry that you two have had bad experiences w/ rude people. There is no excuse for bad manners at any age. What you’ve described, in your job search, is ageism. Both men and women get discriminated against because of their age all the time. As a business owner, I would prefer to hire someone more experienced, because I know the job is going to get done right and I don’t have to waste resources training, but I think I am in the minority. 

By Truth 1746 on 09/18/2009 2:06 pm