Ask Amy: He wants me to meet his random Facebook ‘friends’

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Dear Amy: Do you think it normal (or wise) to meet your Facebook friends?

My husband arranged a dinner with a “friend” he met on Facebook through one of his news sites. He’s not happy that I didn’t want to go with him.

He arranged another dinner with someone he said was a member of his fraternity from college. I attended this dinner only to find out they didn’t personally know each other!

My “friends” on Facebook are people I know, and even if I haven’t seen them in years, I enjoy their news about family and their activities.

To randomly collect friends that you have no personal background with seems desperate and unwise.

Concerned Wife

Dear Concerned: Any time you personally connect with a “stranger,” there is some risk involved, but in my opinion, meeting people you’ve gotten to know online is a natural and positive impulse. I’ve done so many times.

Meeting someone who was in your fraternity in college is not a “random” meetup. This is personally connecting with someone with whom you already share some real-world commonality.

This is neither desperate nor unwise. It is actually old-school “networking.”

Dear Amy: Two sisters in our extended family have a broken relationship.

When they were young, their parents brought foster children into the home. The eldest foster child was a boy in his early teens. He began sexually assaulting the younger sister, who was 8.

The abuse continued for at least four years. No one in the family was aware of it. The young sister was threatened not to tell anyone.

Fast-forward 20 years. The abuse was revealed, and the older sister said that everyone needed to forgive the predator. She opted to keep him in her life, like a brother.

The victim no longer trusted her sister, and their relationship was never the same.

Now the older sister feels rejected by the family because of her continued support of the predator. She still feels that forgiveness of the predator was the best course, and she can’t grasp the depth of her younger sister’s hurt.

Sixty years have passed, and the entire family is still clouded by this disloyalty.

The older sister feels like she’s the victim, due to the palpable rejection she feels from everyone else in the family.

Is there hope after all this time that trust can be re-established? How should they make amends?

They are now all senior citizens, and they could both benefit greatly from each other’s companionship and love.

Your advice?

Fractured Family

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