Dear Abby: I am 58 years and five years in my second marriage.
We live together a little more than a year before we get married. At that time, I was seven years old as a caregiver for my parents.
We moved to Kentucky from Florida because his mother needed us close, but from the movement, he has become some that I barely know.
Finally we obtained his severe depression under control, but he has become petty and vindictive. He is a child or a thug. See nothing more than videos of conspiracy theory on YouTube. I don’t know what to do. It was not so when we left.
I need to rebuke my credit after recent years and save money. I am putting the majority of my payment check in a separate account, and I was planning to go in a couple of years, but it has a little better that they are in the right medications.
Even so, it is really difficult to overcome in recent years. He hopes he takes care of his mother, who abandoned him as a child. I don’t want to. I really don’t like it.
Am I wrong to be thinking of leaving?
– Cutted anywhere
Dear stuck: Her husband may have married you, so she had someone who takes care of your mother. You paid your quotas for seven years with your own parents.
Remember her husband who moved to Kentucky like this HeyNot you, you could take care of your mother, and you won’t allow you to impose it to you.
Keep out your money, and when you have enough to start, decide if you want to move on.
Dear Abby: I am a 20 -year -old gay man who was seeing a boy in about 50 who lives a couple of hours away.
For almost two months, we talked almost every day and saw each other as the allowed time. I thought we had a great chemistry, and he hero in high esteem. (I just presented to your column).
Out of nowhere, he says that he only feels friendship for me and that we are not in the same place emotionally. It is a total blow.
I feel that I did or said something, but I don’t know what it is, so I’m blaming myself. Full of all our conversations and dates on my head, looking for where I was wrong.
How do I break this cycle? And how can I allow myself to trust other men, such as special older men, when I feel so burned by my interaction with Mr. Fifties?
-Ceinte and so many in Tennessee
Dear twenty -so many: Please stop with such force. Sometimes something happened. Maybe chemistry between you two was a strong as you thought it was. It is also possible that Hey with some and do not have the courage to be honest about it.
Whatever your reason, you have no choice but to accept that you are in the same place emotionally. It is time to move forward without assuming that all older men are the same.
Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by his mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.dearabby.com or Po Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.