Dear Prudence,
I’m in my early thirties and dating an absolutely wonderful widower in his forties, whose first wife died of breast cancer. We both very much want to have kids; he and his first wife wanted them as well, but she was infertile. I’m currently pretending not to know he plans to propose to me on a trip we’re taking this Christmas. There’s just one problem. His first wife decorated their gorgeous robin’s-egg blue Queen Anne house in bland, neutral-hued minimalism and Live-Laugh-Love. I’m a professional interior designer and passionately prefer colorful, sophisticated maximalism, which would be a far better fit for this house anyway.
Money is not an obstacle. But whenever I broach the subject of redecorating, my significant other just repeatedly reassures me I don’t need to feel jealous of how much he loved his first wife. He’s a typical STEM guy without much aesthetic sense of his own, so can’t seem to see that’s not the real issue. How can I communicate this to him without insulting his first wife or her taste? And would it be silly or selfish or shallow to make my acceptance of his proposal conditional on letting me redecorate the house when I move in? I love him but cannot live there or raise my family there as it is.
— Can’t I Just Reframe All Those Pictures of My Predecessor?