ChumpNoMore
Don Juan
A site I occasion for news has an advice column...
http://www.slate.com/id/2222012/
Do you agree with Prudence's advice?
http://www.slate.com/id/2222012/
Do you agree with Prudence's advice?
Dear Prudence,
Several years ago, I moved to South America. During my first few months there, I became fast friends with a local man. He was a wonderful source of help during an otherwise lonely time. After several months of friendship, we started a relationship, which lasted only briefly, as we realized that we were better friends than lovers. Eventually, I moved back home to the United States. My friend recently contacted me to tell me he is coming here for several months for work. I was thrilled at the chance to see him again and happy to help him navigate my country as he helped me in his. I'm now engaged, however, and my fiance was furious. He told me that all past relationships should stay in the past and that I should not be in contact with this man. I offered to see my friend only with my fiance present or with a group of friends, but he wouldn't accept that. As a threat, my fiance said he was going to start contacting his ex-girlfriends. He has trust issues because his mother cheated on his father and her other husbands. I can't stand the thought of hurting my fiance, but I don't want my friend to have to navigate a foreign country alone, either. I also don't want to bear the burden of my fiance's mother's mistakes. What should I do?
—The Fiance, the Immigrant, and Me
Dear Me,
The country wasn't Argentina, was it? It's been in the news lately as the international capital of romance. Unfortunately, now your fiance has another argument for his unreasonable demand: the example of South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford, who, apart from being more attractive to women than the guy in the Dos Equis commercials, has made suspect the assertion "We're just friends!" However, I believe you're just friends, and so should your fiance. In a way, it's even more believable since you and your friend tried the sparking thing, and the flame thoroughly fizzled. Because he's your friend, it would be normal to invite him to dinner to catch up with you and meet your fiance. That your fiance has made that impossible is insulting to you and him. But more than that, your fiance doubts you and is threatening your relationship not because of anything you've done but because of his unreliable mother. Your South American friend was a help to you when you were lonely, and he's turned out to be an unwitting help to you now that you're not. If you give in to your fiance's demand, then expect to lead a married life in which you have little ability to have friendships and work relationships with men; in which your communications and whereabouts are constantly scrutinized. Your fiance needs to get some help working through his "trust issues" before you get married. Unless he does, you will spend many years atoning for his mother's infidelity.
—Prudie

