DEAR AMY: I am a 16-year-old girl, and I live with my parents and my 14-year-old brother.
I'm worried about my father. He has a very stressful job in the car business. But because of gas prices, he isn't doing so well right now, and he handles his stress by exploding in anger.
For example, we were recently on a 13-hour drive home from visiting my grandparents. At a rest stop, my mother gently teased him and he started yelling at everyone.
After another six hours of sulking, when my mother tried to confront him, he maintained that she had made a snide comment and got angry all over again.
My father acts this way on every vacation and nearly every day he has off. He's not violent, but it is scary.
He is my father and I love him, and I've never doubted that he loves us, but it is painful and frightening to have to deal with this all the time, as I get stuck playing peacemaker.
— Worried Teen
DEAR WORRIED: Gas prices are so high lately that families feel they have to choose between filling the tank and sending the kids to college.
None of this is your fault, however, and it is your father's responsibility to find ways to modulate his anger.
You could try to help your dad by talking to him. Choose a time when he is calm and when the two of you are alone. The best you can do is to tell him how his behavior makes you feel. He might have grown up with a parent with an explosive temper, so hearing how this affects you and your brother might have an impact.
Also talk to your mom. It sounds as if your father needs help, and she could urge him to get it.
DEAR AMY: I am getting married soon and have to decide on a guest list. The friends list is easy, but I can't figure out what the cutoff should be for some of my extended family.
My mother wants to invite family members whose names I don't even know.
My fiance and I are paying for the wedding and don't relish the idea of inviting people we don't know.
Are there rules and requirements to this I don't understand?
Also, I have a crazy immediate family of divorced parents who both got remarried when I was young.
The trouble is, my dad got divorced again, so now I have an ex-stepmom. We haven't ever been close. My dad is selfishly pressuring me to invite her so as not to set a "precedent" that his other kids might follow and not invite him to things.
I don't like being pressured, guilt-tripped or bullied into inviting someone to my wedding.
— Worried
DEAR WORRIED: It is your wedding and your guest list.
Every marrying couple faces family pressure, and you may have to choose to invite someone for the sake of the family you are in — and the family you are making together. This is an intimate celebration of your relationship, however, and you shouldn't have to share it with people you don't know.
There is no rule saying that you have to include former stepparents, and it is unfair of your father to lay this at your feet, but the best you can do is to respond respectfully and lovingly, make your choice, draw your boundaries and stand firm.
DEAR AMY: I'm responding to "Sleeping Alone."
During 41 years of marriage, my husband's snoring has gotten louder and louder. I spent many sleepless nights, and I could not function taking care of our three children with no sleep. It is horrible to sleep with someone who snores so loud that people down the hall can hear him.
Fortunately my husband got tired of being kicked, nudged, etc., and moved out of the bedroom. It has worked out perfectly. If we want "to get together," we do.
We both have enjoyed sleeping better because of the separate bedrooms.
I no longer resent having to listen to him snore, and he enjoys being able to make as much noise as he has to.
It worked for us!
— Sleeping Well
DEAR SLEEPING: In my answer to "Sleeping Alone," I noted the increased interest in so-called "snoring rooms" for snorers. It is a great solution for couples — as long as they still feel they can "get together" when they want to.
Send questions via e-mail to askamy@tribune.com
I'm curious, after the multiple responses to the snoring issue, why no one has suggested he get it fixed?Having the tonsils removed, for one, is supposed to eliminate snoring (it worked for me although that's not the actual reason my tonsils were removed). And aren't there simple over-the-counter remedies like that tape that holds your nose open wider?
DEAR WORRIED: Sounds like your dad needs to be by himself. I hope your mother decides to divorce him so that you and your brother can live in peace. There's nothing worst than being unhappy at home. Home is suppose to be a place where you get away from all the stress and pressures of the world, but to have to deal with it at home too is sad.
DEAR WORRIED: Don't get married girl. Marriage is over rated and almost always ends in divorce. Shack up with your man so that when it's over, and it will eventually be over, you have no legal obligations or ties with him.
NewYorker1 sounds like she's had enough broken hearts to lose all faith in the world. ;)
Newyorker1, I hope you don't get paid to dole our your advice. You have some scary opinions. Marriage is obviously not in your vocabulary considering your answers to both stories. To me, marriage is the greatest sacrament we humans enjoy next to giving birth to our children! If you never make a matrimonal commitment to another person, I guess you will avoid the legal 'hassles' of divorce. But you will never know the highest expression of love and devotion to the one you plan to spend the rest of your life with. How sad.
It's not sad sweetie, it's reality. Trust me when I say that most married people I know are miserable. Most married men I know regret getting married because they feel trapped and tied down. Most married men I know are not happy. Most married women I know constantly complain about their husbands. Why go through all of that?
NY1, let me guess. You've never married or you have married and it failed. Your opinion is based on whom you know. Most people I know are married and are happy in their marriages because they know how to make them work. I'm divorced, but not regretful of my marriage at all. They were some of the best years of my life. I have three great children to show for it, too! We've both moved on. But I'm hoping to marry again one day, because I want to be outwardly and publicly committed to someone who is as committed to me. Marriage does that for most people I know! ;)
I think most married people are in misery because unfortunately most relationships are insincere.People get into relationships because they're bored, they're co-dependent, or they feel obligated for some reason. Instead of finding true love, they just find the first available and convenient person, then just go through the motions.Personally, I think that's the real reason marriage, or any kind of relationship, winds up sucking.I know so many couples who admit they aren't even attracted to each other, haven't had sex in 5 years, yada yada. "But we're really great friends!"
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I believe in love, commitment, and relationships, I just don't believe you have to sign legal documents to be committed. The legal aspect/ramifications of it is what I'm against. My name stands alone. I will never give someone legal ties to me. EVER! I like owning my own house, I like being the only person on my bank account, I like being the only person on my bills, etc. The thought of somebody else being that involved in my life makes me want to throw up. Don't get me wrong, I have loved and committed to someone, but there's only so much of me a person is going to get. I'm sorry, but I have to have 100% control of my own life.
NY1, you and I have talked before. I am married and am deliriously happy. Some people make stupid mistakes, marry the first guy to come buy, marry someone whom they had problems with to begin with, etc. Just because you have chosen to never get married and see it as hell doesn't mean it won't make another happy. I control my life, we are independent, yet we live our lives together. I don't think you can have a real relationship until you can live and survive on your own. I look at the elderly who have been married for 60 or 70 years, and you can see that for some, a true, successful marriage can enrich your life.
I applaud people who can do that, I just can't do it. I'm just too independent. I like my freedom and my space. It really gets on my nerves when someone is around me all the time. My life is so fulfilled in so many other ways, that I don't really need a relationship. When I have downtime, which is not that often, I enjoy being by myself watching movies or reading a good book. The only time I have alone is typically late Sunday evenings and that is my time to relax. I don't want somebody in my face trying to spend quality relationship time. Gag!
NY1, I agree with you about 95%. Peace of mind, quiet time, possessions, sanity, self-control, self-destiny and not having anyone's hooks into you list are great reasons to stay single. Vejan has the right balance and attitude when it comes to married folks. I do believe more than an implied contract should occur when an unmarried or dating couple has a child together.I am dating a nice woman. We both have our own homes thirty miles apart. I am completely debt free including no mortgage. She is successful. My business is great. The "M" word has been followed by two more words: never again. Ha ha.