8B — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD THuRSDAY, MAY 14, 2020 COFFEE BREAK Wife laughs off man’s pleas to end their long marriage DEAR ABBY: I have a problem I can’t fix. I have been married for 54 years. For the last 20 we have slept in different bedrooms. I get no affection from my wife, and every- thing has to be her way. We no longer have anything in common except our children and grand- children who, for the most part, come to me only when they need something. Over the years, we have drifted apart, and there is no longer any- thing we enjoy doing together. I have told her many times that for my mental health we should part ways. She laughs and shrugs it off. To her I am a paycheck. She thinks we don’t have a problem. Her parents lived pretty much the same way. I need someone who will sit with me when we go out to dinner, hold hands in public, have a couple of similar interests, share the same bed, etc. I have met a woman online who DEAR seems to care and ABBY who wants to be with me. I haven’t followed through, but every time I’m verbally abused, it’s pushing me more and more toward her. Help. — UNHAPPY DEAR UNHAPPY: Tell your wife you are making an appoint- ment with a licensed marriage and family therapist to discuss your marital situation. It may be the wakeup call she needs to get her to quit laughing and pay attention to the fact that you are seriously unhappy. Ask her to go with you, but if she refuses, follow through and go without her. It may help you emotionally as you disengage from this marriage. If you do end the marriage, recognize there will have to be a fair distribution of any assets that accumulated and be prepared to discuss your options with more than one lawyer. A word of cau- tion, however: Do NOT immedi- ately rush into a romantic relation- ship with someone you know only through the internet. It is crucial that you take the necessary time to detoxify and regain your bal- ance after you exit this marriage. DEAR ABBY: My mom passed away a year and a few months ago. My parents were married for 38 years. Dad started a whirlwind romance with a lady about nine months after Mom’s death. Their relationship lasted three months, and they were supposed to get married. She blindsided him by breaking the engagement a month before the wedding. The breakup was because she still has feel- ings for an ex-husband and had nothing to do with my dad. He keeps talking to her “as a friend,” but he is miserable because he’s in love with her. Ever since the breakup, she gets nasty and criti- cizes him about small things. She is not even a good friend. I want my father to be happy and find someone who will love him. But he continues to call and text this woman, even though it makes him sink deeper into depression every day. He keeps thinking she’ll take him back, but I don’t see it happening. How can I convince Daddy to cut off all contact with her? — WHAT’S BEST FOR DAD DEAR WHAT’S BEST: I’m not sure you are the person to do that. It might be better to enlist the aid of a male relative or close friend — someone who knows what has been going on. Your father might be more receptive to that message if he hears it from a contemporary. If not, he may have to learn his lesson the hard way. DEAR READERS: For those of you having trouble coping with stress and anxiety during this challenging time, Jack Drescher, M.D., respected psychiatrist, psy- choanalyst and member of the American Psychoanalytic Asso- ciation, contacted me offering a resource for emotional health matters related to the coronavirus crisis. For more information, go to psychologytoday.com/us/blog/ psychoanalysis-unplugged-0. — LOVE, ABBY Stampede: People flock to Wildlife Safari in spite of stay-home guidelines West Coast’s only operating open-air animal park broke single-day records J By Jon Mitchell The News-Review via AP StoryShare WINSTON — Dan Van Slyke couldn’t help but smile when he talked ear- lier this week about a recent resurgence of Wildlife Safari. “No doubt about it, we’re saving people’s lives,” said the executive director of the drive-through animal preserve. To be clear, Van Slyke wasn’t talking about something like a cure for COVID-19, the virus that started a worldwide pan- demic. He was talking about how his park is pro- viding a cure for sheer boredom, which arguably became just as contagious as the epidemic thanks to the social distancing and stay-at-home orders put into AP Photo by Jon Mitchell A visitor stops April 6 with a carload of Wildlife Safari guests at the lion exhibit of the open-air animal park in Winston. place around the world. “If you’re in Portland and you’re stuck in a house and you’re going crazy, you can come down here,” he said. “We’re saving lives of kids, we’re saving mar- riages. This is all about mental health. That’s what we’re doing.” The park, which opened in 1972, is the only drive- through animal park in Oregon and the only open-air animal park on the West Coast that’s still DONATE NOW TO SUPPORT LOCAL REPORTING givebutter.com/bakercityherald open. Park officials have embraced the park’s tradi- tional sales pitch of “you are captive, they roam free” as if it was made for a once- in-a-century pandemic. Van Slyke, at one point, when Gov. Kate Brown originally issued her “Stay Home, Stay Healthy” order in March, wanted to close the park since many were under the impression that everyone needed to remain indoors. Park officials did an about-face on that deci- sion not long afterward, opting to keep the drive- through open while closing the Safari Village. But as time progressed, the park opened without fully opening. Merchan- dise from the gift shop was brought out into the open and put for sale under a canopy tent, and anyone working the booth is required to wear gloves. On Wednesday, workers at the kiosk at the front of the drive-through park wore masks and gloves. And for a couple of weekends, food was being prepared and served outside of the closed gates to the Safari Village. Just the drive-through portion of the park, how- ever, was good enough. Jacob Schlueter, the mar- keting director for the park, said the park broke sin- gle-day attendance records, with cars extending from the front gate of the 600- acre park past the turnoff near Oregon Highway 42 — a distance of almost 2 miles. Park attendees, some of whom drove in from as far as Washington and Cali- fornia, reached more than 4,000 on one day, Van Slyke said. Brown’s announcement on May 7 for phase-by- phase reopening of Ore- gon’s businesses forced the park to change plans again, however. Schlueter said even though some of the park’s animal encounters have reopened — private and small-group sessions with park staffers and park patrons are still available — many large-group encoun- ters that included groups of 100 or more won’t be available since the gover- nor’s order isn’t allowing groups of 25 or more until September. LOCAL NEWS FUND COVID-19 givebutter.com/lagrandeobserver