i’m nearly 15, he’s 21

Dear Suzie,
hi i like with this 21 year old and im neary 15 in 7 months time i think he likes me but i dont know how do i tell if he likes me or not.
he is always wanting to talk to me and always wanting a hug when i go home at 8.30 9 0’clock whats on his mind is it he likes me or he is just having a bit of fun and that i should leave him to go to someone more into all the things 21 year olds like to do
your thanks girl who likes a lushus man

He’s not luscious, he’s a creep. A 21 year old who tries it on with a 14 year old? That, my dear, is paedophilia. What’s on his mind doesn’t bear thinking about.

What you should do is avoid him like the plague and tell your parents what has been happening. They may choose to talk to your local community police officer about him and I think they’d be doing everyone a favour to do so.

Stick with boys your own age. They may seem silly and clumsy but their interest is honest and equal. Let this man have any more chances with you and you may wind up really regretting it.

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Do boyfriends come before friends?

Dear Suzie, me and my friend have fallen out because we both like the same boy i dont no what to do please help love you XxX ????? XxX

I’m really sorry to hear you and your friend have fallen out over this especially since fighting over a boy is such a waste of time. The fact is that at your age, boyfriends come and go. However kwl this guy is, and however strongly the two of you feel, he’s not going to be the love of your life. But your friend could be a friend for life. So who’s worth more?

My advice would be to say so to her – f2f, in a txt or in a letter or email. Let her know that however much you like this boy, you value your friendship with her more. Then suggest you get together to agree what you’re going to do to settle this unhappy situation as friends again.

Either toss a coin to see who will have first go at going out with him (because, trust me, who ever goes first may only stay with him for a short time and then the other can have their go!) Or accept the fact that there are plenty more fishes in the sea and you should look for a pair you can double date without having to fight over them. Or offer to step down in her favour, agreeing if you both ever find yourself fancying the same boy again it will be your turn. Good luck and I do so hope you end up friends again!

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I lie in bed crying every day

Dear Suzie, As a Jewish teenager I was forced to become engaged to a boy, I was not comfortable with my relationship with him. I met a non Jewish man and my parents threw me out at 16. My fiancee was upset and committed suicide.

I had two beautiful children but my partners family did not accept them because they are German Catholic and we had the children out of wedlock. After twenty years, our relationship broke down because I discovered that my partner watched Gay porn on the internet and he never wanted to have sex with me.

I met a wonderful (non Jewish) man four years ago and we married. My mother has recently died from bowel cancer. He has helped me through my own lonely spate of cancer and severe migraines that I suffer with every few days.
My children are now 14 and 10. Their blood grandparents have no interest in them and neither do my in-laws.

My husband is desperate to have a child of his own so we have been trying. Over the year I have had four miscarriages and I am pregnant now with the fifth. It is difficult because I am now 41-years.

I was really happy to be in a new relationship. My problem now is that I have found out that my husband’s parents admit to being anti-Semitic and they wouldn’t go to my mother’s funeral to support me. My sister and two brothers were nasty to me and it would have been good to of had support.

Non of my husband’s family spoke to me about my mother’s death or sent their condolences. My mother in law and family also show a disinterest in my miscarriages and pregnancy. I do feel very lonely and I live in a small village in North Yorkshire, there is no Jewish community for miles around that would understand my situation.

My husband’s family are planning a big reunion and party in July. Family are visiting from all over the world and the special guests will be my husband’s brother and sister in law and their two kids and my husband’s sister, who is going to announce her engagement to her new boyfriend from New Zealand.

My mother in law is very excited and has sent me a timetable of when all the relatives will be around so we can entertain them, but I don’t want to be bothered with them. I know that this is going to eventually end in divorce, because my husband loves his family.

I lie in bed crying every day as I don’t know where I have gone wrong.

Please advise me.

You’ve suffered from alienation, exclusion and religious prejudice and I do sympathise with you. But I feel the way to rise above it is not to continue along the same path. Your parents threw you out 24 years ago because of their fundamentalist and narrow views. That was nothing to do with being Jewish – I’m Jewish and wouldn’t give a toss what tribe a son in law of mine belonged to as long as he loved my daughter. So seeking Jewish friends won’t make a difference – what you need is friends, period.

Good friends will sympathise and support you even if they can’t empathise with your exact position; all they need to do is know you are sad, and want to help. Which is what your husband should be doing. Why is he allowing his family to ride roughshod over your feelings, and then demand your allegiance and efforts?

If I were you, I’d calmly and quietly tell mother in law that you are glad she is planning such a wonderful celebration but that you won’t be entertaining on her behalf. You can point out to her son that she has not given you any support or comfort and that at present you are in no fit state to be knocking yourself out. And that the whole point of marriage is that partners put each other first.

My strong suggestion would be that you make an appointment with Relate to discuss your feelings, and work out strategies to manage them, with or without your husband. Look in the local phone book for your nearest centre or go to Relate. They also do phone counselling – call 08451 30 40 16 for an appointment. Or the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy can suggest a counsellor in your area. You can ring them on 0870 443 5219 or write to BACP, BACP House, 35-37 Albert Street, Rugby, Warwickshire CV21 2SG or go to BACP. Invite your husband to come but even if he won’t, go on your own. It will help. Good luck!

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Your books on sex

Dear Suzie, Have you got any new books on Sex in the pipeline or forseeable future?

Well, in addition to writing two of the books that went with the Good Sex Guide series – Good Sex Guide 2 and The Good Sex Guide Abroad – I’ve written on Tantric Sex, Sexual Fantasies, Sex Aids and a 3D book called Sensational Sex. And of course, sexual advice was a part of Make Your Honeymoon Last. I tend to want to write in areas that I feel need something said, rather than Yet Another…..whatever. If you feel there’s a gap out there, do let me know.

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Red bag, red shoes

Never mind the red bag, where did you get those red shoes, i saw on your show ‘step families’?

They’re Italian and I bought them in a little shop in Lancaster, in either December 2004 or January 2005, just before we began filming the Stepfamilies series for BBC1. Which means, alas, they’re at least two seasons out of date by now! My, how time flies…

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Does he like me?

Dear Suzie, i really need help… I’m dying!

I’ve been working with a guy since christmas (7 months now) and we became good mates. I liked him then and let him know… but he already had a girl friend. he was cool about it and we stayed great friends. we spoke to each other when we saw each other but never text each other.

he has now split up with his girl friend and texts me alot. we’ve been out loads as mates since the split and he acts differently around me. he always wants to come out now when before he wouldn’t dream of coming out.

he does act differently with me too… like he put his arm round me the other day when he thought i was upset n said in a sort of baby voice “aww r u upset?”. he texts me saying silly things like when i was tidying my room he text me saying “you can come and tidy my room if u like!” i cant describe how else he is different with me but it just seems like he wants to know me and be with me more.

it’s probably wishful thinking but i really want someone else’s opinion who doesn’t know either me or him! i’m dying because i’ve really liked him for ages and it’s killing me not knowing how he feels! i’m not sure if he thinks i like him anymore either!

Please help!! i need to know what to do about him? do i forget him and put it down to wishful thinking? or do i carry on like i am and get nowhere!?

There’s no point asking me – I’m not psychic! His behaviour suggests it, and suggests that he remembers very well that you’ve told him how you feel. But the only person who can really tell you how he feels is the man himself. Go ask.

Say “I told you what I felt about you and it still applies. How do you feel about me? Do you like me enough to date me?” If he says yes, arrange something without all those mates around. If he takes the opportunity to tell you he’s really fond of you but wants to remain friends, accept it. You won’t die, I promise you, even though it may hurt.

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bullying friend

My twelve-year-old daughter is coming home from school in tears. She was ‘dropped’ by her best friend, who seems to delight in belittling her in and out of class. She does have other friends, but is very upset by the whole business. I have mentioned the problem to her teacher, who says she will keep an eye on it in school. But how can I help my daughter to deal with the bullying and boost her dwindling self-confidence?

Reassure her it isn’t because of anything she has or hasn’t done. Girls friendships do tend to be tempestuous and in and out. Sometimes it’s simply a case of them trying out control and testing the bounds of friendship.

But it may be because her friend is coming under pressure from somewhere and is “passing on” feelings of being out of control or set aside. Explain it’s a bit like kicking the cat or slamming doors when you’re feeling bad – she may be taking the place of the cat and the door for the other girl who has the problem.

Brainstorm with her reasons why her friend may be behaving in this way all of a sudden. If your daughter can understand it’s neither her fault nor even personal, and you can keep telling her she’s terrific, she should be able to switch from feeling got at and on the defensive, to sympathetic and self confident.

School can help, not by singling out either girl but by examining and tackling the roots of bullying and making it the whole subject (not the individual situation) a classroom project – ask about their bullying policy and how they put it into practice.

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Am i pregnant?

Dear Suzie, I haven’t been getting my menstrual period lately.I am really worried because I have had intercourse without a condom before.I am real worried.My expected period was supposed to be 4 days ago.My period is regular, so what should I do?

See your doctor AT ONCE. Periods can be late for all sorts of reasons but if you’ve been having unprotected sex, it’s likely to be because you are pregnant. You need to see a doctor a soon as possible, either to help and guide you through a healthy pregnancy or to arrange a termination while it is still safe.

Whatever your age, your doctor will be focused on helping you do what is right for you, and chosen by you. If you are under 16, your doctor will still only tell your parents with your permission. But remember, if you go ahead with the pregnancy they will know about it sooner or later, and sooner is better. If you are under 16 and choose to have a termination, in exceptional cases your doctor may go ahead without their permission, but it’s something that you’ll need their support to manage so your doctor will help you involve them.

If you’re over 16, you can consent to treatment on your own. I’d still say you need to involve those nearest and dearest. but whatever you do you need support now so don’t delay ans see your doc NOW.

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i slept with my boyfriends stepfather

Dear Suzie,
my boyfriends stepfather has come to live with us and he made a pass at me. i pushed him away, but the next time, i didn’t and we slept together and it was the best i have ever had. my boyfriend works long hours and me and his stepfather have slept together several time since then. and every time has been brilliant. but i know its wrong. i want to stop, but he is so sexy and he makes me feel so good about myself.
im confused
please help

If he makes you feel good about yourself why are you writing to me? The truth is he makes you feel awful. You’re cheating on your boyfriend and doing it with one of the people he’d be most hurt to discover is betraying him.

Let’s for a moment consider why this man is doing this. Relationships between stepfathers and stepsons are often difficult and competitive. It’s very common for them to feel rivals over the love of the first woman in their life – your boyfriends mum, his stepfathers partner. If this man has come to live with you is it because he’s having problems with his partner? And is this his way of clawing something/somebody back from his stepson? Whatever, however flattered you may feel by his attention, I’m betting it’s less to do with you than with the dynamic between the two men. That’s not exactly rewarding for you, is it?

It’s easy for an older man to be better in bed than a younger one. For a start, the anticipation and thrill of being with someone you look up to, and of being deceitful, gives it a charge. Being older, he’s more experienced. That doesn’t mean he’s a better lover, and it certainly doesn’t mean he cares for you. And just because you have an orgasm doesn’t mean he means anything to you, either.

I suspect you’ve allowed yourself to be pulled in to something nasty and cruel. But that doesn’t let you entirely off the hook. Why do you think you did it, with this of all men? Are you angry with your boyfriend for working rather than being with you? Did it feel good to get back at him by playing behind his back with his stepfather?

You don’t tell me your age so I don’t know how much you could also call this abusive. Frankly any relationship between an older man in a position of trust and respect over a younger girl, which begins with something more than persuasion, is abusive in my book. If I were you I’d tell him to sling his hook, at once.

The problem is that man this selfish and careless about the proper boundaries between himself and a younger girl, himself and his stepson’s girl, may well hit out by telling tales. Since you simply can’t keep this secret for ever you will have to decide how you want it to come out, and control from whom, when and how your boyfriend hears about it.

Since it feels to me that you have as much to say as he might say to you, I’d strongly suggest you do so with the help of a counsellor. Relate offer counselling for relationship and family issues. Look in the local phone book for your nearest centre or go to Relate Or the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy can suggest a counsellor in your area. You can ring them on 0870 443 5219 or write to BACP, BACP House, 35-37 Albert Street, Rugby, Warwickshire CV21 2SG or go to BACP.

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should I change my job to avoid my exes girlfriend?

Dear Suzie,
I recently broke up with my boyfriend as he had been seeing his ex girlfriend behind my back for the past few months and I found out when I read his texts. He admitted that he hadn’t loved me for a while and he is now seeing her.

I work in a college and shedoes a course here. I occasionally see her around and everytime I do I feel overcome by feelings of jealousy, hatred and anger.

I love my job and the people that I work with, but I am seriously beginning to consider finding another job as I am fed up of feeling like I need to hide away in my office just so I don’t bump into her. Is it worth risking finding another job and ending up in one that I don’t like, just so that I don’t have to see her everyday?

People can be s***, can’t they? You have all my sympathy; it’s a rough and unpleasant thing to happen to you. But look at the upside; you’ve got rid of a guy who really didn’t deserve you – you’re well shot of him. You have a job you love and I bet you’re good at, have colleagues who like and value you and with whom you enjoy working. Why leave that just because of one small reminder of a disappointment in love, which will soon fade anyway.

Stay where you are and deal with this. If you avoid sources of sadness and pain and anger when trouble comes your way, you may end up not only running all your life but never getting the skills to face up to them.

Much of your angst comes, not just from jealousy and anger, but from squashed pride and humiliation. And the longer you hide in your office, the longer those feelings of bruised self confidence and battered self esteem carry on. I think your colleagues would support you if they knew you needed it. So come out of that office, hold you head up high and face her down. Ask your mates to be with you when you have to go anywhere you’ll see her, to give you moral support.

She’s the one with a boyfriend who couldn’t make a new relationship, who lied and deceived – do you really envy her that? And in time – quite a short time, I bet – you’ll feel better about it, if you face your fears and conquer them. In a few months you’ll wonder why on earth you ever thought about leaving a good job and nice workmates for her.

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