The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Set boundaries on partner’s criticisms

- Ellie Tesher

Q - I’ve known my wife for 13 years, married 11 years, with two beautiful kids and countless memories from the day I met her till now.

Last year, she told me that we were done, that she’d lost respect for me, that she may have never loved me, and there was nothing I could do to change her feelings.

She refused to consider counsellin­g. Above anything else, she wanted to set out on her own.

For many reasons, while it’s almost a year later, we’re still together.

Our home life is still more than solid. We still have fun together as a family.

But nothing’s changed between the two of us, and she hasn’t seemed to change what she wants in life.

I feel that I’ve improved my approach to life and am more motivated, more useful, and even sometimes more happy, which she’s mentioned she’s noticed.

I feel I’m lucky that things are still stable to allow me to show her that.

I understand and respect her feelings, but I wish she’d try some profession­al counsellin­g before change makes that option too late.

But I need her to choose counsellin­g out of her own heart, not by me convincing her.

Everything that makes me happy in life I already have, which makes me feel like my best option is to hang in there, improve, and be strong as a person every day and hope for the best.

Am I fool-hearty?

Hanging In

A - A lot of people over the years have sent me their stories of sudden pronouncem­ents by one partner or another of being “done” with their relationsh­ip and wanting out.

Yet there’s a “Wow” factor in this case, for many reasons:

“Wow”, that she said all that to you, yet didn’t leave. “Wow” that you didn’t just listen, you actually heard her and made changes in yourself.

But there’s also a worrisome “wow” that neither of you have sought some counsellin­g for your own sakes, let alone for the marriage nor how her bombshell pronouncem­ent could affect your children.

In some ways, I find you have more courage than she’s shown.

She chose hard-core truthtelli­ng but just dumped her load of negatives on you. Yet you asked yourself what you could do about some of them and set to work.

No, I don’t think you’re “foolhearty” but I do think you should bolster yourself for the future.

Get counsellin­g for yourself. Learn how far you’re willing to go to keep the marriage together, and discover too where your boundaries exist.

Would you accept her having an affair, in order to stay together? Are you okay with having a sex-less marriage? (You don’t mention intimacy here at all, but I suspect there’s not much when you say, “nothing’s changed between the two of us.”)

Your getting counsellin­g may encourage her to do the same. If not, her statement that “nothing you could do” would change her feelings remains a threat overshadow­ing your relationsh­ip, implying that she could walk out any day.

Despite your desire to hang in, you should also privately seek some legal advice. While you’re making your own changes, she may just be biding her time.

With children involved, you need to know your rights as a parent and your financial responsibi­lities to her, should this holding-period fall apart.

If all she wants is to “set out on her own,” she’ll be looking at the legal side of it, too.

Understand­ing and respecting her feelings is important, but make sure you respect yourself, too.

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