Dear Amy: My daughter is 20. She met a young man a few summers ago. Things have become serious (her words), and they are celebrating their one-year anniversary. He lives in Tennessee (11 hours away by car), and she attends college near our home.
He visited her during spring break last year, and we met him briefly during that time. He is her age and in college.
He now expects her to visit him for a few days after Christmas. Im told she will stay in his sisters room at his parents house (He has an apartment near campus). Im sure he and his family are nice people, but we dont know them.
She wants to travel alone since she feels she is an adult. She says he is a gentleman. My wife and I are very uncomfortable with this. We persuaded her not to drive. She is willing to pay for the travel expenses by bus or plane.
I dont feel good about her demands and the pressure her boyfriend is exerting on her. We thought about driving her down and renting a motel room for a few days, but that isnt practical.
I keep thinking about all the things that can go wrong such as her being ill or hurt, them breaking up, potential abuse, problems with transit predators, etc. If we dont let her go, I think shell end up going anyway. I trust her, but not him.
What do you recommend?
CONCERNED PARENTS
Dear Concerned: Your girl is not traveling to Balochistan. Shes going to Tennessee. All of the things you are worried about are all hazards that await any of us the minute we leave the house.
If your daughter can afford to pay for this trip and if the two of them have been responsive to you about where she will stay, etc., then you should share your concerns and reservations but otherwise embrace this trip.
She should provide her boyfriends and his folks phone numbers so you can call to thank them for their hospitality; this will be an opportunity for you to get to know one another.
Give her all of your parental warnings about bus station transit predators and unprotected boyfriend sex, and ask her to take your calls and to check in with you each day.
Dear Amy: You asked for feedback from readers about how to deal with someone elses odor issue.
When I was in eighth grade, an anonymous note was left on my desk. It read, Wash your face, take a bath and use deodorant. Several students started laughing, so I knew this was meant to humiliate me. It still brings tears to my eyes to think about it, decades later.
I wish one of my friends, or the teacher, had taken me aside and quietly but kindly told me the truth.
When I was in my early 20s, some co-workers were giggling over something. They were planning to leave a can of deodorant on a new co-workers desk with an unsigned note, Try using it. I was horrified and told them to let me speak directly to their co-worker.
Telling someone about a body odor problem is a delicate thing. It should not be anonymous. Take the tactic of, This is hard for me to say, and hard to hear, but if it were me, Id want to know. Then get to the point quickly, and be ready to accept whatever the reaction is. If you take it upon yourself to deliver the message, the other person deserves to respond to it.
Do it at a time when the recipient of the news can easily leave and have some private time to get over the embarrassment.
BEEN THERE
Dear Been There: Thank you for describing what this was like for you. Your experience made you very compassionate.
Dear Amy: I loved your recent description of nagging: Nags nag because they feel they arent being heard. I hate the thought that Im nagging and thats exactly what it feels like!
A FAN
Dear Fan: A counselor once offered this description to me regarding my own behavior. It helped.
askamy@tribune.com


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