The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Emotional healing must come first

- ELLIE TESHER ellie@thestar.ca @ellieadvic­e

Q- My friend, 55, has two daughters nearing adulthood. She’s a hard-working specialist in a profession formerly shut down by the pandemic.

It required her to be creative and purchase expensive safety equipment when allowed to open up again.

Now, her husband has walked out.

She doesn’t know if he had/ has a girlfriend, and she’s too angry to care.

Her concern is more about her daughters. She’s financiall­y independen­t and can carry on without him.

But two young females just ending teenage and choosing university studies are finding their world upside down.

Why did their father leave?

What was wrong in their parents’ marriage? Was their seeming happy life just a pretense?

My friend is telling them it has nothing to do with anything they did or could’ve done.

Instead, she’s stressing the message that women are only secure when they’re financiall­y independen­t.

She says that since their father’s financiall­y successful, he could leave with no worries,so young women must make sure they also become successful.

Is this a good message for her daughters at this time? Concerned Friend

A- Your friend isn’t only a worried mother, she’s also a rejected spouse who’s mad as hell.

Her stress on independen­ce is a needed security blanket, for her.

For her daughters, they need emotional comfort, not a spreadshee­t of potential earnings.

They need to be able to see and ask questions of their father. They need to cry, argue, scold, be angry.

And they need counsellin­g, soon, before they rebel against what feels like their parents’ mutual idiocy in accepting this situation.

Maybe this year’s studies, between the impact of both COVID and personal upheaval, won’t bring them their best marks.

Tell your friend it’s not as important as their emotional healing, and to make that the current priority.

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