Carolyn:
What do you think of premarital counselingfi My boyfriend and I, in our early thirties, live together. The one obstacle we face is an inability to "fight fair." He has suggested we see a couples' therapist before we become engaged. I am thinking that if we can't communicate well on our own, we may not be "meant to be." What do you thinkfi
--Brooklyn
I think if you still can't communicate after some tutoring from a competent professional, then maybe you aren't meant to be.
Since it makes so little sense to chuck everything instead of trying to fix one (admittedly large) problem, I also have to wonder if you've already made up your mind to leave him. If that's true, and the confessing, packing and moving -- not to mention the unfair fighting that may come with it -- all seem too daunting, then maybe this discussion about counseling, if not the counseling itself, can be just the opening you need.
Dear Carolyn:
After our son broke up with his live-in girlfriend of 2 1/2 years, my husband and I felt very sad. We really liked this young woman and thought she would be part of our family forever. It's been five months now and both have moved on to other relationships. We became emotionally attached to this young woman and find it hard to "move on" and accept the new girlfriend. Our son feels we should be more supportive of him and his new girlfriend. It has caused some friction in our family, which has never happened before. What do you recommend we do to fix this situationfi
--Sad Mom
You and your husband need to break up with the old girlfriend.
I sympathize, I do -- as everyone should who has ever signed on to the idea of gaining a daughter or son through a child's marriage. It has to work the same in reverse, and by that measure you've lost a (common-law) daughter.
However, since it sounds like you're working on losing a son, too, it's time to concentrate on keeping the baby you've got. The reasons aren't just familial, that he's your son and you need to back him no matter what. That wouldn't be the case if, for example, he'd been cruel or abusive to her.
It's more that it was his relationship, day to day to day, and any number of blameless (or at least forgivable) things could have happened that he might not want to pick over with Mom and Dad. What if, for example, their sex life wasn't so goodfi Should he have to spell that outfi Would you want him tofi
So, in the absence of bigger moral imperatives: He made his decision, you made him, he's the one you support. You can keep in touch with the ex, if you'd like, but the open grieving for her has to go.
No doubt your grief would be easier to handle if your son gave you a chaser of sympathy or understanding to go with that shot of like-my-new-girlfriend-or-else. I think it's OK to ask for that -- not as a condition of your support, though. Just as a modest request for a little support in return.
And, who knows -- he chose well once, maybe he chose well again.
E-mail "Tell Me About It": tellme@washpost.com; fax: 202-334-5669; or write: "Tell Me About It," c/o The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St., NW, Washington, D.C. 20071. Chat online with Carolyn each Friday at noon Eastern time, at www.washingtonpost.com.
This story appeared in The Daily Herald on page C3.
Posted in Lifestyles on Saturday, June 23, 2007 11:00 pm
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