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Ask Amy: Missing cat takes its toll on a friendship

Amy Dickinson, Tribune Content Agency on

Two weeks ago, Tony lowered the boom. He had cheated on our daughter. He begged for her forgiveness. After a dramatic few days, she agreed to stay with him, and then he broke up with her!

Honestly, I feel quite heartbroken. I feel deceived by his dishonesty and I’m so incredibly disappointed in his lack of integrity.

I’m having a hard time reining in my emotions. When I expressed some of these feelings to our daughter, she got mad at me!

I’m considering contacting Tony to give him a piece of my mind. Should I?

And how should I react to this at home?

– Upset and Furious

 

Dear Upset: You should react to this by behaving like those wise mothers in the movies and keeping your feelings – and your thoughts – to yourself.

Your daughter’s emotional bandwidth is stretched thin. Your honest reaction might cause her to actually feel defensive about “Tony.”

You should concentrate on your daughter and react only to her. If she wants comfort, give her that. If she wants to vent, let her do that without piling on. Assure her that she can recover from this, and that you and her dad are forever in her corner, no matter what.

Dear Amy: I didn't really appreciate your feminist snide remarks in your response to “Upset Dad”: "Your reward is that you get to tell the kids that they are going to finish out their scheduled school week before going on vacation."

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