The Daily Courier

Ask Ellie: Moving on hard to do when the sex is so good

- ELLIE TESHER

QUESTION: We met online, he’s younger so I thought we’d just be friends.

We met twice for a drink or coffee. On the third date, he kissed me. It was electric!

He has lots of baggage — young adult kids still in school, an aging parent.

But I was happy to get together once or twice a week.After three months, he just stopped texting.

A month later, there were two meetings then he was gone again.

We re-connected after another month for over a year, but only at my house or out somewhere. I thought it was because his kids are loyal to their mother.

Now I think he was trying to reconcile with her. I’m done, it’s his third strike, that’s my rule.

But the sex and conversati­ons were great. I can’t get him out of my head.

I’ve joined social groups, a gym, and am trying so hard to move on.

— Broken-hearted

ANSWER: Say a thank-you to yourself for knowing how to count strikes and what out means.

He was using you as “backup,” and probably involved with others too in the same way.

But his goal was either winning back his ex — or still staying married to her throughout his dating episodes.

Never at his house? That’s a serious red flag.

Trust me, your heart would be far more “broken” (it’s wounded but will heal) if you hung in and he continued his unexplaine­d absences, distancing, then reappearan­ces expecting you to jump for joy.

Yes, sex and conversati­on can be great with a practiced charmer who remains unknowable, and comes and goes at will.

You’re wise to have moved on. Believe it.

QUESTION: I have a crush on my “friend.” I’ve known him since the second grade.

He flirts with me all the time and is always there for me when I have problems.

Once, when we were walking home after school, I asked him how you get someone to like you. He said it’s simple — make him jealous.

Then he looked at the ground and asked who I liked, but I had to leave by then and he never asked again.

Two weeks later he told me he liked my friend and they ended up dating, but he still flirts with me.

Is this some sort of mind trick to make me jealous? What do I do?

— Confused!

ANSWER: It’s natural that you’re confused, since you and this guy are both young and inexperien­ced. That’s why you were uncertain about how to handle a crush or tell him that you like him when you were unsure how he feels.

Meanwhile, he’s dating someone, so his flirting with you shows that he too doesn’t know how to draw the line — either he does like someone else or he’s trying to make you jealous — or, he’s flirting because that’s his go-to style of friendship with the opposite sex.

You have the ability to speak up. Say that if he’s dating someone, flirting with you is unfair to her. Also, you have the choice to not flirt back.

But, you also call him a friend who helps you when you have problems. If that’s an important connection you don’t want to lose, just accept that he likes someone else.

Being young means it’s very likely things will change soon enough. You’ll both like other people, have other crushes.

If this friendship is real and strong, that’s worth preserving by not stressing on the current situation and acting natural with him. TIP OF THE DAY Someone who’s periodical­ly gone from a relationsh­ip without explanatio­n, has someone else waiting.

Read Ellie Monday to Saturday in The Daily Courier.

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