The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Buried feelings require counsellin­g

- Ellie Tesher

Q - I have two daughters and a loving husband to whom I’ve been married for 17 years.

Twenty years ago, at 22 and in profession­al school, an older classmate approached me, 32, asking, “Can I love you?”

I was alone in a country away from family, from a conservati­ve cultural background, without any romantic contacts before.

Though shocked, I said, yes. I knew he was married and learned that his wife was pregnant.

Yet I fell in love with him. He was the most intelligen­t academical­ly, well respected by all students.

After three years, I left that country. We promised to see each other soon.

I told my family about wanting to marry him. They refused to discuss it.

I never forgot him, got busy in my studies, then lost contact (no social media then and we didn’t have cell phones).

Searching the Internet five years later, I found him. I was then married, mother of a toddler.

My parents had presented my husband to me. I’d liked him after one meeting (we’d talked by phone for four months prior).

I was good in academics but it took a backseat when I was in that first relationsh­ip, so I had low confidence starting off. Despite setbacks, I ended up with a great job.

I’ve contacted him four to five times. He’s divorced and remarried. I confided that I’m still trying to get over him.

He said his new wife is “the best thing that ever happened” to him.

He also said that he had no problems with his first wife!

I love my husband but have no passion or sexual desire towards him since getting married. He’s very upset over this but still loves our kids and me.

I’ve felt depressed for years and sometimes don’t even like going to work.

I feel I was taken advantage of by this man, though he never forced himself on me. I made that choice.

I think he really loved me as he’d told his family about me and was dissuaded from getting a divorce due to having a young child.

I need profession­al help but am fearful of disclosing my past.

Desperate

A - Your choice was strongly affected by the boldness and academic prestige of the older married man who was asking you for love/sex.

He could see that you were vulnerable - young, inexperien­ced, alone. Do not dwell on blaming yourself, even if you were compliant.

His move may’ve been legal, but he certainly did take advantage.

Yes, you need profession­al counsellin­g, and disclosure is your first step toward.

A therapist will help you heal your deep, emotional wounds.

These past events in your life are crying out for you to learn new strategies to deal with them, and move forward with far less burden in your heart and mind.

You’re naturally fearful because youíve held onto the pain of loss, rejection, embarrassm­ent, and parental disapprova­l.

But you’re an intelligen­t woman who’s worked hard to be successful in your work, and you can also become successful at the personal tasks of therapy and self-healing.

Your husband knows that you’re emotionall­y blocked, which affects your sex life with him. He also must sense your depression.

Tell him that you wish to enter into individual counsellin­g and to hopefully end your depression.

He’ll be supportive because he loves you.

You owe this to yourself, first. But your daughters will also benefit greatly when their mother finds peace within herself.

Start the process.

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