Should i have it off with his best friend?

Dear Suzie, My hubby has had his prostate removed and cannot get an erection. He has given me permission to get sex else where. His quite keen on me having it of with his best friend and I must say so am I. What should I do ???

Do what you and your husband decide after a proper discussion. It’s your sex life – only you can sort it out. Sorry – it’s not my place to collude or give you permission for this scenario. Being an adult means having to make your own decisions.

All I will say is that while in real life some people may react to the loss of potency by encouraging their partners to go elsewhere, and get some satisfaction from having some control over sex by proxy, most would find it exceedingly painful. The fantasy may seem beguiling, the real experience far less so. I have encountered many people who have experienced this frustrating situation. All would have found it painful in the extreme to have adultery added to impotency. Before going any way along this line I would strongly recommend talking it over with the help of a Relate counsellor.

And any couple facing such a situation should discuss it properly with their GP. Doctors sometimes forget the sexual aspect of such operations, or feel awkward in asking questions. There is a wide range of help now available and a wide range of sexual behaviour that a couple with erection problems can indulge in and enjoy together. My advice would be that adultery, even permitted adultery, should stay the stuff of fantasy not real life.

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Am i adopted?

Dear Suzie,
(I’m spanish so i don’t know if i write correctly)
I don’t really know if this is for teenagers but it’s really urgent and i can’t find the right web.
I don’t look anything like my family and my friends at school say I’m adopted behind my back i’ve tried asking my parents but they go all wierd and just say it’s all nonesense. Please answer me I need some proper advice for once!

You write very correctly – better English than some UK teenagers! And yes, I answer anyone, no matter what their age.

Some people look a lot like their parents and brothers or sisters. Some people do not. What often happens is that you get your looks from members of the family who are no longer around – a grandparent or a great grandparent. A sister or brother may remind you of your Mum or Dad, or your grandmother of grandfather. But you may be the image of a great grandparent, and nobody remembers what they looked like.

You’ve also got to remember that people at school often think it’s fun to get a reaction from you. If it makes you sad when they say this, they may do it even though it’s not true just because you react.

Teenagers often rather like the idea of not being a son or daughter of their parents. It feels mysterious and exciting. If you’re going through the usual teenage phase of wanting to be different and separate from them it makes you feel this explains why you feel that way.

You say your parents go weird when you ask if you are adopted. This could be because they think it’s a weird question and are offended.

But, yes, it might be true. Sometimes people think it is best to pretend an adopted child was born to them. Maybe they feel it would make you feel more loved and part of the family if you believed you were born to them.

Personally, I don’t think this is so. Telling the truth may be difficult and awkward but it needs to be done. If you are adopted, unless the laws in Spain are very different to those in the UK, sooner or later you will find out the truth. In the UK you can ask to see your original birth certificate when you are 18.

And keeping such a secret is doomed. After all, anyone in your family older than you will know the truth – grandparents, aunts, uncles and also family friends.

Finding out when you are older can be very painful. Not only do you discover that you weren’t who you thought you were, you also find out your parents have lied to you.

If I were you I’d sit your parents down and tell them you love them. Explain this situation has made you very confused and upset and you need to talk it through carefully with them. If you are their natural child, you need proper reassurance and for them to help you understand why you look different. It might be comforting – and fun! – to seek out some old photographs of their parents, and their grandparents, to see who you do look like.

If by any chance you are adopted, you really need to know this now. If they kept it a secret even when you are asking questions, explain it will be far more painful to deal with later.

Do you have a friend or family member who will understand your feelings and support you? It would help you talk to your parents if you had someone you trusted.

I hope this helps!

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My son is gay!

My 17 year old son has recently told me that he thinks he’s gay. I’ve actually had suspicions for a little while but now that he’s actually come out and said it, it’s knocked me for six. I’m certainly not anti-gay in any way but when it’s your own son, I guess it puts a rather different perspective on the whole thing and to be honest I’m desperately hoping the whole thing will turn out to be “just a phase”. He’s a teenager – surely that’s a confused age in his life and he’s still discovering his sexuality.

I am relieved and pleased he felt comfortable enough to tell me. Apparently he’s also told four of his closest friends at school (one of whom happens to be a girl who has an older brother who is gay) and, according to him they are “all cool about it”. However, two important people who don’t know yet are his father and his older brother.

He says he is really nervous at the idea of telling his brother. They have always been close, but they went to different schools and don’t have any friends in common and his brother started university last year. His stepfather has been marvellous about it – really kind and helpful and supportive but my ex sees our sons irregularly now – trying to manage the diaries of two teenagers and an adult is a nightmare. So I’m really worried this is going to lead to arguments and accusations.

I did talk to the family doctor. He was sympathetic, but he only depressed me by saying if my son chooses this lifestyle then he should be aware that it will be a very hard path to follow. I must admit I’m hoping that he’s just experimenting with the idea. So I don’t want to give him the wrong advice which will simply push him more in that direction. At the same time, I don’t want to lose his trust by saying or doing the wrong thing if this is the way he will go. I so want to give him the support and help that he needs.

You’re starting off brilliantly, so feel reassured by that. He trusted you and came to you – that’s a real compliment and you need to feel pleased at that.

Facing up to the fact you have a gay child is a process that can be difficult and painful. It feels like mourning; you have to face up to the assumptions you made about them and their future and your part in their future may no longer be possible. Most parents imagine/accept/expect to have grandchildren at some time and to have their sons or daughters bring home partners they will relate to and enjoy a lifestyle they can understand. A parent may have to mourn what they see as a loss – none of this will be as expected.

But your doctors expectation is way out of line – out of date, antediluvian even. In fact, first option I might suggest is finding a GP living in the 20th let alone 21st century! For a start, you don’t choose to be gay. It’s not a ‘lifestyle’ and it’s not a choice. The evidence suggests what makes you gay is a complex mix of genetics – but no one gay gene – and multifactorial environmental issues.

But far more important than that is the fact that being gay simply isn’t that much of a deal anymore. Oh yes, maybe in your GPs day male gay sexual acts were illegal so being gay was fraught. If found out you could be hounded to death and homophobia was a real and frightening aspect of daily living. “Gay” is now a casual term of opprobrium in schools and many young people can be hideous about it. But times have changed so much. Laws against all discrimination mean workplace and higher education discrimination is rare and to be frank, it can be cool to be gay. As you say, he has four best friends who are fine about it and I bet it’s not an issue in his school and won’t be at uni or in work. So this “it’s going to be a hard path” is nonsense.

And changes in society also mean the two big losses that parents of gay people faced may no longer be out of reach – a wedding and a family. Most mums particularly mourn the idea of never watching their son or daughter plight their troth in an extravagant celebration where you get to wear the Mother of the bride or groom gear. Well – update! Now, you can. And that moment when you holds your son or daughter’s baby – also, update! Now, you can and not an adopted child, a child of their blood. Let’s face it, your straight son or daughter may not keep to the script either but the point is that whatever the sexual orientation of your child, you now have equal chance of having those fantasies fulfilled.

This “just a phase” thing is something I think from our 50 years ago. Somewhere along the line it entered into the collective consciousness, along with the idea that the testimony of women and children was not to be trusted (we can thank Freud for the latter and I suspect the former too!) It’s a total misunderstanding of the facts. Yes, teenagers do thrash around exploring and experimenting, trying to sort out who they are and where they stand. And yes, the teenage years are the ones in which sexuality among many aspects are focused on and explored and so their sexual orientation may come up, and out, at this time. And yes, some young people explore orientation and draw back from expressing gay feelings. But not necessarily because “it’s a phase”.

What I know happened in my day was that gay men and women might have tried or started to come out and realised that their parents, friends and society at large would make life so ghastly the best thing was to go back in the closet. Their orientation wasn’t changed; their behaviour was. And that’s where you get the families in which a Mum or a Dad finally snaps after years of marriage and having kids to either have a gay affair, or actually come out and leave a family they’ve been struggling to stay in for years. If, that is, they make it that far. Suicide is also an option for people who go back in the closet having peeped out and been convinced they better accept it’s “just a phase”.

You’ve ‘had your suspicions’ for some time. Of course you have, as had he. Most gay men and women will say they first became aware they had feelings for their own sex over feelings for the opposite sex in primary school. Optimum age seems to be about 9 – it can be younger. By the time they are teenagers, they are usually pretty certain. As, frequently, are friends and family, although they may be in denial.

I do also have to say that sexuality and sexual orientation is also a very complex and shifting issue. To my mind, and to many others, sexual orientation isn’t a clearcut on/off, straight/gay thing. Think of it as a continuum. At one end of the continuum are the men and women who will only ever be attracted to members of their own sex. At the other end, the men and women who will only ever be attracted to members of the other sex. And then there are the great majority strung along the line. In the middle, true bisexuals who swing both ways, straight or gay 50% of the time. Some men and women will be solidly one or the other but capable of at least being attracted to their own or the other sex. Some will be less fixed.

Now – that seems to contradict my stricture about it’s NOT a phase. Because yes, he may sometime down the line find himself attracted to a woman, IF he’s actually nearer the middle than towards the end point. But I wouldn’t count on it and I think it’s really important for you to recognise it’s not about choice and it’s not about your influencing it. And, of course, it’s not about where you are on that line as being ‘better’ or more desirable than being in another place.

So – where does that put you? You can’t give him ‘wrong advice’. Nothing you say or do is going to affect his sexual orientation. The only thing – THE ONLY THING – you can affect is how he feels about himself, how he feels about you and telling you, how he is supported in telling the other members of his family. So far, you’re doing fine. But you needs to stop seeing this as about you. You didn’t ‘make him gay’. You can’t ‘unmake’ him gay. What he needs from you is simple acceptance. He’s your son – same as he ever was. He needs your love and approval, same as he ever did. That’s all.

What you needs is some support to go on supporting him. There is a very good group for parents of gay and lesbian young people called FFLAG

It’s really good; it offers local groups and contacts and also speaks out and acts to defend and enhance the human and civil rights of lesbians, gays and bisexuals.

You do have to grasp the nettle soon about his Dad, and his brother. There is some evidence to suggest gayness runs in families – it’s one of the aspects that supports the gay gene argument but as I said, that’s complex and multifactorial and the jury is still out on the details. But the evidence suggests if you have one child who is gay the chances of another being gay is enhanced.

But, if Mums find it hard to let go of their fantasies about their children and facing up to the new reality of their child, dads have it too – and in spades about a son. Mums will struggle with the “Is this my fault, what did I do or not do?” Dads will too. Both may also have a horrible thought; “What does this say about my own sexuality??” And if it’s a son, Dads may well go into frantic, furious denial of a violent sort to push that idea away. And of course, a non resident Dad may have even more reason to feel guilty, scared and thus to need scapegoats and to attack even more. His brother may feel the same – need to push him away to ‘preserve’ himself. Or not – he may actually be the one in the family to show most support; who knows?

My feeling is that keeping it a hidden secret does several, very harmful things. It says you’re ashamed of your son and who he is. It means when it does come out – and believe me, it will – those kept in the dark not only have to contend with the revealed secret but that you kept it from them. they may feel insulted you didn’t trust them, humiliated other people knew first – all sorts of conflicting and difficult feelings which will only serve to muddy the waters and make it harder to concentrate on the real issue.

And most important, it will deny them the opportunity to know your son as he is, and to have a relationship with the real him based on love, trust and truth. That’s what most people kept out of the loop often say hurt them most. Yes, maybe they may have reacted badly and unhelpfully, but they weren’t given the chance to grow and come up to expectations.

I’d strongly suggest you visit FFLAG for help and support for yourself, and in telling his Dad, and his brother. I think they will help you come to terms with the new reality and not to see it as an automatic sentence of hard labour and pain. Mind you – FFLAG do have some pretty awful tales to tell. But it’s not as your GP says or necessarily as their worst case scenarios say anymore. And many of their stories are so inspirational and reassuring! The key is that we all have to pull together to fight discrimination and the fight begins in our own hearts and the hearts of those around us. Good luck!

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My ex is using my boys to get to me

Dear Suzie,

Firstly I could cry when I found this site! I am having a really bad time at the moment. I have been separated from my husband coming up to 2 years we have 3 wonderful boys. The marriage broke down due to unresonable behaviour. The boys have reguarly contact with their Dad.

I have met new partner who has no children and only sees my boys once a week thought we would take it slowly. The boys are great with him when he is here, but unfortunately my ex is using the boys to get to me by saying they don’t have to see him and to tell me that they hate him. My eldest one is 10 taking it the worst talking to me like his father did and telling me what I can and can’t do. He is very confused and insecure. I have done the usual by spending time with him on his own. Talking to him and doing behaviour charts to aim for a treat of his choice. This hasn’t worked and I am really at my wits end and spend a lot of time getting upset. My new partner wants to support me he is lovely but feel if he came round more upsets my 10 year old more….

Please help feel like I can’t go on any longer.
I am currently arranging mediation for all

Thanks in advance x

I know how despairing you can feel in such a situation and how stuck. Your husband was unreasonable, which is why the marriage broke down. Now it seems that not only is he continuing his unreasonable behaviour but he has bequeathed it to your children. It must feel so unfair and such hard, painful work!

But stop a moment. Look at all the helpful things you have done so far.

You’ve taken yourself and your children out of an untenable situation. Kids hate losing full time access with both parents but the reality is that however much it hurts to be at a distance, it would hurt far more to have to see and experience conflict day after day. It’s bad enough that they go on seeing him manipulate and bad mouth you when you don’t live together – it would be passing on much worse messages to them if they saw it every day, and saw you lie down and accept it.

You continue to support them in seeing their Dad. That’s a triumph and a continuing comfort to them and you should credit yourself with holding to that, however difficult it might be.

You have recognised how confusing the situation must be for your children and the mixed messages they must be getting. You can see how they value and like your new partner and how any difficult behaviour around this relationship is due to their fathers’ struggle in accepting it.

I think you can also see how hard it must be for him. Whatever he might say about it I would imagine he feels that he has failed as a partner and a father and his anxiety and jealousy of how much better this new man seems to be doing both jobs would make him bitter and guilty and thus wish to be a saboteur.

And lastly but far from leastly not only have you started working with your eldest son in dealing with his behaviour, you have seen that some sort of outside help would really help.

So bravo, bravo to you! Dry your tears for now and let’s see how we can come up with even more ideas to make this better.

For a start, don’t think you can clear it all up, happy ever after, overnight. Dealing with separation and new relationships is really, really complex and really, really hard. It all needs to be done a bit at a time and with an eye to so many aspects of what is a very complex situation.

Your son, being the eldest, probably feels he has to stand in for his Dad now. He shows this by talking to you like his Dad – becoming, in a sense, the Dad in the house now. Sons get their idea of what being a man and a Dad is all about from their own fathers so if he’s got the idea that ‘real’ men shout and leave, that may be what he thinks he has to do to be a real man, and of course to earn his fathers affection.

He may also have quite mixed feelings about his Dad – a man, after all, who has left him. Your son would feel angry at him but guilty of such anger because you ‘should’ love your Dad. So somebody has to take the brunt of the anger and pain, and the newcomer is the obvious one to dump it on. Your son may also be struggling to make sense of why his Dad left and kids often think it’s their own fault – if they’d been ‘good’ maybe Dad wouldn’t have left. So he’d have that to deal with.

More than treat charts what he may need is an acknowledgment of how he feels and help to sort out what he’s thinking. He may be most confused by the fact that he likes your new man – and then has to deal with his father demanding that to show he loves him, he must be antagonistic to this newcomer. That can give a child trouble in trusting his own feelings and instincts. Your ex needs help to see that his own understandable feelings about the breakdown of his relationship with you and your new relationships need to be dealt with separately from his dealings with his children.

Mediation sounds an excellent idea. You may also find the help offered by Parentlineplus on their website and through their freephone 24/7 confidential helpline on 0808 800 2222 invaluable. I’d also suggest you have a look at my own book Stepfamilies – surviving and thriving in a new family – I really do cover all these issues and more.

And the fact I do should tell you something; you’re not alone, you’re not being uniquely incompetent and neither your son nor your ex are being uniquely perverse. All of you are struggling with a very difficult and complicated situation with loads of buried emotions and conflicting needs. With some support and help, and the confidence to recognise you have actually made a very good start, you can manage it. Good luck!!

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He’s putting pressure on me to have sex

Dear Suzie, im a buddhist and i believe in Dukkha, Anatta and everything. I have been going out with this boy for three months. We have a good time but now he is beginning to put pressure on me to have sex. I like him a lot and he said that he loves me. I am 16 and Iâ m not sure that I am ready to go that far but I donâ t want to loose him. Is he worth it?

No.

No one is worth going against your own feelings or principles. Ever.

Someone who loved and respected you would only want to do what you were ready to do. Someone who cared for you would care what you felt. Someone who was worth while would put a worth on your feelings above his own desires.

I’m not saying he’s all bad. Young men can get carried away with their feelings, and do come under tremendous pressure from friends and society to ‘prove themselves’ by having sex. He might only be in it for sex, or he may really care for you but find it hard to draw a line between what might be good for him and what may be good for you.

So you need to stand up and tell him, firmly; no means no. It’s not a rejection of him but his putting pressure on you feels like he cares more about himself than you – and why should you do something that could lead to sadness and regret just to please a guy who doesn’t really care what you feel?

Most young people who have sex under the age of 18, and some even after that, say they wish they had left it till later. And that’s boys as well as girls.

This is a lesson for life, my dear. If it’s not right for you, even if the other person really, really wants it, don’t do it. You’re responsible for yourself, not answerable to him. Say no, and mean it. He may kiss you kindly and say “Fine. I understand how you feel. We’ll wait, then.” Or he may leave.

But if he flounces off, he really wasn’t worth it because trust me; the chances are if he leaves you when you say no, he’d have left you soon after your saying yes.

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I’m in serious debt – help!

Dear Suzie, im a 18 year old female, not working, claiming benefits and i am in serious debt, i took out 2 store cards and i am in now just under 500 pounds worth of debt i am losing sleep i really dont know how to go about getting it sorted please can you help?

For a start, cut up those cards and don’t use them again. Make yourself a promise; never, ever use a credit or store card unless you can pay off the full amount at the end of the month or at the most over a couple of months. The amount you have to pay in interest when you only pay off a small amount each month makes these cards a very bad way of borrowing money.

Okay – that’s for the future. What about now? There is help, from the National Debtline. Follow the link to their website or call the free confidential helpline, open Monday to Friday 9am to 9pm and Saturday 9.30am to 1pm, on 0808 808 4000.

They will help you work out a plan. You can ask the stores to give you time to pay, and you can then put aside a small amount every week to gradually work off this debt in a way that doesn’t put you at risk.

But it’s a lesson, isn’t it? If you want nice things – and don’t we all? – there are no short cuts. You have to earn the money to pay for them. You’re not working? Why not? No jobs in your area, no training to get the jobs there are, family to care for? Contact your local Jobcentre Plus about what’s available – jobs, training and support, whatever your situation. You can do it – and then one day you can take a deep breath,debt free, and think about shopping again, but with the cash to back it up! Good luck!

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She accuses us of ‘leaving her out’

Dear Suzie, I am 16 years old and in year 11 at an all girls private school. this is a very important year for myself and my friends, with exams, so we definitly do not need more stress at this time. However, there is one girl who accuses us of ‘leaving her out’, and has told us that she refuses to be friends with us unless one other particular girl leaves our group. She has been extremly unkind to a lot of my friends, and although i like this girl i know that her behaviour is unacceptable and is turning into bullying on my one friend. We tried to sit down and talk about it rationally, however this one girl became hysterical and screamed and cried and refused to talk to us. this puts us in a very difficult position because to an outsider it would look like my friends and i are ganging up on her, (a theory which she is beginning to encourage) and that really is not the case, we just want to sort things out and are trying to handle the situation responsibly. Please help me and my friends because we dont know what to do when this girl refuses to talk, or puts the blame onto us. we realise we are not perfect, however this girl does not seem to think she has done anything at all out of what she should, when really, her behaviour is unacceptable. please help me to help her realise her mistakes and so she can learn from this and we can go back to the way things were before everything happened.

You say this girl accuses you of bullying by exclusion – and leaving someone out IS as much bullying as hitting, humiliating, calling names. But that her solution is for you to exclude someone else. And that she reacts to what you say is rational discussion as if it were a Kangaroo Court.

So it’s clear that there is a wild mismatch going on between the way you see it and the ways she sees it. And you’ll understand that I, not being clairvoyant, can have no way of knowing which way the balance lies. You’ll notice I don’t say “which way the truth lies” because of course, that’s the point. She may sincerely believe she is right in the way she is experiencing the situation, as do you. Which means that the first thing you have to do to find a solution is to recognise all of you need to learn and think, not just her.

That you’re all under stress, in a hothouse situation, is almost certainly significant. You don’t tell me whether this girl is new to your school, or class, or group. Nor, if she has been there some time, whether this behaviour is new.

The question to ask, always, when someone is in distress is “What has changed?” Someone might suddenly find a familiar situation stressful because events at home have altered – family break up, illness, new arrivals. Someone might come back to school after such an event and take it out on another girl – because they remind them of a sibling or another person in the situation. Someone might feel school friends were excluding them when the real issue could be that they were feeling left out, rejected, let down, unloved at home. I call it “kicking the cat” – taking raw feelings out on one set of people because you can’t take them out on those who have actually upset you.

Or it may be the fear of letting herself or family down in the impending exams has made her feel “left out”, angry and afraid so she hits out at you to blame someone else rather than herself. Or the school friend you are defending may, unknown to you, be taking something in her life out on this girl when you aren’t looking.

So maybe you all need to understand why any of you may be bringing issues from other parts of your lives to make the dynamics in your group so difficult at the moment.

I think you’re trying hard and being very responsible, but this sounds to me like a situation that is neither your responsibility to fix nor within your power to do so. I would imagine you have a pastoral tutor or house mistress whose job it is to look after the well being of your group. Please, take the situation to her and do so without fear of being a “snitch” or an incompetent. Ask the tutor to help all of you have that discussion, without it breaking down into accusations or tears. Look at my answer to the previous letter “She says I’m a bully” for some ideas on having a discussion with someone mediating. Once you can at least begin to understand ALL the various elements that are affecting all your feelings and your actions at this time, you should be able to sort this out. Good luck!

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She says I’m a bully!

Dear Suzie,

i had an argument with this girl and she tld her friend now her friend told people that i’m a bully so i’m scared to go 2 my lessons. i’m not a bully she’s making up lies! what shoould i do

It’s horrible when you dread going to school and people are nasty to you. Bullying is a truly wicked act and none of us want it in our school, our homes or our workplaces. So it’s really good that people have become much more aware of bullying in the last few years and blow the whistle on it. But spats between friends or classmates are not the same as bullying. Either you’ve come across as much stronger than you think, which is why her friend is rushing to defend this girl, or someone is “playing the bullying card” and trying to use an accusation to win the argument.

What you need is a mediator. When two people have a dispute, especially when they may not see eye to eye over what each thinks is going on, it helps to have someone calm things down and let both of you put your point of view. A mediator has to be neutral – not on anyone’s side. There job is not to wade in and make each of you apologise or tell one or both of you off. Their job is to sit you down and allow both of you to say your bit, and to listen to what the other one says.

Do you have a teacher you trust? Ask him or her to call a meeting between the both of you. Agree the rules of a discussion – you might begin with these;

* Be honest but not nasty
* Moderate your language (ie no swearing!)
*Listen to the other person without interrupting – maybe use a stopwatch to allow each 2 minutes to begin
*You’re there to explain what you think, feel and have done NOT what you think the other person thinks, feels, has done

If you and she can sit down and talk it out in a calm manner and both can hear what the other says, you should be able to sort this out. Good luck!

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He’s nasty to me!

Dear Suzie, i have wrote to you before about my bf who’s says he loves our sex and me but i don’t believe him, because we are having difficulties in our relationship (of 2 years nearly) – after me spending months not going out or seeing anyone and waiting on him hand and foot, which i like to do for him. but a few months ago he started to get really nasty and malicious towards me and calling me names and i got depressed and stood for it. anyway 1 of his best mates came over to see him and i was in too, after a few hours of mucking about he started to get really nasty and was talking to his mate about another girl who i know of (in front of me) and looking at boy mags.

he then started talking about this girl and the mags in a very explicit sexual way, i got the ump and was being moody and was asking him constantly why he is acting this way towards me and he just kept taking me for a mug. then i had an outburst and called him a “heartless c**t” he then ignored me for the rest of the night and went to sleep. i layed in my bed with him next to me crying my eyes out and calling for my dad silently (who died when i was 6 months old) he is now today still ignoring me and hurting me really bad. i keep asking him why he is still being nasty but no reply. i love him sooooo much i dont know what to do? i am 18 and already i feel like i dont want to be in this malicious world, i am so sad please please help me? thank you

This does sound a really sad situation and you do have my sympathy. I had a look back at your original letter when you told me he says he loves you but you don’t believe him. I said at the time,

“Has he given you reason to distrust him? Have your life experiences left you feeling low in self confidence and self esteem so you doubt that he could or should enjoy this intimacy you share?

The only reasonable way to find out if someone is telling the truth is to ask them. If you can’t trust what they say, it’s for one of two reasons. Either your instincts are correct and they are not trustworthy – in which case, get out while the going is good. Or because you have a problem, either with intimacy or with accepting your own self worth – in which case, address that and seek some help.
I can’t tell you which it is but I bet you can, if you think about it.”

Now you say he calls you names and humiliates you in front of his friends and takes advantage of you. But you also say you call him names and go out of your way to actively encourage him to treat you like a doormat.

I can hear that you are sad and depressed, and have every reason to feel you need a man to look after you and to need love and security. But you have to be a confident person with good self esteem, expecting the best out of a relationship and giving it, too, to make a relationship work. Waiting on a man hand and foot and sitting round while he acts like a 2 year old isn’t going to do that. He could do with growing up a bit and treating you with more respect and care. But equally, you might find it helps to feel better about yourself and not to expect that the only way you’re going to be okay is if a man takes care of you.

It sounds to me as if both of you are finding difficulty in knowing what might be expected in a good relationship, and what both of you might reasonably both bring to this partnership and get out of it. I suggested last time it might help to talk it over with someone. Losing your Dad at 6 months may be a grief you’ve never actually faced up to and got over and it could help to talk it through with a counsellor. I suggested Relate – your own doctor may be able to suggest someone too. Do ask!

Posted in All Advice, Relationships, Self-Esteem, Sex | Comments Off on He’s nasty to me!

I want a dog!!

Dear Suzie,
I really want a dog. I am not allowed one though until I move out of my parents home or until my dad retires but that ia years away. Wat can i do to make them let my have one? Please write back soon.

I really sympathise with you cos I’m a pet person myself, though we have cats. And I have to say for all sorts of reasons, I think kids need to grow up with animals. Having pets can teach you to be less selfish, to recognise that you have to be responsible. Treat your animal the way you might sometimes treat your Mum and they won’t smile understandingly and come back for more – they’ll avoid you!

Having a dog contributes to good health – walking the dog several times a day can help you keep up that healthy exercise, and looking after it can help you learn how to care for others.

And maybe that’s why your parents are saying no; they feel when it comes to feeding and walking the dog twice a day it will fall to them, once the early excitement has worn off.

So what can you do? You can’t MAKE them let you have one. You might be able to persuade them, though. And to do that, you have to do your research, present your case and make them an offer.

Give them a list of the good things about having a dog – such as the fun of playing with it, the health aspects of walking and playing with it, and the emotional benefits of having someone in the house always pleased to see you. You do the work to come up with at least 10 points on that list.

Follow up with a list of the things you recognise as downsides – the fact the dog has to be kept clean, fed, exercised etc and how you propose to make sure this is done. Again, you do the work to come up with at least 10 points on that list.

Propose a chore chart of who will do what, when, and offer to negotiate and sign a contract to show you will keep up your end. Be realistic about this. It’s no use saying you’ll do it all – you can’t, and won’t and that’s when your parents will say “Oh yes, you say this but I know you’ll let us down.” A winning negotiation begins with recognising what you really can do and what you can’t.

If, instead of nagging, whining and wheedling, you approach this in a calm and mature way you may make a case god enough to win them over. If they still says no, ask them to explain their reasons, and listen to them and respect them. Then you can ask if there is anything you can do to overcome these.

It all comes down to discussion rather than argument. I really do wish you luck – let me know what happens!

Posted in All Advice, Children, Family, Relationships, Self-Esteem | Comments Off on I want a dog!!