The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Reader shares her cautionary tale

If an adult child manipulate­s/controls the parent’s next marriage, the partner should consider leaving them both ADVICE

- ELLIE TESHER ellie@thestar.ca @ellieadvic­e

Reader’s commentary regarding the letter-writer who couldn’t understand why her boyfriend wouldn’t stand up to his adult daughter about the couple’s relationsh­ip plans (May 5):

My husband and I were deeply in love and had what I thought was a solid marriage of 12 years (following five years living together common-law).

When I raised the topic of a will, he finally revealed that his house in the Caribbean was being willed to his two children.

This response was after we married without a prenuptial, after I’d put my inherited funds into a joint bank account and spent $250,000 to totally renovate that island house.

He told me not to worry because his daughter is very sweet and if he died before me, she’d let me use the house.

His son wasn’t even considered in this discussion because of his health issues.

I felt deceived and betrayed by my husband. I felt that my own children should at least get the $250,000 when we both passed, with his daughter getting the house.

When she learned of all this, I received an email so full of hate and venom, calling me every awful name and including ugly accusation­s.

She wouldn’t allow me to attend family celebratio­ns or see her baby, my step-grandchild.

This went on for over two years with my own children supporting whatever made me happy, telling me they didn’t care about the house or money and not to break my marriage up for that.

My husband outright said there wasn’t a bit of truth in his daughter’s horrible verbal assault of me, but he wouldn’t stand up for me even slightly.

We went to marriage counsellin­g for many months, but no matter what advise was dispensed regarding his daughter, he couldn’t implement it.

The counsellor told him there was one too many women in our marriage, but my ex couldn’t get it, even when the counsellor asked, “Why don’t you just marry your daughter?”

After years of incredible hurt, I finally left. My husband didn’t have my back at all. His daughter got her wish and her house.

Now he’s miserable, lonely and missing me, and I’m slowly recovering from utter despair.

That poor woman who wrote to you, who wondered why her partner keeps her and their plans a secret from his daughter, may have deeper problems than she knows.

My ex couldn’t stand up for himself, me or us. Now I understand why they had closeddoor meetings all those years. I was never included in any in-depth or problemati­c conversati­ons. Step-daughter Came First

A– It’s a manipulati­ve relationsh­ip between adult children and their divorced fathers or mothers that’s heard too often by profession­al therapists.

But it’s often a harsh surprise to the next spouse.

Call it the manipulati­ve child syndrome (or the jealous and manipulati­ve daughter in this case), but you’re describing a campaign by your husband’s daughter launched way back, with you too polite to question their closed-door discussion­s.

It often starts with the parent’s guilt, which is more common when a father moves out from the family home.

The ex (wife or husband) may be the kids’ model for exercising power – refusing access, changing visitation days, etc. – and the daughter (or son) a quick study.

Unsurprisi­ng, the fight for control escalates when there’s money sought through a will or outright gifts, often unknown to the innocent spouse, as in your case.

Better to be free of them all.

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