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Pay attention to what you learn dating

Q. I'm in an almost one-year relationship. While there are many wonderful aspects of our relationship and of him, I wonder about the long term. It took me a little while to put my finger on it, but it seems to center on impatience. He can be a very impatient driver (aggressive and tailgates), gets extremely frustrated easily when things don't work out the way he wants (a slow-loading app, a Word document not formatting correctly). This translates into many aspects of our relationship.

Is this something that can be changed or eased? I find myself either withdrawing or trying to be the peacemaker or calming influence.

On the Fence

A. Sure, it can ease, if he ever grows up.

Till then, you have to worry about winding up in somebody's bumper. Aggressive driving is not a hmm-can-I-adapt-to-this? personality quirk, it's often illegal and always a crash risk. The sooner you let him know you won't be his passenger until he learns to manage his "impatience" better known by its real name, anger the sooner your neighborhood roads become safer.

As for your future together in general, all I can think of is the anguish people feel when an unbearable trait emerges in a partner after you've fused your lives ... and how that's nothing compared with the searing regret and self-flagellation that follow the realization that you knew the problem all along and married it anyway.

You're struggling already with the burden of either managing his emotions when he fails to flat-out not your job or hiding from them. That has a real name, too: "Walking on eggshells." He's controlling you through his volatility, whether he means to or not.

How much fun do you think that'll be after you've carried his weight for a decade or three? How about through the rigors of raising children or owning property or just filing joint tax returns year after year after year? Waiting throughout both for the next outburst and for the outbursts to finally stop?

You're dating. You're doing this so you and he can get to know each other. It's what people do.

But sometimes we get lulled into doing what people do without reminding ourselves why we do it. People date not just to see if they can create something that lasts, but also to see whether they should.

Your dating data are coming in. Please heed them.

Q. I will be blunt. My niece wants to host Thanksgiving and I am not ready to hand over the hosting duties to the next generation. Among other issues, my niece and her husband are foodies and probably want to make a bunch of food nobody wants instead of recipes that are a classic for a reason. Is there anything I can do?

Anonymous

A. Two things. 1. Be honest that you take great pleasure in hosting and aren't ready to hand over the reins, but you appreciate the offer and will let her know when it becomes too much for you.

2. Lose the attitude. "Probably want to make ... food nobody wants"? "Classic for a reason"? Unless you're serving venison a la Wampanoag, your menu is a reflection of evolving tastes and culinary fashion; to begrudge your niece the same is just bad generational sportsmanship.

• Email Carolyn at tellmewashpost.com, follow her on Facebook at www.facebook.com/carolyn.hax or chat with her online at noon Eastern time each Friday at www.washingtonpost.com.

© 2015 The Washington Post

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