Dear Abby: I have been blessed with 38 to have my first and most likely Lorap. He is perfect. My daughter, “Robin,” highlighted. He left alone with the child all day long, every day while his partner works. Robin just slept when he was at home. I understand his failure. I brought him and his brother, 12 months apart, myself. I can’t find my grandmother I always don’t have a car and Robin doesn’t have a driver’s license.
I love every picture I have received. I want to memorize every aspect of my grandmother. There is a recurring theme in his pictures. I think the child has a lazy eye. I compare pictures from birth to the age of 10 months old.
Robin is in a vulnerable state with stress and postpartum depression. Should I tell him or allow a doctor to catch it? I know that it’s longer unpleasant, it’s worse to get it. Now, I can’t say or do anything right for him. Obviously, “I don’t know how much it wants to raise a child!” – Press Grandma in Missouri
Dear Grandma: If your daughter suffers from postpartum depression, it is very important that he treats his doctor for it. You have to tell him that. I can’t stop it so fast. Your granddaughter should have regular examination of his pediatrician because if something is not good in his eye, his pediatrician should catch it and recommend treatment.
Dear Abby: My father separated my mother when I was 7. He was never around their divorce. They married young, and I had three siblings. My parents “have” marry (that’s time), so it’s not a happy solidarity. Dad understood oneself and not yet. He moved to the State, we never supported and sat on the trails, looking at us flounder.
My mother works three jobs in my full childhood. He is the best parent you can imagine, but it is a true struggle for us all. In a way, we have been blessed to have left. Two of my brothers continued in relationship with this person, later in life again and with two more children. I have never understood how they could forgive him, but they needed.
My father is 86 today. Years ago, he moved back to our growing. He died and had two to six months to live. It was a strange feeling, and I had sympathy for what my brothers went through. How do I support it?
I didn’t talk to my father for 40 years, and we didn’t talk about each other. I can’t forgive him what he does and my mother do. Of course, I’ll know if he’s going to pass. I want to be sincere and support my brothers. – understands California
Dear informetics: No one can guess how a parent’s death can affect them, and that includes you. Don’t be surprised if it comes as a jolt. You don’t have to mourn your father’s death to be sensitive to your siblings feel. Usually, it can help a good listener and help with any details that need to be attended when asked.
Dear Abby written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was built by his mother Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.dearobburebober.com or PO Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.