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Portrait of advice columnist Amy DickinsonAuthor
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Dear Amy: My wife and I have three young children who, thanks to generous financial aid, attend a local private school.

Often we ferry them to birthday parties of friends, and we are shocked and awed by these events. It seems that children’s birthday parties have taken on the urgency of the nuclear arms race, as parents kill themselves trying to outdo one another by throwing the biggest, most outrageous parties imaginable.

Don’t get me wrong — I think it is great to celebrate a child’s special day, though we prefer to do so in a much more low-key fashion.

Luckily for us, our kids all have summer birthdays, so we make merry by gathering close relatives, sharing a nice meal and eating cake.

I often find myself bristling at buying presents for kids who already have plenty and for whom another present will mean very little.

Our solution has been to purchase sustainable presents, such as movie passes or gift certificates.

Still, the expense of buying these items is considerable, even when we limit the number of parties our children may attend. Every so often an invitation will ask that a donation to a charity be made in lieu of a present, a practice that we find thoughtful.

I realize the problem is mostly my own, and that I perhaps should be less judgmental. Still, I wonder if any child really requires presents from 20 friends every birthday. — Concerned Party Pooper

Dear Concerned: I share your concern about these birthday campaigns of shock and awe. It’s fine to be open with your kids about your limitations, but there is no point in judging others. You convey your own values to your children every day and in every way. That is always going to be the most important thing to them.

Your children are interacting with people who have much more than they do, and your job is to make sure they continue to have their feet firmly planted in your family’s reality. Consistently convey that you like your life — and theirs — just as it is.

Dear Amy: I am 18 years old and have liked a girl I work with for some time.

She is 19 and has a lot of the same interests I do. We are both going into the same career field.

The only complicated thing is that she has a boyfriend and a young child.

She always seems to trash-talk about her boyfriend, and it seems as if she is flirting.

I’ve expressed my feelings, but after I did I felt she was trying to get me to not like her.

What should I do? — Confused

Dear Confused: Strap on your high-tops and back away from this crush.

The way you describe your co-worker, she is either confused or attempting to “play” you. Either scenario doesn’t bode well for a relationship.

Or perhaps you’re the one who is confused. You might have misread her friendship signals and misinterpreted her behavior as a sign of interest.

If she is in a relationship, then you both should honor it. If her relationship is unhealthy, you could be a good friend to her and encourage her to end it, but don’t make any more romantic moves unless she is available.

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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