The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Set fear of the future aside

Woman needs to recognize, appreciate brother’s positive attitude towards life

- Newsroom @theguardia­n.pe.ca @Peiguardia­n Read Ellie and Lisi Monday to Saturday. Today’s column is written by Ellie Tesher. Send relationsh­ip questions to ellie@ thestar.ca or lisi@thestar.ca. Follow @ellieadvic­e.

Q –

I’m worried about my younger brother who thinks he’s 17, instead of his actual age of 71 years. There’s only two of us and I fear that I’ll lose him too soon.

He was our late mother’s star: he played high school basketball and was a standout member of his hockey team.

Mom’s gone now, but I think my brother still performs for her.

Our father passed years before – more reason for me to worry about my brother’s current and future health.

He defies aging. In one day alone, he’ll go to a Y to play handball, often competing against men in their 40s, and even younger.

Later, he’ll go to a scheduled hour at a men’s fitness class, where most of the regulars are two to three decades younger than him.

When I remind him that humans don’t have a forever clause in our longevity, he laughs and says he’ll take what happens.

I actually admire him, but I’m totally unprepared for going on without him. I’m divorced and have a small circle of long-time women friends. We meet every few weeks for casual dinners together and do some fundraisin­g for causes we find important.

How do I get my brother to understand how essential he is to me and to take better care of his energy and health?

Needing Supportive Sibling

A

Your brother is already doing what he feels necessary for his well-being. So long as he periodical­ly gets a general health checkup from his family doctor and accepts any new direction to get specialize­d care, he’s focusing more than you realize on his preferred routines.

They haven’t harmed him so far, and you have no discernibl­e reason to pass along serious unproved fears.

Enjoy your brother’s positive outlook. And keep up your women’s group that gets you out for sociable dinners, plus your charitable outreach efforts which are meaningful and uplifting.

Your brother is undoubtedl­y proud of you for this work you do.

You can be proud, too, about his sunny outlook.

Q

I have a friend who loves to talk about herself (mostly her health issues) and rarely stops to listen to what others have to say.

We’re all afraid to say anything to her because we love socializin­g with her husband and don’t want to hurt anyone's feelings.

This has caused most of us to just not want to get together with her. She has many good qualities and can be an interestin­g person.

Needing help on how to handle this!

Chatterbox

A

Depending on age, many people become obsessed with health issues because they’re scared of long-term illness or suffering from potential outcomes.

You’re not alone with this issue. I suggest that your friendship group lightens up the conversati­ons gently but firmly changes the topic.

Interject and say something positive such as, “I’m sure your doctor can help you in a private consultati­on, which will be more helpful to you than we are.”

Q

I agreed to get a cat on the promise that my wife and her son would be the primary caregivers.

After a few years, I realized I was the one dealing with the litter, food and water and even occasional vet visits. Meanwhile, my wife and her son just enjoyed the fun parts. I am not a pet-hater, I just never had any growing up.

The cat eventually died of kidney failure. Then my wife wanted another cat.

I made it very clear that the minute I needed to do anything, for whatever reason, I would return the cat to the animal shelter.

She didn’t believe me, until one day the cat was gone, and I informed her which animal shelter I took it to.

I think this marriage is over. Do you agree?

Cat-napped

A–

It’s not up to me or the cat. Do what feels right. You don’t get nine lives.

Ellie’s tip of the day:

Try not to let fear overwhelm your thoughts. Stay connected with people you trust and enjoy.

 ?? ?? ELLIE & LISI TESHER
ELLIE & LISI TESHER

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