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Asking Eric: Will Women’s Weekly Card-Playing Group Dissolve as One Member Experiences Cognitive Issues?
- The letter writer, in a four-year relationship, says the boyfriend's ex-wife and ex-mother-in-law visit his house for coffee while she retreats to the bedroom to avoid them.
- Because the daughter lives at home and meets her mother on Sundays at church, the boyfriend may be keeping family contact as the ex-mother-in-law prefers a reunion.
- The writer spends weekends with him and says the visits make her very uncomfortable, and she would like him to ask the grown daughter to meet at church but hesitates to start an argument.
- The columnist recommends asking for respect and boundaries, urging the letter writer to request the boyfriend address the ex-wife and ex-mother-in-law and clarify intentions in the shared space.
- A weekly card group reports that over the last year one player has become increasingly cognitively impaired, forcing the group to slow play and correct her, and advises involving the friend, checking medical and social support, and exploring new group meeting practices.
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22 Articles
22 Articles
Boyfriend's ex-mother-in-law still comes for coffee
Dear Eric: My boyfriend and I have been in a relationship for four years. His daughter still lives at home. She's kind of estranged from her mother but still gets together with her on Sundays to go to church.
·St. Louis, United States
Read Full Article+18 Reposted by 18 other sources
Asking Eric: I’m not happy about boyfriend’s habit of having Sunday morning coffee with his ex and her mom
Is he just being nice to offer coffee when they pick up his daughter for church?
·Portland, United States
Read Full ArticleCoverage Details
Total News Sources22
Leaning Left8Leaning Right1Center12Last UpdatedBias Distribution57% Center
Bias Distribution
- 57% of the sources are Center
57% Center
L 38%
C 57%
Factuality
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