General News

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New York Jets add former Alabama defensive lineman, cut former Auburn kicker

Anders Carlson will not be with the New York Jets for their regular-season finale on Sunday. But Phidarian Mathis will be.

On Monday, the Jets waived Carlson, a former Auburn kicker, and were awarded Mathis, a former Alabama defensive tackle, as a waiver claim.

The Washington Commanders waived Mathis on Saturday to open an active-roster spot for former Crimson Tide All-American Jonathan Allen, who returned from a nine-game stay on injured reserve.

The Cincinnati Bengals, Houston Texans and Detroit Lions also put in claims for Mathis, NFL Network reported. The Jets were awarded Mathis because of their 4-12 record. The waiver order is decided in the same way as the NFL Draft, with the claims awarded from worst to best.

By failing to clear waivers, Mathis comes to New York with his four-year rookie contract intact, so he is under contract with the Jets for the 2025 season.

Mathis played 257 defensive snaps and 54 special-teams plays in 12 games for Washington this season, his third since joining the Commanders in the second round of the 2022 NFL Draft.

In Washington, Mathis played with former Crimson Tide defensive tackles Allen and Daron Payne. Alabama alumnus Quinnen Williams has been a Pro Bowl defensive tackle for the Jets for the past two seasons.

Carlson was New York’s fourth kicker this season after Greg Zuerlein handled the duty for the first eight games, and Riley Patterson and Spencer Shrader kicked in one game apiece.

Carlson kicked in five games but was a game-day inactive on Sunday. In his second NFL season, Carlson made 8-of-10 field-goal attempts, including a 58-yarder, and 9-of-11 extra-point kicks for New York.

On Saturday, the Jets restored Zuerlein to the active roster after he’d spent seven games on injured reserve because of a knee injury. Zuerlein was active for Sunday’s 40-14 loss to the Buffalo Bills, but he did not attempt any kicks.

The Jets close their season against the Miami Dolphins at 3:25 p.m. CST Sunday at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey.

FOR MORE OF AL.COM’S COVERAGE OF THE NFL, GO TO OUR NFL PAGE

Mark Inabinett is a sports reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on X at @AMarkG1.

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Barrage of gunfire in Birmingham leaves 3 wounded

Three people were wounded when gunfire erupted in Birmingham’s Kingston community late Monday afternoon.

Birmingham police just after 4:30 p.m. began receiving Shot Spotter alerts of multiple rounds fired in the 4700 block of Ninth Court North.

Officers found one victim, an adult male, injured at the Shell gas station on Richard Arrington Jr. Boulevard, said Officer Truman Fitzgerald.

Two females were found wounded at an apartment in the 4400 Block of 9th Avenue North.

Fitzgerald said the victims all appeared to be adults.

One of the females sustained life-threatening injuries. The other two victims are expected to be OK.

Investigators believe all three were shot in the same incident.

No arrests have been made.

Anyone with information is asked to call detective at 205-254-1764 or Crime Stoppers at 205-254-7777.

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3 takeaways from Auburn basketball’s final non-conference game vs. Monmouth

After a nine-day break, Auburn men’s basketball returned to Neville Arena looking for one last easy buy game win before starting conference play.

While Auburn did get the win, beating Monmouth 87-58, it didn’t always look easy. It took the Tigers until late in the first half to gain control of the game.

Auburn finished off a lopsided win in the end, improving its record to 12-1 going into Southeastern Conference play this weekend.

Here are three takeaways from the win over Monmouth:

Slow start

Monday night’s win didn’t follow the typical formula of Auburn pouncing to a big lead and cruising. Monmouth led at the first media timeout and stayed close for most of the first half.

Auburn looked out of sorts defensively to start the game, giving up open shots both in transition and caused by dribble penetration. Monmouth took advantage of that in the first few minutes, starting the game making its first three 3-pointers.

The defensive gameplan was fairly clear early on, with Auburn placing extra attention on Monmouth’s leading scorer, Abdi Bashir Jr. He often occupied multiple defenders, which led to some openings in dribble penetration and a few miscommunications in transition.

Auburn eventually turned things around, ending the first half on an 18-0 run. During that run, the defense tightened things up and Bashir was hardly able to get a touch.

Chaney Johnson’s boost

As the scoreboard read 28-28 at the 6:32 mark of the first half, Auburn was looking for a run to end the first half and take full control of the game into the halftime locker room.

The Tigers got just that, scoring 18 unanswered before the halftime buzzer sounded, and the surge was led by Chaney Johnson.

Johnson, who finished the game with 12 points, started the run with 10 straight points of his own. His baskets came in the half court, in transition and at the free throw line, immediately bringing a balanced offensive spark after replacing the injured Dylan Cardwell, who didn’t return until the second half.

Johnson has been an impact player off the bench for Auburn all season and Monday night was no different. Not only were his 10 straight points and 12 total points impressive, he also finished the game +30 in 19 minutes played.

A new season begins

The buy games, showcases and invitationals are over.

Auburn emerged from its daunting nonconference slate an impressive 12-1, but now the real gauntlet begins. The SEC is stronger than it’s arguably ever been this season, meaning there are no more easy games left on the schedule.

Through 13 games, though, there’s no reason to believe the Tigers aren’t ready for the challenge. Monday wasn’t a perfect 40 minutes, and the big win didn’t come against SEC-level competition, but it capped off a nonconference schedule that featured wins over teams like Houston, Iowa State and Purdue.

Other than a different result at Duke, Auburn couldn’t ask for much more out of nonconference play. But championships aren’t won in December, so there’s no time for Auburn to sleepwalk or get complacent. There might have been a hint of that to start Monday’s game.

Nevertheless, the Tigers have put themselves in position to be a national contender entering conference play. Saturday will be the first step in determining whether or not they play up to that level.

Peter Rauterkus covers Auburn sports for AL.com. You can follow him on X at @peter_rauterkus or email him at [email protected]m

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Huntsville police release more footage of person of interest in Christmas Day homicide; help sought to ID man

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Tua Tagovailoa’s current hip injury unrelated to Alabama setback

In what turned out to be his final game as Alabama’s quarterback, Tua Tagovailoa sustained a dislocated hip and posterior wall fracture against SEC rival Mississippi State on Nov. 16, 2019.

A hip injury kept Tagovailoa from lining up at QB for Miami on Sunday in a game the Dolphins had to win to stay in the NFL playoff race.

On Monday, Miami coach Mike McDaniel said the first question he asked when he learned of Tagovailoa’s latest injury was if it was related to his college injury.

“They’re unrelated,” McDaniel said, “and there’s no causation involved in it.”

Now the question is: Can Tagovailoa play on Sunday in the Dolphins’ regular-season finale against the New York Jets?

That game matters because Miami defeated the Cleveland Browns 20-3 on Sunday with Snoop Huntley at quarterback.

If the Dolphins beat the Jets and the Denver Broncos lose to the Kansas City Chiefs on the final Sunday of the regular season, Miami would claim the third wild-card spot in the AFC playoff field. Both games will kick off at 3:25 p.m. CST.

Tagovailoa didn’t make a big deal about his injury when he met with reporters on Thursday.

“I mean it’s good,” Tagovailoa said. “It’s just like anyone else on the team and anyone else around the league. You get banged up a little bit towards the ending of the year, so just got to take care of that.”

Tagovailoa sustained the hip injury during a 20-12 loss to the Houston Texans on Dec. 15 and aggravated the injury in a 29-17 victory over the San Francisco 49ers on Dec. 22. Tagovailoa took every offensive snap for the Dolphins in both games.

McDaniel said the injury did not heal as the Dolphins had hoped last week.

“Relative to a projected timeline based upon the previous week, I would say that it didn’t improve as we were kind of forecasting,” McDaniel said. “Not necessarily worse, just you’re expecting things to progress, and sometimes the body could care less about your expectations. It wasn’t like he took a shot or got hit in practice or anything like that. We just had some, I think, reasonable expectations based upon the week previous, and it didn’t really work out that way. …

“It was not safe at all (for Tagovailoa to play) based upon a litany of things that his body was vulnerable to as well as his inability to avoid and move within the pocket. The risk of just leaving him really unprotected is the way that I would say both on impact and the ability to avoid impact.”

This week, McDaniel said he would have Huntley better prepared to play if Tagovailoa is out again.

“This week, I know one thing: Snoop will get more reps than Tua this week as we go through the week and have to be prepared for both guys to play,” McDaniel said, “because I don’t really know exactly what it’s going to look like this next Sunday. So that’s really the optimism. We’re kind of in a gray area now because of just how his body did not cooperate with my agenda.”

McDaniel said Tagovailoa’s participation this week would be determined by the Dolphins’ medical staff. The decision to play would not be the quarterback’s. Otherwise, Tagovailoa would have been in the lineup against the Browns, McDaniel said.

“I think with injuries it’s pretty cut and dry,” McDaniel said. “One hundred times out of 100, if someone’s not medically cleared to play, I don’t trump card that. I suppose, on game day, I guess by the letter of the law you could say it’s my final say. My final say is to choose to listen to the medical professionals with their expertise and knowing the pros and cons, and that’s the only thing responsible to do with players.”

FOR MORE OF AL.COM’S COMPREHENSIVE COVERAGE OF THE NFL, GO TO OUR NFL PAGE

Mark Inabinett is a sports reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on X at @AMarkG1.

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BetMGM bonus code ALCOM1500 activates huge first-bet bonus for Lions vs 49ers on MNF

Get set for another installment of Monday Night Football when the Detroit Lions meet the San Francisco 49ers. BetMGM offers a $1500 first-bet bonus with BetMGM bonus code ALCOM1500 available for Monday’s clash. Read on as I share how to unlock up to $1,500 in BetMGM bonus bets for Lions vs. 49ers on Monday, December 30.

BetMGM bonus code ALCOM1500 at a glance

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💰 BetMGM bonus code details Up to $1,500 back in bonus bets if your qualifying wager loses
📝 BetMGM bonus code terms and conditions Minimum $10 deposit. Bonus bets are sent within 24 hours if your qualifying wager settles as a loss.

Losing wagers less than $50 gets users a single bonus bet. Losing wagers of $50+ gets users five bonus bets in equal 20% denominations of the amount wagered.

Bonus bets expire seven days after receipt and are non-withdrawable.

✅ Last verified Dec. 30, 2024

BetMGM bonus code ALCOM1500: How to unlock up to $1500 in bonus bets

Newly verified BetMGM sports betting accounts that use the bonus code ALCOM1500 and make a minimum deposit of $10 will receive bonus bets up to $1,500 if their wager loses.

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  3. Choose a banking option and make a $10 deposit into your BetMGM account.
  4. Once the deposit has been cleared, place a bet using BetMGM bonus code ALCOM1500. If your wager loses, BetMGM will grant bonus bets based on your wager amount:
  5. For losing wagers under $50, you will receive one bonus bet.
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Please note that these BetMGM promo code ALCOM1500 bonus bets must be used within seven days.

BetMGM Sportsbook existing user promos

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How to use your BetMGM bonus code ALCOM1500

If your bet loses, you only get the BetMGM bonus code ALCOM1500 bonus bets.

If the bet were mine to make, I would bet $1500 on the red-hot Detroit Lions to win. The San Francisco 49ers are injury-riddled and have dropped four of their last five.

If you win the $1500 bet, you’ll win $2310 plus the $1500 wager. If you lose the bet, BetMGM bonus code ALCOM1500 provides bonus bets in 20% increments to help recoup your lost wager.

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Kahleb Collins believed to be dead: Fayette County other charged in connection with deaths of 2 toddlers

An Alabama toddler discovered missing after a crash killed his father and sister is believed by authorities to be dead and his critically injured mother is now charged in connection with his and his sister’s deaths.

Wendy “Pam” Bailey, 22, is charged with abuse of corpse, a Class C felony, aggravated child abuse, a Class A Felony, first-degree domestic violence, a Class A felony, and criminally negligent homicide, a Class A misdemeanor, 24th Judicial Circuit District Attorney Andy Hamlin announced Monday.

The criminally negligent homicide charge is for the death of 2-year-old Ryleigh Collins.

The girl was killed in the horrific Dec. 8 crash that also killed 40-year-old Steven Bradley “Brad” Collins, who was Bailey’s husband and the father of Ryleigh and 1-year-old Kahleb Collins.

The investigation showed Ryleigh was unrestrained when the fatal crash happened that Sunday morning.

The rest of the charges are linked to the presumed death of Kahleb, whose body has not yet been found.

Hamlin said the intense, three-week investigation led authorities to determine that Kahleb has been dead for several months. He said law enforcement is still actively searching for his remains.

The warrants against Bailey were served Monday. Bailey was released from UAB Hospital and booked into the Fayette County Jail.

Prosecutors are asking that she be held without bond under Aniah’s Law.

“This investigation has been particularly challenging as it involved the tragic deaths of two young children,’’ Hamlin said.

“I want to commend the efforts and cooperation shown by every agency involved: the Fayette County Sheriff’s Office, the State Bureau of Investigation and the Alabama State Troopers.”

The investigation began that Sunday when the crash happened on Fayette County 73 near Morris Cemetery Road, about two miles south of Glen Allen.

A crash report said Collins was driving 92 mph hour on the road that had a 45-mph speed limit.

“The driver …was driving aggressively at an extreme rate of speed,’’ the ALEA trooper wrote. “Due to his actions, the driver was unable to operate his vehicle safely on the wet roadway.”

The wreck happened when Collins was trying to negotiate a curve to the right, according to the report.

The force of the impact caused Collins and his wife to be ejected from the truck. They were not wearing seat belts.

Ryleigh Collins, who was unrestrained in the back seat, was pronounced dead on the scene at 11 a.m.

Collins, who worked for a roofing company, was taken by ambulance to UAB Hospital where he died the following day at 1:06 p.m.

Bailey was airlifted to UAB.

Steven Bradly Collins, left, and Ryleight Collins, right were killed in a Dec. 8, 2024, traffic crash in Fayette County. Wendy Pam Bailey, center, is in critical condition.(Facebook)

Following the deadly crash, investigators learned that Kahleb was missing.

The Fayette County Sheriff’s Office several days later issued a press release saying the 1-year-old had been missing since the Dec. 8 single-vehicle crash.

The following day, the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency issued a missing alert for Kahleb.

Investigators carried out multiple searches at the family’s home on Highway 129 in the Winfield area, and traveled to Birmingham several times to interview Bailey at the hospital.

Court records indicate the Alabama Department of Human Resources had been involved with the family.

The boy’s grandfather, 55-year-old John Elton Bailey, is charged with failure to report a missing child as officials alleged that Kahleb was last seen Sept. 4.

The criminal complaint states Bailey “failed to report a missing child by delaying to make or failing to cause to be made the report with willful and reckless disregard for the safety of the child and the child suffered serious bodily harm or death, to wit: physical injuries to the child and the child was removed from the home and taken to an unknown location and no report was made by any resident of the home.”

Bailey was arrested Dec. 11 and remains held in the Fayette County Jail on $100,000 bond.

One of Bailey’s appointed attorneys, James Standridge, said the public defender’s office is now working to learn the facts of the case prior to the preliminary hearing which is set for Jan. 15.

John Bailey is Wendy Bailey’s father and lived with the family.

Brad Collins on Nov. 6 posted this on Facebook: “Our son is not doing well. He is not growing has major back issues. His organs are growing but not his body. He has to have surgery at some point. Keep him in your prayers. Been rough and just seems going to be a long rough road ahead of us.”

The investigation is ongoing with additional charges possible against the mother, Hamlin said.

Anyone with additional information is asked to call the sheriff’s office at 205-932-3205, the State Bureau of Investigation at 1-800-392-8011 or Hamlin’s office at 205-367-9915.

“Now that the charges have been brought,” Hamlin said, “I look forward to getting the case to court to seek justice for these two innocent children.”

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Former Florida State OC, Dothan native to take over as Jax State’s receivers coach

Former Florida State wide receiver and offensive coordinator Lawrence Dawsey will take over as Jacksonville State’s wide receivers coach, his agency announced on Monday.

Dawsey, a Dothan native and graduate of Northview High School, was serving in the same position at Appalachian State before taking the job at Jax State.

The move for Dawsey reunites him with new Jax State head football coach Charles Kelly, who was announced as the program’s next head football coach on Dec. 21.

He has been regarded as one of the best recruiters in the country, being named 2011 ACC Recruiter of the year by SI.com and ranking in the top 10 of the ACC for three seasons during his time at Florida State.

Dawsey coached wide receivers at Florida State for 11 seasons (2007-2017) before becoming the Seminoles’ co-offensive coordinator in his final five seasons; Kelly was FSU’s special teams coordinator in 2013 and was moved to defensive coordinator from 2014-2017.

The receivers coach was FSU’s passing game coordinator when Heisman Trophy winner and Hueytown High alum Jameis Winston led the program to a 2013 BCS National Championship.

He worked with the Bill Walsh Diversity Coaching Fellowship for two seasons before serving as an offensive analyst at Texas A&M in 2020 and 2021, taking over App State’s receivers in 2022.

Before his stint as a coach at Florida State, his alma mater, he spent three seasons as receivers coach at South Florida after serving as a graduate assistant at LSU.

He was a standout wide receiver for Florida State from 1987-1990, earning First-team All-American honors as a senior before being selected by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the third round of the 1991 NFL Draft.

Dawsey had a seven-season career in the NFL with the Bucs, New York Giants, New Orleans Saints.

He will join an offensive staff for Jax State that includes offensive coordinator Clint Trickett and offensive line coach Rick Trickett.

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Casagrande: Nick Saban as college football commissioner? Let’s get real

This is an opinion column.

The headlines are hard to miss if you’re into college football and have an internet connection.

Lane Kiffin wants Nick Saban to be the commissioner of college football.

James Franklin also wants Nick Saban to be the commissioner of college football.

Kirby Smart too.

Everyone wants Nick Saban to be the commissioner of college football.

Sounds cool, but three questions, if I might.

  1. What is a commissioner of college football? Like in reality? We’re discussing this job, like it ACTUALLY exists. (It doesn’t)
  2. Does anyone think any single person could be given absolute power, wave a wand and fix the compounding issues facing the sport today?
  3. What makes you think the 73-year-old would want this monumental (though imaginary) task?

Not trying to end the year on a cynical note, but like, what are we talking about here?

Are coaches this desperate that they’re creating a mystical superhero from their former ultimate villain?

Nick Saban is going to swoop down from the College Football GameDay set and fix the problems that greatly contributed to his retirement from coaching?

What are we talking about here?

That’s not to say the problems facing the sport are some fantastical Marvel storyline. They’re real and not going away.

The concern is valid because the intersection of NIL, revenue sharing, and recruiting is only getting more complicated and with real-world consequences. The NCAA is losing power every passing day after court rulings stripped much of its power in this realm.

With that power vacuum came a patchwork of state laws that created an untenable situation that we’ve been told can only be solved by Congress.

Like the one in Washington D.C.

And Tommy Tuberville’s trying to be a leader in that movement.

So, one can understand why these coaches are so frantic to find a competent leader who understands the reality of the situation.

But reality is where we should remain.

And in this dimension, there’s no such thing as a commissioner of college football. Are we suggesting the formation of a new governing body that breaks away from the NCAA to regulate the sport? That brings a whole new web of complications that nobody appears to be equipped to handle.

The College Football Playoff only governs the postseason with no power to do anything but fill a 12-team bracket.

And they stink at that. So, next.

Smart, a longtime Saban assistant, had the most realistic take on the situation when speaking before the Sugar Bowl quarterfinal this week.

“I don’t know if it as simple as let’s name a commissioner, and it solved all our problems,” Smart said in New Orleans. “I don’t think that’s that case. We are governed by separate circumstances. Conferences govern us. NCAA governs us. Now we have courts govern us.

“I think a commissioner would be a nice thing in theory, but what can they effectively get done if everybody can’t agree on something?”

That said, Smart added he thinks Saban “would be great” for this made up position.

Cool.

Great in theory, but again, we don’t live in theory.

As with any of these discussions about the future of college football and collegiate athletics as a whole, it’s a matter of power. It’s a struggle between those at the top of the pyramid with conference commissioners on top of the current scheme.

Notice you don’t hear any of them suggesting the seven-time national champion retired coach should assume power over the sport?

Because as D’Angelo Barksdale once said, “The King stay the King, aight?”

There are multiple crowns in this realm, and none of them are bowing to kiss the ring of Saban (in this fantasy world where he’s actually trying to steal the power because he isn’t in this one).

In fact, Saban himself said the conference commissioners or ADs would be more qualified for such a mystical position as college football commissioner. It’s right there in a February 2024 piece from ESPN.

“I’m not really looking for a job,” Saban said in the piece, “but I do know I’d like to impact college football the best way I can, whether it’s being a spokesperson or anything else.”

He’s long been a thought leader in the sport who has always had an eye on the big picture while building and maintaining an empire unmatched in the sport’s modern history. None of this diminishes the idea of what he could do to salvage a sport at the crossroads.

In a perfect world, we’d have a functioning Congress.

Or Saban would be 10 years younger in a space where leaders were willing to cede power even if it was against their own self-interest.

But this is a world painted in the imperfect.

Instead, we’re trying to navigate the mess made by those already in power and who aren’t letting any of it go.

The idea of Saban in a wizard’s hat descending from the clouds, ready to abracadabra a functioning college football is awesome. Lane Kiffin never had a bad idea.

But we aren’t in a Disney movie.

Nick Saban isn’t Santa Claus.

So we should stick to solutions rooted in reality rather than fantasy because the clock is ticking.

Michael Casagrande is a reporter for the Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @ByCasagrande or on Facebook.

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Dear Annie: I’m struggling to find peace while living with my mother-in-law

Dear Annie: My mother-in-law is currently living with my husband and me.

She insisted she needed to move in with us, as she was divorcing her husband who received a much larger retirement than her and she was convinced she couldn’t live on her own. She owned her house outright but refused to stay in it because she felt the upkeep of the land would be too much. My husband was worried that if we said no, we would lose that relationship, and we believed that she could be able to compromise and live peacefully with us as she stated that she valued honesty and compromise the way we do. (We both see in hindsight that this was flawed, but we never had any reason to doubt her at the time).

She contributed funds to assist us in buying the house (a major sticking point), and we all moved in and quickly found out she is not what she presents to be. She is mean, vindictive and manipulative. She expects my husband, who is autistic and absolutely needs decompress time, to drop everything as soon as she demands it to assist her with something, like he did when he used to live with her. When he tells her no, she becomes passive aggressive and cold. We try to establish boundaries, and it makes our home a war zone.

Annie, I have PTSD. I suffered a lot of abuse in my life, and this kind of conflict puts me on major edge. I have panic attacks in my room, and I obsess over every little thing she does to try to understand it, because I’m constantly in survival mode. We are afraid to try to “kick her out” because my husband is worried about the effect the fall-out will have on me, so we’re waiting for the divorce to finalize and for her to have more money than she thought so that she’ll decide to leave since she hated living with us (something I’m not sure will happen, but we’ll cross that bridge when we get to it).

My big question is, how do I find peace through all of this? How do I care for myself and my husband without letting her continue to mess me up? I am struggling so hard in this situation, to the point that my husband and I don’t invite friends or family over because we’re worried about the impact. I just want some peace with my husband. — Drowning in Drama

Dear Drowning in Drama: Right now you are in a limbo period. You are waiting to have your living situation changed and go back to the way it was. Sounds like your mother-in-law’s moving out will be beneficial for all of you.

While you are waiting, repeat the serenity prayer: God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.

Read more Dear Annie and other advice columns.

“How Can I Forgive My Cheating Partner?” is out now! Annie Lane’s second anthology — featuring favorite columns on marriage, infidelity, communication and reconciliation — is available as a paperback and e-book. Visit Creators Publishing for more information. Send your questions for Annie Lane to [email protected].

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