Dear Abby: I don’t feel safe riding in friend’s vintage car

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DEAR ABBY: Recently a friend came over and took me to lunch. She has a small, 50-year-old vintage car that was very popular in the ’60s.

She had come from Marin County over the Golden Gate Bridge to my house. As she drove us to the restaurant, her car stalled twice. It was very underpowered and, in my opinion, rickety.

After she dropped me home, I sent her an email strongly expressing my concern that she is driving an unsafe car. I was worried for her safety. She took offense, so I apologized.

She has plenty of money to buy a safe used car like anyone else, but she says, “I like driving vintage.”

I don’t want to get into her car again. Was I wrong to tell her I felt her car was unsafe? — NERVOUS PASSENGER IN SAN FRANCISCO

DEAR PASSENGER: You weren’t wrong to warn her. However, you may have been wrong to assume that she has “plenty of money to buy a safe used car.” Nobody has as much money as others assume they do.

Because you don’t want to get into her car again, you should provide the transportation from now on or meet her at the restaurant.

MORE DEAR ABBY: Now that I can afford a sports car, my wife says I’ll look like an idiot My sister-in-law wants me to pay for her broken car seat For 12 years, my husband keeps asking for a threesome

DEAR ABBY: My across-the-street neighbor and I have become friendly. She has a 15-month-old and a newborn. Not only is she not married to the baby’s daddy, but they don’t even live together.

She has been asking me to help her a lot now that the baby is born. I’m 10 years older and raising three kids, all in their teens.

Abby, I don’t want to raise anyone else’s kids. How can I politely tell her that I have my own family to care for? She has a tendency to overreact. — KEEPING DISTANCE

DEAR KEEPING DISTANCE: To tell your neighbor you “don’t want to raise anyone else’s kids” may be accurate, but it’s a bit rough.

When she asks you to do things for her, be pleasant and say — consistently — that you are busy, you don’t have time, you have other plans, etc. If you do, she will soon realize that you are not to be depended upon.

DEAR ABBY: My son has lived overseas on and off for six years. He’s being married to a wonderful young woman where they met, which was in Wales.

Needless to say, not everyone can attend, so we are having a reception for them here in the States. My son already has a fully furnished house overseas and doesn’t need anything, plus the cost of taking gifts back would be astronomical!

Anyway, he is thinking of asking for monetary help with the honeymoon. Would this be all right to do and, if so, how do you ask people for it? — HELP FOR THE HONEYMOON

DEAR HELP: Many young people today post requests like that on their wedding website. Or, because friends and relatives may ask what they need after receiving invitations or announcements, the message can be conveyed verbally.

According to the rules of etiquette, however, requests for gifts or money should NEVER be included WITH the invitations or announcements.

Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at http://www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Good advice for everyone — teens to seniors — is in “The Anger in All of Us and How to Deal With It.” To order, send your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $7 (U.S. funds), to: Dear Abby, Anger Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Shipping and handling are included in the price.)

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