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My Question of the Day for 24 March 2010 – UPDATED

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My Question of the Day: Dealing with health issues isn’t easy for the person who is unwell or the people who love him/her. Imagine that a close relative/friend has been chronically ill for many, many months, but he/she didn’t tell anyone or ask for anyone’s help or support. One day, at what seems out of the blue, you’re close relative/friend is hospitalized and not expected to leave with his/her life. How does finding out that he/she has struggled with his/her situation all alone all this time make you feel and/or what do you say/do at this point?

My 2 Cents: It’s amazing how many of us would feel sorry for ourselves in a situation like this. Let me explain.

Some of us would think, “I can’t believe he/she didn’t trust me enough to share this information with me. How could he/she do this to me?”

Sigh.

I hope this would not be my thoughts. All I can do is be there for my loved one now, and I’m not going to waste more time trying to figure out why he/she didn’t tell me. I want to believe I’ll say, “How can I help you now?” I want to believe I would make the most of the time that’s left.

Anything else would just be counterproductive.

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Take a few moments to check out the tweets from Twitter on this subject:

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Joshua Gibson JoshDamage I’d feel a myriad of emotions. But mainly I’d feel sad this person felt they had to go thru such a crisis alone.

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The commentary doesn’t have to end!

Please feel free to continue to add your comments below.

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RULES FOR COMMENTS

1. DO NOT include links in your post. There is a place for you to include one link when you’re filling out the Name/Email/Website information. Comments that include links will be deleted.

2. If your post is obviously irrelevant to the question at hand, it will be deleted. This is a tactic spammers use to simply show up on blogs.

3. Please keep your comments respectful. We can agree to disagree without attacking each other.

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My Question of the Day for 29 January 2010 – RESULTS

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The Question: A good friend (not necessarily a close friend, but a good friend), who is a single parent, asks you if you will babysit his/her child(ren) on an upcoming Saturday because s/he is going to have to work overtime because of a big project his/her company has to complete before the end of the month. Your good friend wants to drop the child(ren) off on Friday night, because s/he says s/he’s going to be leaving for the office in the wee hours of the morning to start the project.

After a couple of days, when you’ve had time to make sure you’ll be free, you tell your good friend that you will babysit, and it will be fine to drop the child(ren) off on Friday evening after 7p.

About four days before the Friday evening that your good friend is supposed to bring his/her child(ren) to your home, you find out from a very, very credible source that your good friend isn’t working overtime at his/her job. S/he has planned a one-day trip to the biggest sporting event of the season for your favorite sport; an event you decided to forego (and that is now solded out) to help out your good friend.

What do you do?

My 2 Cents: I’d ask my friend to come by my house and then ask him/her point-blank, if s/he’s planning to go to the sporting event. I want to ask him/her face-to-face, because I’m definitely planning to verifiy his/her answer, and I’m not posing the option of whether s/he has to work. When you give a person a choice, they are more apt to compound their lie. I’d confront him/her on the issue that’s most important to me: Did you make plans to go to a sporting event on the day you’re asking me to watch your child(ren)?

If s/he says she really has to work, I’d ask for the name and telephone number of his/her superviser, so we could get him/her on speakerphone and verify that. If s/he admits that s/he lied and is planning to go to the sporting event, I’d decline to watch his/her child(ren), and I’d make it clear that I’m not the person to ask to babysit in the future.

That’s not to say I’d never babysit his/her children in the future. It’s just that s/he can’t ask me to babysit. I’ll volunteer my services when I know I’m free, and I know s/he has work/plans, but I won’t give him/her the opportunity to lie to me again. It saves us both hard feelings.

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Take a few moments to check out the tweets from Twitter on this subject:

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MusingMom MusingMom  I would let the “good friend” know that I know that she is not working and tell her that she will have to find another sitter

Everything is Reasy! Mo_Rease  I’d watch the kids but the parent would have to pay up.

Kristen West QTKrisAriel  We wouldn’t be friends anymore.

Joshua Gibson JoshDamage  I simply ask my friend. If they did in fact lie I wudnt babysit. But that’s just me. I HATE a liar

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The commentary doesn’t have to end!

Please feel free to continue to add your comments below.

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My Question of the Day for 29 January 2010

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My Question of the Day: A good friend (not necessarily a close friend, but a good friend), who is a single parent, asks you if you will babysit his/her child(ren) on an upcoming Saturday because s/he is going to have to work overtime because of a big project his/her company has to complete before the end of the month. Your good friend wants to drop the child(ren) off on Friday night, because s/he says s/he’s going to be leaving for the office in the wee hours of the morning to start the project.

After a couple of days, when you’ve had time to make sure you’ll be free, you tell your good friend that you will babysit, and it will be fine to drop the child(ren) off on Friday evening after 7p.

About four days before the Friday evening that your good friend is supposed to bring his/her child(ren) to your home, you find out from a very, very credible source that your good friend isn’t working overtime at his/her job. S/he has planned a one-day trip to the biggest sporting event of the season for your favorite sport; an event you decided to forego (and that is now solded out) to help out your good friend.

What do you do?

RULES FOR COMMENTS

1. DO NOT include links in your post. There is a place for you to include one link when you’re filling out the Name/Email/Website information. Comments that include links will be deleted.

2. If your post is obviously irrelevant to the question at hand, it will be deleted. This is a tactic spammers use to simply show up on blogs.

3. Please keep your comments respectful. We can agree to disagree without attacking each other.

FYI: You may edit your comment for up to 30 minutes after posting. After 30 minutes, your comment can no longer be revised.

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My Question of the Day for 26 January 2010 – RESULTS

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The Question: A close friend has been struggling with his/her marriage for the majority of the time s/he has been married. You’ve been there to hear about it all; the many bad times and the few good times. Your friend has decided s/he must make a change. S/he asks you point-blank what s/he should do. What do you say?

My 2 Cents: This is a question I can answer with first-hand knowledge, I’m sad to say.

Several years ago, I got in the middle of the marriage of my friend and her husband. He was really doing her so badly, and I begged her and begged her to leave him. Finally, when he was deployed and she found letters he’d written to other women, she took my advice and left him. She came to live with me.

When she was on her way, I called my mother and told her the great news. My mother didn’t think the news was so great. She said to me, “Faydra, do not ever meddle in married-people’s business. You have no idea what’s really going on in anyone’s marriage. I hope you don’t regret this.” I brushed her comments off, because I was just happy my girl was dumping that loser.

When she got there, we did OK for a couple of months, and then it was downhill from there. She didn’t come alone. She came with two, small children, and we were all living together in a studio apartment in the slums of Washington, DC. I was in college full-time and working three part-time jobs.

Let me throw this in right at this point: When you’re single, never been married, have no children and have only had to think about yourself, you develop a certain level of selfish, self-centered thinking when it comes to your space and your place. It’s not necessarily a bad thing, but it’s a different dynamic than when you’re someone’s wife and mother and you have to be selfless.

Long story, short: After some back and forth exchanges through notes, I changed the locks on my door, and put all her things out in the hall while she was at work and her children were at school. Then for a week I went to stay with the family for whom I babysat to make sure she and all her stuff would be gone when I got back to my place.

We didn’t talk for years over that. Years. Long years. She wasn’t just a friend. She was my best friend.

When we both moved back to the town where we’d grown up, she gave me an opportunity to ask her forgiveness. Let me tell you how it happened:

I heard from someone else that she was back in town, so I called her parents’ home and asked to speak to her. When she got on the phone, she greeted me like I’d never been the totally selfish, self-centered person who put her and her small children out on the street in DC with nowhere to go.

I timidly asked, “Can I come see you and my godchildren?” Yes, I am godmother to her two oldest children.

“Sure,” she said, like it was the dumbest question anyone had asked her in forever.

I went over, hugged and talked with her, caught up with her parents, to whom I hadn’t spoken since I’d done such an awful thing to their daughter and grands, and her husband was there, too. Yes. She went back to him when he came back from being deployed.

One day, we were out having lunch, just chatting about anything and everything. After some silence, she said, “It took me a long time to forgive you for what you did. I figured if I could forgive my husband for all he did, I had to forgive you. I don’t want to talk about it ever again. We are past it. I love you.”

You know how your nose starts burning when you’re about to burst into tears? My nose was on fire. I had to take a long, deep breath to keep from exploding in tears right in the restaurant. After she allowed me to collect myself, my best friend started a new subject, and we moved on.

By the by, it wasn’t until after 14 years of marriage that she actually did finally leave her husband, but she left when she was ready to leave and not when I, her parents, my parents, her sister, her aunts, uncles and cousins and anyone else was ready for her to go.

To answer the question at hand, I wouldn’t offer any advice to a friend who asks me what s/he should do about his/her marriage.  I’d tell him/her to pray on it. I’d let him/her know I’m there if/when s/he makes a decision, but I won’t speak one way or the other on his/her marriage.

Again, thank God for forgiveness and reconciliation.

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Take a few moments to check out the tweets from Twitter on this subject:

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S. Laraia dryskywater  it sounds like a set-up. i wouldn’t allow myself to be scapegoated, but I may point out that posing the question says a lot.

Chela chela816  I sum up pros & cons succinctly for the person and reason out to logical end. But I NEVER make the decision for anyone.

Stephanie Hargrove shargrove  I’d tell him/her that it all that really matters is want she thinks is best& she already knows what’s best-just do it

Vicky BLKMGK  I’d tell her to do what her heart really wants to do.

Tomi Clark tclarkusa  I’d tell my friend to go w/ their heart & let ‘em know I’m there no matter what decision they make.

lt md20737  I would give her or him thier options and tell them to weigh the benefits. & leave it alone.

Joshua Gibson JoshDamage  tell her opinion in a non confrontational tone. I wudnt want her to start defending him. Then you just hope for the best.

All Reasy Everything Mo_Rease  I would tell that friend that in the end, that’s their final decision to make. I can only support them.

Femina Prudentia Fem_Pru  “Go to couselling.” (Then change the subject)

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Also, check out the responses from Gather.com

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L.L.:  You aren’t happy. Start a new life.

T.C.:  Instead of giving him the option of changing, she should make a big change. Leaving is hard but chances are it won’t get any better. It takes soul to leave…why is she still there?

D.A.:  asking her or him what do he/she really wanna do… and then what she/he really need… the point is in what he/she need.. from that she/he can start to make a move

R.A.: Here’s a piece of wisdom. Tell the friend to pray about it, and follow her spirit.

T.W.: most definitely pray about it

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The commentary doesn’t have to end!

Please feel free to continue to add your comments below.

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My Question of the Day for 26 January 2010

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My Question of the Day: A close friend has been struggling with his/her marriage for the majority of the time s/he has been married. You’ve been there to hear about it all; the many bad times and the few good times. Your friend has decided s/he must make a change. S/he asks you point-blank what s/he should do. What do you say?

RULES FOR COMMENTS

1. DO NOT include links in your post. There is a place for you to include one link when you’re filling out the Name/Email/Website information. Comments that include links will be deleted.

2. If your post is obviously irrelevant to the question at hand, it will be deleted. This is a tactic spammers use to simply show up on blogs.

3. Please keep your comments respectful. We can agree to disagree without attacking each other.

FYI: You may edit your comment for up to 30 minutes after posting. After 30 minutes, your comment can no longer be revised.

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