If an overweight co-worker complains about hard it is to lose weight, is it fair to weigh on the obvious reasons?
Advice Columnist Carolyn Hax takes your questions and tackles your problems.
Advice Columnist Carolyn Hax takes your questions and tackles your problems.
After a breakup, a pal told the writer she wished she’d gotten a heads-up about relationship doubts.
A man offered a good job in his girlfriend’s home town wonders what to do now that she’s his ex-girlfriend.
Parents wonder how to help their daughter, who is expressing doubts and not financially independent.
A mother-to-be and her husband have to fend off parents who want to spend every weekend with them.
He wants to take an unaffordable solo vacation and leave her with a baby and a toddler. She needs a Plan B.
Woman and her husband want to send their own Christmas card, not be part of a family letter.
A reader finds criticism of a popular book, “The Gift of Fear,” misguided.
Advice Columnist Carolyn Hax took your questions and tackled your problems.
A reader’s boyfriend wants a family and kids, but she isn’t sure if he wants them with her.
A reader’s friend made contact after cutting off communications for five years. Can the friendship be revived?
Dividing the estate leaves a survivor wondering if some heirs aren’t showing proper thanks.
The answer: You can’t change her negativity, but you can learn to take away her power to ruin the big day.
How you treat your dog is a good indicator of how you’ll handle kids — in both discipline and affection.
A daughter has seen what her parents’ negativity has done to her brother’s relationship.
One parent is annoyed that another family’s activities seem to dictate when they all can get together.
Advice Columnist Carolyn Hax took your questions and tackled your problems.
She’s financially comfortable and careful. Her boyfriend, not so much. Should they move in together?
The letter writer wants permission to veto a friendship. Does this cross the line of trying to control the situation?
She comes from a quiet upbringing and finds his family overly brash. How can they compromise?
A woman who wants to offer her sister some unsolicited relationship advice needs to back off.
A woman with a high-achieving firstborn wants to help her younger daughter achieve on her own terms.
He says he’s sorry, and she’s wondering if she is giving up too easily.
The letter writer is encouraged to set an example by bringing her son to see her ex’s parents.
Advice Columnist Carolyn Hax took your questions and tackled your problems.
She wants a caring partner, but she has chosen to be with people who are emotionally distant.
A woman wonders what to say to her parents about their cold treatment of her husband of two years.
A neighbor seeks advice after witnessing a parent verbally abusing her child.
Carolyn Hax started her advice column in 1997, after five years as a copy editor and news editor in Style and none as a therapist. The column includes cartoons by “relationship cartoonist” Nick Galifianakis — Carolyn's ex-husband — and appears in over 200 newspapers.
Besides the daily column, Carolyn has a weekly live online discussion (noon Fridays), a reader forum and a Facebook page. She also has a policy of saying yes when NPR calls but avoids TV like something forgotten in the back of the fridge; the feeling appears to be mutual.
Carolyn lives in Massachusetts with her husband, three boys and medium brown dog, Billy, but sees D.C. as "home." Sign up for Carolyn Hax’s column, delivered to your inbox early each morning.
Tackle your problems with Carolyn every Friday from noon until she falls on her keyboard. Plus dip into her deep archives.