Life Advice

/

Health

Husband controls the radio, wife wants a different tune

By Amy Dickinson, Tribune Content Agency on

Dear Readers: This week I am running topical "Best Of" columns while I'm on book tour, meeting readers of my memoir, "Strangers Tend to Tell Me Things," which is now out in paperback. I'll be back next week with more answers and advice directed toward a fresh batch of dilemmas. Today's topic is marriage.

Dear Amy: For years, my husband has been controlling our radio and television programming. When I choose a radio station, he tells me the music is garbage, and he'll tune it to his station. Until now, I've never felt it was worth arguing over.

Yesterday he was out of the house, and I was listening to a station that my daughters and I enjoy. When my husband came home, my daughter expressed her concern that the station was "not one of daddy's." She didn't want to be confronted by him. She went upstairs.

Sure enough, he came in, realized that it was not one of his stations, said the music was garbage and turned off the radio, despite my objections.

He does the same thing with the television. His inflexibility and dominating behavior are obvious to me in other situations that are more important to me (such as the extreme lack of organization in the house and his unwillingness to look for a job).

He is a stay-at-home dad. This was great while the kids were little, but due to instability in my own profession, this is now causing concern.

 

-- Unable to Change Course

Dear Unable: You have wrapped many complaints about your husband into one bundle. From your account, he is intimidating and domineering -- so intimidating that he has trained your daughter to believe that he literally owns the airwaves.

Imagine the impact of his behavior on your girls' impression of how men do/should behave.

This is not about a clash of media taste -- though I believe that whoever occupies a room first (or is making dinner) gets to choose the playlist (truly tasteless or degrading music and commentary are not for public consumption and -- like the Supreme Court -- the adults declare that we know where the line is when we hear it).

...continued

swipe to next page

 

 

Comics

Take It From The Tinkersons Dogs of C-Kennel Bart van Leeuwen Baby Blues Bob Englehart Dana Summers