A NOTE TO PARENTS OF YOUNG CHILDREN: If your little ones will be out trick-or-treating tonight, please be sure they are supervised to assure their safety.
Mom Resents Supporting Her Daughter Who's Deep in Debt
DEAR ABBY: My 34-year-old daughter, "Martha," is a single mom. I adore my granddaughter. Martha needs me to give her $500 a month, plus cover emergencies (new tires, hospital bills for baby, etc.) in order to get by. She has said repeatedly that she wants to have another baby before she's 35.
Abby, it's a financial burden to help her as much as we have. My husband (her stepdad) believes, along with me, that we should help until her finances improve. Martha is awash in student debt and has a low-paying job. She lives 12 hours away, so we have to fly out to see them, which means we don't see them often.
My question: How can I tell her that having a second baby when she can't support the first is something I can't handle financially? I am becoming resentful. Our retirement has been dismal because all our money is going to her.
My daughter has a hair-trigger temper and would use access to my granddaughter as leverage to keep the money coming. I'm appalled that she's in this position and upset that I have to pay for her choices. -- APPALLED IN OHIO
DEAR APPALLED: You DON'T have to pay for your daughter's choices. Tell Martha that as an adult it is her responsibility -- not yours -- to provide for herself and her child, and that if she becomes pregnant before her finances improve to the point that she's self-supporting, not to expect one more penny from you.
Please consider starting to reduce the amount you give her and set a deadline beyond which you will no longer supplement her income. Martha may need to find a second job, but that's better than you spending all your retirement money shouldering her responsibilities.
Expect her to be angry. If she threatens to blackmail you with access to your grandchild, tell her that the person she'll be punishing is the little one, not you, and stick to your guns.
Friends Borrow Husband's Equipment With Attitude of Entitlement
DEAR ABBY: My husband has purchased different pieces of equipment over the years. He recently bought a small tractor that he's very proud of and enjoys using around our property. He also has purchased a large trailer that he often uses to haul his equipment and other things.
His problem is friends who seem to think they can help themselves to his stuff. They actually have the audacity to say, "I may borrow your tractor, trailer, etc., tomorrow." I find this to be rude in that they are not asking -- they are telling him they will.
I told him to say he doesn't loan his equipment out, but he can't seem to be able to say that. Do you have a good comeback that he could use without offending his friends? -- FRAZZLED WIFE
DEAR FRAZZLED: You, not your husband, appear to be the person with the problem. Nowhere in your letter did you mention that HE thinks he has one. If he resents what these friends are doing, a solution might be for him to tell them to talk to YOU about borrowing the equipment, so you can refuse for him.
Cancer Survivors Dispute 'Previvor's' Place at Relay
DEAR ABBY: This is in response to "Conflicted in California" (March 20), whose co-worker walks the "survivors' lap" in Relay for Life events. Her co-worker is what we call a "previvor," someone who took steps to lessen his or her chances of developing cancer. For other co-workers to belittle her for walking this lap is just plain mean. As a survivor, I have no problem with a previvor walking the lap. -- DIANE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE
DEAR DIANE: In your letter, you made reference to "previvors." This is a term I was unfamiliar with. After doing some research, I found the following information on the site of Facing Our Risk of Cancer Empowered (FORCE). It reads:
"Cancer previvors are individuals who are survivors of a predisposition to cancer but haven't had the disease. The group includes people who carry a hereditary mutation, family history or some other predisposing factor. ... The term specifically applies to the portion of our community that has its own unique needs and concerns separate from the general population, but different from those already diagnosed with cancer."
Some of the letters my office received were vehemently against "Conflicted's" co-worker participating in the survivors' lap. Read on for more reader comments:
DEAR ABBY: The co-worker walking the survivor lap is a fraud. I am a two-time cancer survivor currently going through a round of chemotherapy. I call foul!
She had a genetic threat of cancer, but has not had it. She hasn't heard those horrible words confirming her worst fears. She hasn't felt the pain of a chemical cocktail shot into her veins, which can only be described as Drano mixed with napalm. She hasn't watched her hair fall out or seen her skin burned and charred from treatment. She chose elective surgery based on genetic markers.
If she wants to participate in Relay for Life, there is a caregiver lap and other activities she can participate in to honor her aunt and mother. She may have gone through pain and grief, but she is no survivor. -- SURVIVOR IN THE SOUTH
DEAR ABBY: It's sad that this has become a case of whose cancer was worse and a judgment of who can or should walk the lap. Just let her walk. It doesn't take away anything of value from anyone else. Relay for Life is an individual experience in a group environment.
I was once invited to walk the survivor lap and a "friend" came up and asked me point blank, "Why are you here? You only had thyroid cancer, not breast cancer!" I responded that I didn't realize cancer was a contest, and I walked the lap. -- LET IT BE
DEAR ABBY: How do I fight feelings of jealousy? I don't want to sulk over what other people have and I don't. I just want to live my life being unaffected by other people's riches, fertility and happiness. Any tips would be appreciated. -- JEALOUS IN COLORADO
DEAR JEALOUS: NOBODY has everything or a life that's completely problem-free. A way to minimize jealousy would be to be grateful for the positive things you DO have going for you. Quietly list them in your mind before going to sleep at night, and again in the morning before getting out of bed. If you do, it will set the tone for your day and help you to keep the green-eyed monster at bay.
Three-Time Divorcee Realizes She's Better Off on Her Own
DEAR ABBY: I'm a 55-year-old woman, divorced for a year and a half. I was married twice before and have three grown children.
I own my own home, have a job I enjoy and a loving family. I do what I want when I want and how I want. I control the remote, the thermostat and my money. I have no desire for male companionship or a "social life," and can honestly say I have never felt happier or more content in my life.
I wonder why society places so much emphasis on men and women forming romantic relationships. I also wonder how much angst I could've saved myself, my former husbands and my children by realizing years ago that marriage is not for me. I don't know why it took me so long to realize that I will never meet a man whose company I enjoy more than my own.
I just want to tell your readers -- at least any who feel the same way I do -- to be happy with themselves and stop letting friends, relatives or society dictate to them how to feel or what to do. There's nothing wrong with an independent woman or man being, well, independent. These days I call myself ... EMANCIPATED AND HAPPY
DEAR EMANCIPATED AND HAPPY: If I had to guess why society places so much emphasis on marriage and romance, it would be because that's the way society perpetuates itself. After three divorces, it is not surprising that you are happier on your own.
I'm sure many people wish they were as independent and resilient as you. However, most people crave some degree of closeness and intimacy -- which may be why women and men search for romance. Today, more than half of adults in the United States are single. For those who are not "coupled up," I'm sure your message will be meaningful.
Military Mindset Will Keep Charity Event on Track
DEAR ABBY: I am the luncheon chairperson for a large fundraiser that will be held in six weeks. I know my question is one shared by many. How can a brilliant person be advised to keep his remarks short and not like he's preaching to the choir without seeming rude? -- DOESN'T WANT TO OFFEND
DEAR DOESN'T WANT TO OFFEND: Here's how. Run your event like a commanding general. Tell all your speechmakers and honorees how much time they are allotted. Insist they submit their remarks in enough time before the event that you can review the length -- and keep "reminding" the speakers what time the event MUST end.
If you bravely and diligently do this, your event will be a hit. And you will be regarded as brilliant because not many people are courageous enough to be this assertive.
Grandma Should Fight Fire With Fire to Connect with Kids
DEAR ABBY: What should a person do when their children and grandchildren don't like to talk on the phone, and text you only? -- LONELY GRANDMA IN L.A.
DEAR LONELY GRANDMA: Learn to text!