The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Distance, age issues need to be answered

- Ellie Tesher

Q - I met someone with whom I have a great connection emotionall­y, mentally, and sexually.

He’s 30 years younger and lives 4,300 kilometres away from me.

What are the chances of a long-distance relationsh­ip lasting?

More Than Curious

A - It’s both curious and charming that your first question is about the long-distance factor, not the age difference.

It shows that, you believe it’s not an impossible obstacle.

So, first, there are some distance issues to confront.

Generally, I’ve found that the longer a couple lose contact in person, the more uncertain one or both feels about the relationsh­ip.

It requires a commitment of spending the time and money to periodical­ly travel to each other.

It requires staying long enough to reinforce intimacy, and build familiarit­y with each other’s locale and close people there.

With your age difference, the steps towards success are more personal, less predictabl­e.

Example: An active 60-yearold may slow down at 70, or not. A risk-taking 30-year-old may want children and a moresettle­d life at 40, or not.

The important question beyond “what are the chances” is, how much do you both want this relationsh­ip? What are you both willing to do to try and make it work? Think. Discuss. Decide.

Q - I left my common-law partner of six years last January. We share a young daughter.

I left because of my unhappines­s in the relationsh­ip. I was depressed and tired of the verbal (and on extreme occasions, physical) abuse.

I’d made a very poor decision last year. An old “friend” had begun contacting me, and I partook in sexually-based conversati­ons for a few weeks.

I know it was wrong. I cut contact with this person and chose to not tell my partner rather than hurt him.

But I soon realized I couldn’t stay together.

We’ve been okay in co-parenting our daughter by agreement. She’s happy, stays with her dad one-to-two nights weekly, the remainder with me.

Very recently my ex discovered my past actions and started legal threats to take full custody.

He’s badmouthed me to people I worked with, and friends we once shared. He’s contacted my family members to turn them against me.

I live with regret and remorse, which I deserve. I had therapy to make sense of why I did it and to help with my depression.

I’m a full- time student. My daughter and I live at my parents’ house. They adore her.

I don’t want her father to take her from me.

Remorseful

A - You’re not the first woman or man to cheat when unhappy in a relationsh­ip, and then recognize that it’s the inner alert to move on.

I’d say this same thing to a man or a woman: You cheated emotionall­y, and it’s come back to haunt you.

But a short-lived episode of sex-texting and/or phone sex though deeply hurtful to your then-partner - does NOT make you a bad mother who should lose custody.

However, a lawyer can easily harp on this behaviour on behalf of the girl’s father. He may want more time with her (which could happen even without this excuse).

Equalizing the joint custody schedule may be one solution.

You need your own lawyer for this dispute - one who states that your exís bad-mouthing of his childís mother over a brief lapse of good judgment, is not good parenting either. Nor is abuse.

He’s naturally upset. Apologize. Tell your family members you regret what you did, then deal with the legal custody matters, your child and your schooling. Ignore everything else.

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