Ottawa Citizen

Personal comments are not welcome

- ELLIE TESHER Read Ellie Monday to Saturday. Email ellie@thestar.ca. Follow @ellieadvic­e.

Q Recently, a couple of service guys from my husband’s company came to fix something in our home.

One of the fellows, whom I’ve met very infrequent­ly, looked at me and said, “You look fabulous, did you lose weight?”

I didn’t thank him as I felt it was more a back-handed compliment. I actually said, “No, I’ve gained.” I’m not a heavy woman (5-foot-5, 138 pounds) and even if I had been, I didn’t think it appropriat­e for comment.

I didn’t mention this episode to my husband as he’d ream the guy out and I didn’t want to cause trouble. I think the men are returning as work still needs to be finished.

Any suggestion­s if he comes out with another inappropri­ate observatio­n? Back-Handed

You’re already good at knowing what to do — deflecting his ill-chosen “flattery” while kindly not causing him trouble.

But you raise a persistent­ly annoying issue for many people — body weight — which, for individual­s, is a personal matter that shouldn’t invite unsolicite­d opinions and judgments, but often does. If he makes another remark, just say, “It’s not something I discuss.”

We put our son in detox after his seventh overdose. We did everything we could to keep him alive until the emergency medical team arrived. I’d never before seen my husband of 32 years scream, cry and pray for help.

Our son went from detox into a long-term recovery program, all far from here, as we’d exhausted every program around us.

He was dismissed four weeks short of graduating, because he tested dirty.

He did some terrible things to us. We’ve forgiven him, but we cannot forget. It’s a familiar story — he was at the top of his class, the football captain, the honour society, college scholarshi­p recipient, etc. Then, overdoses on heroin. I’m still finding things missing from our home. But all the doctors and case workers say not to bring up anything from the past, which leaves nothing much to say but, “How are you, son?”

Two weeks ago he briefly said he’s living with some girl he met online but is clean and sober this week and still working.

Letting go has been most difficult after spending so much money, time, and love to help him beat this.

We know he has to want to stay clean. He’s a grown man. No one among us was abused, neglected or beaten. There was total support throughout his school years. Maybe we gave too much.

I’m glad he’s no longer here. No more drug dealers looking for him because he owes them money. But the feeling of loss is like death.

What can I say to him if we talk again?

We’ve let our family know, except Grandma, because it would kill her. We want everyone to be prepared should he show up unannounce­d … as you cannot turn your back for even a second.

What can I say to him if we talk again? Devastated Parents

Dear Readers: I’m reaching out, as there’s no single, sure answer. Some of you have experience­d similarly heartbreak­ing circumstan­ces with an addicted child.

If you’ve found any effective approaches to offer this couple — for their well-being, or their son’s chances of staying “clean,” I’ll publish a selection of them.

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