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Portrait of advice columnist Amy DickinsonAuthor
PUBLISHED:
Getting your player ready...

Dear Amy: Eighteen months ago my wife and I reconciled after three years apart. We spent eight months getting off public assistance; now it seems harder than ever to get by.

We are above the “help” line and well below the make-ends-meet line. The other day our teenage boys came to us and told us “not to worry about Christmas, bills are more important.” Since then I feel like such a failure as a parent and man.

How do I get past this feeling, knowing that there probably won’t be any gifts this year? Our boys are 14 and 17 and old enough to understand, but that doesn’t make me feel any better. — Struggling in N.Y.

Dear Struggling: You aren’t a failure as a parent and a man. From where I sit, you seem like a smashing success. You are giving your boys the benefit of living in an intact family; even though it has been difficult, they see you moving in the right direction. Your local church or Salvation Army should be able to help you find modest gifts for your boys to mark the holiday.

Your sons are a testament to you and your wife, and even though it makes you sad at this time of year not to be able to give them material things, their statement says that they love you and they understand.

I hope you can get beyond these feelings to give your sons the only gift that truly matters on Christmas — being together on a day that is really not supposed to be about receiving gifts, but about believing in and celebrating the infinite possibilities of this world.

Dear Amy: I am one of the few teenage girls who could not care less about shopping, fashion, makeup, getting a boyfriend, etc. I’m quite happy with this, as I consider being a nerd a point of personal pride.

The trouble is that one of my good friends from school often invites me to go shopping when we hang out. I have made my views on shopping quite clear to her on more than one occasion, but she still invites me.

I like her and like hanging out with her. To me, shopping is not a recreational activity. I go in, get what I want, then leave. How can I make it clear to her that I’d rather hang out elsewhere? — The Anti-Barbie

Dear Anti-Barbie: You’ve already stated your case against shopping, but don’t be obnoxious about it. Invite your friend to do things you enjoy — and if you choose to tag along on a shopping excursion with her, camp out at the mall’s bookstore while she browses and meet her at the food court when she’s done.

Dear Amy: Being a non-believer (in my case, agnostic), I never know how to reply when people wish me a “Merry Christmas.” I take no offense at this remark, as I know it is well intentioned, but I always feel compelled to reply in some manner.

I’ve used the phrase “Happy Holidays,” but many folks construe that to mean I’m of the Jewish faith.

Without coming across as some sort of “Grinch” and replying with “And a Happy Pagan Ritual to you and yours,” is there any polite way to inform them that to me it’s just another day? — No Merry Christmas

Dear No Merry: If you take no offense to “Merry Christmas,” then you could simply reply by saying, “Thank you — and the same to you.”
Send questions via e-mail to askamy@tribune.com or by mail to Ask Amy, Chicago Tribune, TT500, 435 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60611.

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