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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Carolyn Hax: Compromise for sake of dog, marriage

Washington Post

Hi, Carolyn: Since you’re an avowed dog lover, I’m hoping you can help. I have two serious dog lovers in my life and feel imposed upon regularly by them both, and get veiled hostility from them when I resist.

My sister has a darling golden retriever and we share a house with a large yard. Although I mostly work from home, my work is demanding and often very stressful, and I like to decompress by going for fast-paced walks. Sis often asks if I’ll take him when she sees me with my sneakers on. I love the dog, but he’s a sniffer and doesn’t like a fast-paced walk.

I made it clear when she got him that I didn’t want a dog because it was a responsibility I couldn’t take on at this point. She points out that my fiance and I want to start a family soon, as if that’s somehow the same thing. I’ll help out if she’s in a bind, but she resents that I’m not more willing.

Now fiance has announced he wants to get a dog. I’ve said that, although I work from home, he needs to pretend I don’t in terms of caring for the dog. He says it’s no problem, as he can come home at lunch and walk the dog, but I can tell he resents my stance on this.

I am beginning to resent his. My compromise is that I’m happy to share the expenses, happy to hire a dog sitter/walker, but just don’t want to take the work on myself.

How do I maintain a healthy boundary here when it’s so clear that two of the people I love most think I’m a jerk? – In the Doghouse

This avowed dog lover says it’s not about dogs.

People do not get to dump their responsibilities on you, or to complain when you refuse to serve as the cheerful dump-ee. There’s nothing wrong with your boundaries, at least with your sister (I’ll get to the fiance issue in a second); you just need to accept that people won’t always respect them, receive them warmly or allow you to set them without consequences. That’s just part of the deal with boundaries, and the boundary-crossing people who inspire them.

But your work isn’t done here yet, especially if your sister is repeating a family pattern of saying one thing and silently (resentfully) expecting another. Does your fiance also use guilt tactics to enforce the primacy of his needs? It’s possible you’re poised to carry an unhealthy family pattern over to a marriage.

Keep that in the back of your mind as you address that DOA compromise with your fiance. Marriage is a different beast from a home shared with a sibling. You and your sib carry out separate lives with separate goals. You and your fiance presumably share goals, plus an avowed duty to serve as the stewards of each other’s happiness. Just as he needs to come home to walk his own dog ungrudgingly, as a gesture of love for you and respect for your needs, you need to have room in your plan to notice when he needs you to have his back, or take his dog out for a spin. Ungrudgingly, just out of love for him and knowledge of what he needs.

That, and your no-dog-care stance is only fair in theory. In practice: highly unrealistic.

So you both need to come up with a fuller, more realistic compromise – one that centers not on care for the pet-to-be, but on caring for each other’s needs, and on acceptance that your needs differ but matter the same. This kind of agreement promises better care for the dog, too, because poor Mr. Pickles inevitably gets the brunt of caregiver resentment.