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Dear Ann Landers,
at is killing our marriage. When D. and I walked down the aisle, he was only a few pounds overweight. I pledged to quit smoking if he would promise to slim down. I have not touched a cigarette since our wedding day. D. has gained 50 pounds. He is a great guy. We enjoy each other, our children and our lives. But those mounds of fat are coming between us. He doesn't understand why our sex life isn't what it used to be. I try, but I'm turned off by those rolls of fat around his middle. Even his kisses leave me cold because his jowls are flabby. I decided a long time ago not to nag since I don't want to hurt him. I fix proper meals and keep no fattening snacks around the house, but I can't padlock his mouth when he walks out the door. Please help me, Ann. -Lovely Man but Too Much of Him

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, while snoop-ing no doubt, seized on what she thought was a challenge-in the form of “other women.” She then displayed her find in a manner calculated to in-crease his guilt and bare his most se-cret emotions. Because the boy was embarrassed and tore the pictures down, she thought she had taught him something and “won a victory.” All she did was fill the boy with re-sentment for her lack of consideration for his private feelings. Too bad you didn’t tell the mother, and ALL mothers, that collecting girlie pictures is not uncommon, that such pictures are a source of stimulation for immature males and when the boy grows up to be a man he no longer needs his paper dolls. BEEN THERE.

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"Television has proved that people will look at anything rather than each other."
-Ann Landers