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Longtime military wife can't endure another reunion

Q. My husband graduated from a military academy 54 years ago. As a healthy, happily married couple for 48 years, we have enjoyed the life we lived as a military family. We always supported each other and our children during our frequent moves, about every two years.

The problem? I have attended homecomings at his school every five years. They are always fun, full of celebrations and reflections. I thought the final event was the 50th ... a big to-do.

I was wrong. Just found out 55 is around the corner.

I just can't go. I'm finished. No more stories of glory days, seeing pictures of hundreds of beautiful grandkids, smiling until the jaws hurt. My spouse thinks I am not being supportive of this (his) special community. I know he can go alone and probably will.

I feel crummy that I want to spend my time doing what focuses on the present and not live in the past, even if it is only for three days. Should I stay or should I go?

A. Because it is only three days every five years, it's entirely realistic for you to go wave the flag as a nod to nearly a half-century of happy marriage.

Because you don't want to go wave the flag even though it is entirely realistic to, this is plainly not just about three days of perma-smiling.

And while only you can know for sure what the real obstacle is, I can piece together an idea from the likelihood that you wouldn't "feel crummy," wouldn't have written to me, and wouldn't have thought twice about skipping the 55th if your husband had said to you: "I understand. Thanks for being such a good sport about all the other reunions, and enjoy your well-deserved break."

Right? You feel bad because your husband's emotional calculations here apparently don't include any banked goodwill for your effort toward those 10 prior reunions. And of course that would feel lousy.

No doubt he feels lousy, too, that you won't rally for one of his top, nearly lifelong priorities by grit-smiling for three of every 1,826.25 days.

I also don't doubt that a half-century marriage has involved a lot more issues than this one where you've each approached the same problem with two different scopes, and therefore come up with radically different emotions in response to the same set of facts.

It's incredibly common. Example: You express annoyance at the wet towel the other left on the floor this morning, while the other is annoyed that you chose to complain despite other's being guilty of roughly zero prior wet-towel leavings in the entirety of your lives together. It's a matter of scope: You see a day, the other sees years.

Cases like these are when the seemingly impossible is possible: when both of you can be both right and wrong. Yes the wet-towel-leaving is wrong and taking exception to it is right - and fussing over a single negligent act by a considerate partner is wrong and taking exception to that is right.

Please talk to your husband with this framework in mind. Suggest that he's seeing one reunion while you're seeing all of them, and ask if he'd be willing to discuss the 55th with you both on his terms and on yours.

Whatever you agree to as a result of this conversation, it will feel a whole lot better just for being understood and agreed to by both.

Q. My boyfriend has made it clear he won't marry me or anyone who doesn't want to take his last name. I'm not willing to change it and I don't want to live with my boyfriend for the rest of my life. I want to be married at some point.

I'm not sure how we move forward. Any suggestions?

A. You break up or you agree to change your name upon marriage or you carry on as boyfriend and girlfriend indefinitely. There's no magic here.

There is, though, the fact of a line in the sand to consider. When both of you draw your own, then it's easy - he won't, you won't, let's call the whole thing off.

When one of you draws an arbitrary line, though, then I could argue it's even easier: Who wants to form a life partnership with someone who apparently gave serious thought to his priorities - for your compliance, mind you - and put you, the person, second? At best?

He chose the idea of his name over the reality of you. How lucky you both are to have this information now. The least welcome information tends to tell us the most.

• Email Carolyn at tellme@washpost.com, follow her on Facebook at www.facebook.com/carolyn.hax or chat with her online at 11 a.m. each Friday at www.washingtonpost.com.

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