DEAR NATALIE: My husband has a big corporate job and recently told me that he is extremely unhappy. He wants to stop working and start a “business coaching” consulting business. I quit my job in PR a few years back to raise our children, and I have no idea how he thinks this will work with me unemployed and him fun-employed. We got into a big argument about it. I want him to be happy, but I also want to be able to eat. What should I say to convince him that this is a terrible idea? – HAPPY DOESN’T PAY THE RENT
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DEAR HAPPY DOESN’T PAY THE RENT: Perhaps there is a compromise here. He should start to build his side-business until it is at a level where he can quit his full-time corporate job and not be strapped for money. It takes time to build up a business. I have done it, and it took a few years for me to be able to support myself full-time with consulting work. As an aside, this is exactly why healthcare should not be tied to employment, as it is a reason so many people in my own life have chosen to stick with jobs they dislike. Encourage him to take action items that will lead him to a place where he can replace or come close to replacing his current income before walking away. Telling him it’s a “terrible idea” is only going to make him feel worse about his options. Work towards this as a team. And who knows? With consistent hard work and a positive attitude, in a few years, it may just all work out!
DEAR NATALIE: One of my (thought she was) closest friends is in an open marriage and she talks candidly about their sex life. She asked my husband recently if he would ever want to “swap” one night so that she could be with him. She was drunk at a party we were both attending. I was extremely upset and my husband was very uncomfortable by her behavior. She’s never acted like that before. I have known her for six years and she’s always been a good friend to me and my family. But now I’m reconsidering our friendship. How can I reconcile this atrocious behavior?
– THOUGHT WE WERE FRIENDS
DEAR THOUGHT WE WERE FRIENDS: Have you talked to her about what she said? There’s that funny saying: “Truth tellers include drunk people and toddlers.” So now that you know how she feels, you need to say something to her so that you can squash this – and fast. If she wants to salvage any friendship with you, she needs to apologize to both you and your husband. And perhaps some time apart is necessary so that everyone can reassess their relationships. At the end of the day, people are impulsive. She may regret what she did – if she even remembers it – but that doesn’t make it right. You have to set a boundary now, assuming you still want to be her friend.
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