Asking Eric: Is his workaholism just an excuse?

He might be using his busy schedule to hide his relationship issues.

By R. Eric Thomas

Chicago Tribune
November 7, 2024 at 9:59AM

Dear Eric: I’m 51. I’ve been dating “John” for more than two years. After a year, he moved in to help with the mortgage. Most of the time he pays, but if he misses a month and I ask about it, he gets angry, which I find to be a very strange reaction.

If I ever get mad about something, he turns around and gets mad at me and often blames me.

Most of the time he works from home and is on many Zoom calls a day. We have been on zero vacations together. When I ask him about taking a trip together, he always says I should go because he is too busy and to stop being antagonistic.

We have had dinner with mutual friends less than 10 times. He seems to be a workaholic. He likes to watch movies with me and occasionally have dinner out together. I’m flattered he wants to spend time with me but sad we have no community together. I feel bored and uninspired.

When his parents are in town, he has dinner with them at 5 p.m. six nights a week for a couple months. I find this excessive. I don’t know if we should break up or stay together.

Eric says: I’m confused about what you’re getting out of this relationship. Part of the reason for the move was financial, but he is inconsistent and angry about mortgage payments. He makes a lot of time for his parents and work, but no time to build a relationship with you.

There’s a difference between being a workaholic and being a person who isn’t prepared to be an equal partner in a relationship. It seems he’s the latter, and if he isn’t interested in learning how to show up for you, you have to show him the door.

You write that you’re flattered when he spends time with you. But spending time with you isn’t doing you a favor, it’s something that he should want to do. You deserve that.

Cranky relative

Dear Eric: Over the last 30 years, I have been very generous with a sibling who has never been in very good financial shape.

I have sensed a certain contempt from her and her family about my generosity. I get a thank you or an acknowledgment maybe half the time.

She is very short-tempered and regularly needles me about things that happened 20 or 30 years ago, snarky comments about stupid little things I did that made her angry.

After many years of letting it go, I find myself angry about her attitude toward me. I have always felt sorry for her and wanted to make her life better, but maybe in doing so I’ve made her feel bad about herself.

I would love to be able to find a way to move forward and let go of all of this negative emotion. Any suggestions?

Eric says: Money talks, but it mumbles a lot, so we have to be especially clear in our communications around it. It will help a lot if you can have a conversation that’s focused on the way you feel about each other and about your relationship. You need a place to work through your resentment, and she likely does, too.

Before you reach out to her, think about what you actually want. It may be as simple as a thank you. But I suspect it’s more complicated than that. Is there a part of you that’s hurt by her response to you or her snarky comments? Is there frustration that the money you gave didn’t stop the hurt? Ask yourself what would make you feel valued in this relationship.

Sort through your feelings and figure out what’s your responsibility to sort through solo and what you can bring to your conversation with her.

Send questions to R. Eric Thomas at eric@askingeric.com or P.O. Box 22474, Philadelphia, PA 19110.

about the writer

about the writer

R. Eric Thomas