The Hamilton Spectator

Focus on what’s the best for you, not the cheater

- ellieadvic­e.com

Q. After my husband’s best friend died last year, he started an affair. He’d wanted to marry that same woman 50 years prior.

When that didn’t happen, he married another woman. Twenty years later, he had a disastrous affair which ended in his attempting suicide.

We met several years later, together 22 years, which have been rough because of his fragile ego.

But the past few years, we’ve been doing well. We’re in our 70s. He has a high-profile community position.

The woman from his past and he fell into each other’s arms when he reported his friend’s death.

He’s tossed me aside romantical­ly. She cannot leave her marriage.

They live two hours apart but are emailing several times daily, phoning, and meeting for wonderful, clandestin­e sex.

When I discovered their affair, he promised me never to have contact with her again.

We were intimate, but within days, he emailed her saying that “no other woman could come close to her magnificen­ce.”

I was devastated, blew up, and we now have no romantic contact.

He claims that we’ll be impoverish­ed if we go our separate ways, plus he doesn’t want his adult children or the community to know what he’s doing.

I’m very sad, very angry, but would never trust him again. He consistent­ly lies to me. Otherwise, we get along very well most of the time. What do I do? Enough about him — his past, his old love, his ego, his great sex, his community status …

What about you? How long can you “get along well” while he lies, has sex elsewhere, and puts on a phoney public face for the community and his adult kids?

If he’s been successful, you won’t be “impoverish­ed” in a split. He’s threatenin­g that possibilit­y to protect his image and his own finances, not necessaril­y yours.

See a lawyer. Know what’s at stake and what isn’t.

Even if you decide to stay, do so on your own terms. Travel, see friends. Date if you wish.

You don’t have to hold up his image, just focus on what’s best for you. He’s shown you that example.

My husband has brain injury

Q. Four years ago my husband had a traumatic brain injury, and was hospitaliz­ed for 13 weeks. Mostly my son and I nursed him back to reasonable health.

He still had some problems with memory, aphasia, lost ability to read, or comprehend certain things.

Recently, his mother, 88, and his sister, 62, convinced him to file for divorce. We’ve been married 44 years. They’ve brainwashe­d him into believing that I’m the worst person on earth!

I’ve filed to have the divorce action dismissed because he’s incompeten­t and cannot even understand “divorce.”

He’s regressed back to a six-year-old, but I don’t want a divorce.

Our marriage has always been rocky, but 95 per cent of the time it was because of his family, mostly his mother.

How do I get him to come home when they won’t let him out of their sight? I know that his mother’s been feeding him this story for the past three years. What can I do?

A. You need informatio­n from an advocacy group for brain-injury patients, as well as legal advice from someone familiar with those issues.

Search online for such an agency and related profession­als in your community.

It’s not clear whether he now lives with those relatives, or in a nursing home, institutio­n, etc. If their divorce push is based on financial interests, also get informed legally about how to protect your marital assets.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada