close

Annie’s Mailbox: Wife alienating friends with her anger, verbal abuse

3 min read

Q. My wife has a good personality and makes friends easily. The problem is, she does not keep them. If someone rubs her wrong, she flares up in anger. If someone disagrees with her, she verbally abuses them. She also gets involved in everyone else’s personal affairs.

When these negative things happen, the friends start backing off. Then my wife complains that we have no friends and it’s my fault because I’m not outgoing enough. But I am friendly and participate in group gatherings without getting involved in conflicts. I make friends and keep them.

This has been going on for 30 years. How can I make her see that she is the one who is driving people away? – Need Help Down South

A. Your wife is disinclined to blame herself for these things. After all, if she had the capacity for genuine self-examination, she might not be alienating her friends to begin with. You can discuss this honestly, calmly telling your wife that she seems quick to anger and slow to forgive, and perhaps she could learn a different approach, either on her own or through counseling. But if you are unwilling to risk that argument, say neutrally, “Some folks are very sensitive, and I try to be careful about what I say to them and always try to forgive them for things that annoy me. But it’s hard work.” That may give her some ideas about how to treat others, while not assessing blame. It’s your choice. You have to live with her.

Dear Annie: “Been There, Done That” lamented the trend to give kids unusual names. These days, complicated names can be an advantage if you are searching for someone on the Internet. A person with a commonly spelled first name can be impossible to find.

Fifty years ago, my kid sister announced that she was going to marry someone with a simple last name. But when she married years later, it was to a man whose name was even harder to spell and pronounce than hers.

When I taught elementary school in the ’70s, the principal suggested that it might be easier for students to call me something other than my last name, as long as it started with “Mister.” On my first day, I wrote my name on the board and told the students what the principal had said. They voted to call me “Mister John.” I remember one open house when a parent addressed me by my last name. Their daughter immediately interrupted to say they were incorrect. I was “Mister John.” – Hard To Spell Last Name

Email questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net

CUSTOMER LOGIN

If you have an account and are registered for online access, sign in with your email address and password below.

NEW CUSTOMERS/UNREGISTERED ACCOUNTS

Never been a subscriber and want to subscribe, click the Subscribe button below.

Starting at $3.75/week.

Subscribe Today