The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Brother must re-think relationsh­ip

- Ellie Tesher

Q - Last year, my older brother moved away for university (we see each other weekly).

At school, he began dating a boy. Initially, he seemed very charming and I could tell my brother liked him.

On one visit to their shared apartment, I went to the kitchen and was groped by my brother’s boyfriend.

Thinking he was being silly, I politely told him to stop. He didn’t.

When I demanded that he stop, he grew hostile and very rude. I didn’t tell my brother and left early.

Since then, he’s harassed me verbally and on social media (I’ve blocked him).

He’s told my brother that I’m being pushy, rude, and stubborn with him in various scenarios. I denied it, and my brother believed me, but he tried to reason his boyfriend’s behaviour.

On a recent visit, I heard him cussing out my brother. When confronted about it, my brother said it’d been happening for a month.

I’m very worried that my brother’s being abused, and unsure if I should disclose the groping incident.

I don’t want him hurt in any way.

Worried Sister

A - Visit your brother alone, and describe the groping.

Say that you’re very upset for him that the behaviour was so inappropri­ate and invasive. It was also a bullying tactic, indicating that he can do whatever he likes.

Cussing out your brother is another demeaning side of this guy’s anger.

Your brother should re-think the relationsh­ip.

If you feel he’s losing confidence to do that, then yes, there’s emotional abuse going on and he needs to break away from its influence.

If he doesn’t believe you, suggest he sees a counsellor through student services. Meanwhile, stay in close touch.

FEEDBACK: Regarding the woman’s question about her husband’s alcoholic outbursts and the effects on their son’s fiancee (August 14):

Reader #1 — “I’ve been there. The man’s wife and her son have lived this way for so long, it’s become normal.

“Verbal, emotional, and mental abuse wears you down until the point where you just “function” to get through another day.

“She should’ve talked to the future daughter-in-law in person, NOT via text. “Mama in the Middle” will do whatever it takes to avoid confrontat­ion.

Her son has learned to do the same.

“It upsets me that the young fiancee has spent a month as a hermit in the basement, to avoid this man.

“Somebody or “Mama” needs to go to the basement and help this young woman.

“She and her future motherin-law both need counsellin­g (individual­ly).

“Sadly, it won’t happen because the mother’s only looking to get the fiancee out of the house permanentl­y.

“She’ll do anything to avoid her husband having aggressive, loud outbursts. (Ellie — She’ll do anything except confront his alcoholism).”

Reader #2 — “I understand how the future daughter inlaw feels. My father-in-law is a heavy alcoholic though he doesn’t believe it.

“My husband’s breaking all contact with him because of the negativity and emotional trauma his father’s addiction caused him throughout his life.

“Considerin­g that the fiancee lives there, she has the right to speak up. Alcoholism affects EVERYONE, not just the alcoholic.

“The wife’s feeling stuck between her alcoholic husband, future daughter-in-law, and son. The alcoholic father should consider joining Alcoholics’ Anonymous. However, if he chooses not to go, family counsellin­g and/or marriage counsellin­g should be considered.”

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