Penticton Herald

Baseball might be only interest couple shares

- ELLIE TESHER

QUESTION: I met my husband at a baseball game. He was sitting behind me and his boisterous support for the home team and hilarious wisecracks about their opponents, made me turn around and smile at him.

He was gorgeous. He thought the same thing about me, but later said it was because of my love of the game.

We spent a wonderful few months dating through the baseball season (No, our team didn’t make the World Series) and by last November he’d moved in with me.

We were busy settling in, then Christmas and getting together with our two families.

But by January, things didn’t feel right. After buying us a new bed, I had no extra money to travel to spring training. I found we had a lot less in common.

I do sales online for a large company, working from home

(which is why I could fit in my passion for attending games).

But my boyfriend only gets part-time work and seems to have little ambition.

Now, during the months of pandemic, he has been mostly unemployed, showed no ambition to find other work and didn’t try to be useful with cleaning up as we lived through social isolation together.

His idea of getting outside to boost his spirits, has been to have three beers on the apartment’s terrace, several times a day.

Adding to the growing gulf between us, as the virus took hold where we live, it became pretty likely there’d be no baseball season until maybe late June.

Even if there were to be one, it’d have no place for fans like us.

I saw a photo of a Korean stadium where there were no people in seats, just pictures of people with surgical masks on to make the point, as the Korean Baseball Organizati­on launched its opening game.

So now, what do I do? Wait for a return to the next “normal” baseball season as the answer to our relationsh­ip?

To break up now, I’d have to just insist that he leave (I’m covering the rent, he only contribute­s a little for food and his beer).

ANSWER: You make a case for the negative, so that’s where you’re already heading in your own mind.

Meanwhile, your still-partner sounds like he’s depressed and hopeless — no income, and drinking to excess.

Being hasty by insisting that he leave, might cause an angry reaction you’ll both regret.

Talk to him in a positive way about how you both can improve things, especially as stay-home restrictio­ns ease.

Ask him if he’d like to talk to someone profession­al online, privately, about how he’s feeling with so many things changed in his life.

Or, maybe he’d prefer having counsellin­g help together. It’d be a start to both of you recognizin­g that baseball, alone, is not enough in common for a relationsh­ip to last through unusual strains and losses.

Once you start this conversati­on, you may both find that, while it was a basis for attraction and one shared interest, it takes more mutual effort and support to build a lasting, loving connection.

Try this approach — unless you feel that the breach between you two is escalating and heading in a direction that worries or frightens you.

If that happens, make a safe plan for telling him that it’s over. You both have families, so get help from yours to back you up and make sure he gets help from his to leave.

QUESTION: What do you have against polyamory? You hardly ever write about it.

ANSWER: I answer the relationsh­ip questions that people send me. With much fewer people involved in multiple physical or romantic relationsh­ips during this pandemic, there aren’t a lot of questions about it.

Now, since you asked, I have nothing against any relationsh­ip — including one involving polyamory — in which the participan­ts are fully cognizant and consenting adults and are not harmed physically, mentally or emotionall­y by it.

That is how I feel about any type of relationsh­ip.

And, it’s in keeping with this Wikipedia definition: Polyamory is the practice of, or desire for, intimate relationsh­ips with more than one partner, with the informed consent of all partners involved.

It has also been described as “consensual, ethical, and responsibl­e non-monogamy.”

Ethics and responsibi­lity apply when and if there’s consent on the part of everyone involved.

QUESTION: As a married daughter, I’ve remained very close with my parents. But my husband’s past years of travel and having a sister who lives near their parents, led to less closeness.

Now, during COVID-19, I’m being swamped with demands. I shop for my parents. His sister said she’ll shop for my in-laws but has an excuse every week (“too tired,” but me too!).

I have to deliver to them an hour away. If I just drop stuff off, they’re “hurt.” But if I go in with a mask/gloves on, they’re insulted.

How can I get my husband to pitch in? He works from home.

ANSWER: Tell him you’re working from home, too. We’re only “all in this together,” if everyone who can, does what they can.

Both sets of parents need help at a time when fear, worry and social isolation are daily factors in their lives. Give him a grocery list.

ELLIE’S TIP OF THE DAY

One shared interest only, to the exclusion of all others, is a shaky foundation for a lasting relationsh­ip.

Send relationsh­ip questions to ellie@thestar.ca

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