
DEAR WIDOW: Please accept my condolences for the loss of your husband.
I’m sure you have many reasons to be angry, and those letters are among the least of them.
Try to think rationally about what the letter said. That they were in his possession probably means they were never mailed, and it’s likely they were written while he was drunk. As to the woman having “changed” him, from the way he died it doesn’t appear he changed a lot.
You have your life ahead of you. If you choose to waste your precious time looking back over your shoulder and cursing a dead man, of course that’s your choice. But if you want to break this cycle of destructive thinking, the quickest way to do it would be to contact your therapist for a “reality check.”
DEAR ABBY: My boyfriend and I have lived together for five years. We have decided that we want to get married. He took me to pick out a beautiful ring and put money down to hold the specific ring. Sounds great, right? Well, it’s not. Unfortunately, my boyfriend doesn’t have the money for it, which is completely understandable, because it’s quite an expensive ring. Here is my issue: He recently took a significant amount of money out of his 401(k) to pay off a gambling debt. I also received a very large bonus, of which a major portion went to pay the gambling debt. Why would my boyfriend take me to pick out a ring if he knows he can’t afford it? Why would he prioritize his gambling debt over a ring for me? For us? For our future? NOT HIS FIRST PRIORITY
DEAR NOT HIS FIRST PRIORITY: Candidly, your boyfriend probably made the gambling debt his top priority because he was afraid if he didn’t someone would beat him to a pulp or worse. Surely by now you have realized that he has a gambling problem and is not good with money. Thank your lucky stars you realized it BEFORE marriage. You are living with someone who appears to have trouble recognizing there are consequences for his actions. If you want a husband who is mature and responsible, stop enabling him and recognize that this man isn’t Mr. Right.
Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
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