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Maintain boundaries on privacy

Published:November 6, 2009, 6:58 AM

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Recent Dear Abby Columns

Updated: August 21, 2010, 2:54 AM

Dear Abby: My boss wants my cell phone number for “work purposes.” He has trouble with limits, and I am reluctant to give it to him. I don’t want to receive text messages, unsolicited calls or contact outside of work. My private life is just that—private.

I have kept an unlisted cell number for many years for good reason. I have a home phone and will answer it when the boss calls.

My privacy is important. I had a bad marriage, and there was stalking and invasion by my ex-husband. Those individuals who need my cell number have access to it. Am I out of line? I realize that many people use their cell phones as their only phones and others don’t mind receiving calls, but am I required to do so?

Wants Privacy

Dear Wants Privacy: As long as your boss has your home phone and can reach you in case of some emergency, I see no reason why he should be pressuring you for your cell phone number. Stick to your guns and don’t apologize for it.

Mom is checking out

Dear Abby: I’m a 16-year-old girl whose parents have been married for almost 19 years. Mom started school two years ago to become a nurse.

She has always been an independent woman, but since she went back to school and is making her own money, she feels the need to be more free. Mom works eight to 12 hours a day. She leaves early and comes home late. She never stays for dinner when she’s home, nor does she do anything with us as a family anymore. She used to work in the same study as my dad, but she moved upstairs. She also won’t sleep in the same bed as Dad.

Mom is seeing a marriage counselor, and she wants a divorce and to move away. She says nothing is broken in the marriage and there’s nothing to fix, but why does she want to leave? She promises she won’t see less of us, but she will be more than a half-hour away. I miss her, and I want my old Mom back!Am I selfish for wanting her to stay?

Shaken in Virginia

Dear Shaken: You are going through a rough period, and you have my sympathy. Your mother appears to be so preoccupied with herself that she has forgotten she’s a mother. Of course you want your mother and your old life back, and those feelings aren’t “selfish.”

While you can’t stop your mother from leaving, you can ask her if you can join her during a couple of her therapy sessions so you can air your feelings in a safe environment and get some of the answers you’re looking for. There are very real changes going on in your life and your parents’. You deserve some answers, and you are old enough to hear them.

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