Q. Dear Abby: I am a 14-year-old female from the West Coast. I am homeschooled and dont have many friends because I score high in tests, meaning I retain more information than the average person.
DEAR ABBY
Homeschooled teen feels isolated
March 1
By JEANNE PHILLIPS
Universal Uclick
On the rare occasion that I mingle with children my own age, they call me unpleasant names, play pranks on me and otherwise torture me. I had to change my emergency cellphone number and start using my sisters because there have been so many immature and insulting prank calls.
I hate it. I cant help that I am smart, and I refuse to degrade myself by dumbing down my actions and speech because they cant handle their insecurities. High IQ
A. Dear High IQ: Being different isnt easy, and clearly you are very intelligent. But you and your parents should understand that crank calls are not pranks they are a form of bullying and should have been reported when they happened.
Most parents who homeschool also network with other homeschooling parents so their children can socialize with peers. If your parents havent done this, I recommend you discuss it with them. You might also meet more intellectually advanced young people if you joined special-interest groups for older students.
Your high IQ might be less threatening to the students who have given you trouble if you volunteer to tutor some of them who need help with their schoolwork. (Just dont fall into the trap of doing it FOR them.)
Stressful proposal
Q. Dear Abby: I have been with my boyfriend, Dan, for almost five years. Hes wonderful and we have a great relationship. We have talked about spending our lives together, but had mutually agreed in the beginning that marriage wasnt a priority for either of us. He has said for years that he never wanted to marry which is fine with me.
I now suspect that hes planning to propose to me on our fifth anniversary. (He has never been great at hiding surprises.)
Im thrilled that he wants to make that kind of commitment, and I want nothing more than to spend the rest of my life with him, but the thought of marriage scares me. I dont know if its nerves about the pending proposal or that I have never planned on marriage and now I have to think about all the stress and strife that comes with planning a wedding.
I want to say yes, but I love the way things are right now, and I know that marriage will change things. What, if anything, do I say to him? Cold Feet? In Salt Lake City
A. Dear Cold Feet: I wish you had mentioned why you think being married to Dan would change things. If youve been happy together for five years, its unlikely that making a formal commitment would damage the special relationship you have together.
Perhaps this is old school, but I feel that if couples plan to bring children into the world, they should be married. Because you want nothing more than to spend the rest of your life with Dan, and are concerned about the stress of planning a wedding, when he pops the question, I suggest you say, Yes why dont we elope?
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