Penticton Herald

Son is jealous of his father’s sports-related accomplish­ments

- ELLIE & LISI Ask Ellie Send relationsh­ip questions to ellie@thestar.ca. Follow @ellieadvic­e.

QUESTION: I’m a man, age 43, married, and father of two sons (20 and 17). My problem is that I’ve started to suspect that my eldest son is jealous of me and that it’s affecting his life negatively.

I was in my early

20s when I became a dad, and wanted to do better than my father had done with me. He worked long hours, said little to me or my sister, watched

TV and went to sleep.

As soon as my boys could catch a ball or run, we were active together, kicking a soccer ball, shooting hoops, running around the school track, etc.

I’d always been a good athlete and pumped up both boys about showing me their stuff. My younger son turned to music, instead. It’s his mother’s talent, so no huge surprise.

Meanwhile, his big brother worked at his sports skills, ran in marathons just as I had, and at which I’d excelled. Soon, he ran farther, tried harder, and made putdown remarks about my swimming skills being much less than his.

Now, with his girlfriend and friends around, he’ll say he’s “way ahead” of me in every sport.

I never wanted to be the “winner” he had to beat. I worry that he’s driven to be “the best” vs. me, and that this obsession has made him resent me.

What can I say to help heal my son from his hurtful and divisive jealousy of me?

— Father’s Dilemma

ANSWER: It’s what you say and do now that’ll hopefully bring better understand­ing between you two. Tell your son how proud you are of his athletic abilities, but what mattered most to you when raising sons, was the relationsh­ip of having healthy fun together with your boys.

Say that now, as he experience­s the world beyond his youth, he’ll form his future through education, jobs, special friends, and finding love.

Tell this competitiv­e son that none of those choices are yours to make for him. His adult life all depends on him... and you’ll always be cheering for him, not competing.

QUESTION: For years I’ve mostly been caring for my elderly parents. I reside in their home, am their legal guardian. My siblings live elsewhere with full-time jobs. Home health aides assist, for limited hours. So, I cannot seek employment to meet my expenses (higher than my weekly stipend from my father’s pension).

My own physical complicati­ons and illnesses mount. Also, my siblings take advantage of me while they assist my parents. They allow the primary aide days off without advance notice to me. They leave me belittling tasks like removing discarded refuse.

Many items were stolen from me, and I did some chores for the aides. The U.S. county within the state agencies cannot assist me as a caretaker because abuse has to be physical force, not psychologi­cal or material loss.

Sadly, other family members and relatives support my siblings or are unaware of their true nature.

I’m trying to relocate away from this mess. Do you have suggestion­s on how to cope?

— Overwhelme­d Caregiver

ANSWER: Pursue informatio­n about what the U.S .state agencies perceive as “abuse.” When talking to these agencies, ask for “mental health support” related to your demanding caretaking tasks.

Also, learn what rights your legal guardiansh­ip gives you with regard to finances sufficient for caregiving costs and personal salary. Your siblings should be contributi­ng to their parents’ care with some compensati­on for you, not just visiting only occasional­ly.

READER’S COMMENTARY: Regarding the woman whose ex-husband doesn’t pay child support, wants to change their agreed custody arrangemen­t, and has a “bully lawyer”:

READER: One thing I have learned during my divorce is that when lawyers start to intimidate, for me, that has meant that they no longer have valid arguments to present.

You need to have a serious discussion with your lawyer. Plus, seek a second opinion, if you’re not satisfied with the current one.

During my own divorce my first lawyer was prepared to cave to the other side. I did not agree.

My second lawyer called their bluff (aka bluster).

Get educated yourself and stand up to the bullies. Otherwise, they will not stop. They have already seen that bully tactics work.

ELLIE: Do not be intimidate­d by your lawyer’s instructio­ns about what she/he thinks is the best response to a difficult opponent. You’re the one who lived with the other parent, not the lawyer.

ELLIE’S TIP OF THE DAY:

Jealousy can destroy a parent-child relationsh­ip, especially if the adult child perceives selfintere­st, personal ambition and past neglect from the parent’s successes.

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