The Hamilton Spectator

Don’t try to be a referee in your children’s disputes

- Ellie is an advice columnist for the Star and based in Toronto. Send your relationsh­ip questions via email: ellie@thestar.ca.

Q: My two married sons don’t get along and it’s breaking my heart. They’re 31 and 36. Both have young children. The older son lives near me, but only visits briefly at the open door (with two kids in school, he’s trying to protect me from COVID).

The younger son lives 480 kilometres away.

He and I have talked irregularl­y on the phone as he’s always “busy.”

As a youngster, he’d follow his big brother around and pushed to excel at the same sports to hang out with him. My older son sometimes seemed annoyed “the kid” had earned lots of attention.

But now the bigger problem is their wives just don’t like each other. They’re different in upbringing, but both women have decent core values. Also, they’re equally strong-minded and voice their opinions without hesitation or filters.

Together, their behaviour differs like chalk and cheese. Before the pandemic, when we gathered as a family, when one started cleaning up, the other would start to bake and make a mess (but great cookies).

Resentment­s and distancing built up with neither husband dealing with it. I sometimes feel like I’ve lost both my sons since they allow their wives to keep our family divided.

What can I do to reunite my sons? Lonely Mom

A: Every mother who reads your letter will feel sad for you, but there are more losses to others here:

1) Young cousins who don’t get to see each other and grow up with the support of loving uncles and aunts.

2) The absence of a strong family structure that gives children and teens confidence through different age stages.

Yet your role is limited. You can’t choose sides. But you can/must show unbiased leadership by ignoring negative comments made about the other brother or wife.

Instead, try to link the children through a joint virtual chat, game, whatever. Talk to each of them asking what they’re learning, what programs they watch, what songs they like (have a singalong with them), etc.

When they show interest in their cousins, their parents may also see the “others” in a more positive light.

Stay hopeful.

Dear Readers: Ever wonder what’s the best way to convey your feelings to a loved one … as in sending flowers, or, as the song goes, “just calling to say, ‘I love you?’ ”

Well, times have changed, again. Text is the love message of choice. Simple and instant, easily repeated. Never mind that it carries no warmth or beauty unless the sender’s a poet.

According to MemesBams.com, a site self-described as “dedicated to helping couple’s relationsh­ips improve through better communicat­ion,” a study was conducted from last Sept. 1 to Oct. 5 of 2,730 English-speaking website visitors involved in a committed relationsh­ip, grouped into male and female respondent­s.

Findings: 53 per cent of men/women report receiving amorous messages from their partner; 51 per cent of men/women who aren’t receiving wish they were.

Text was the most common mode of communicat­ion for those receiving amorous messages from their partner; 86 per cent of women and 79 per cent of men, respective­ly. It was also the most desired.

What about saying it in person? That was second choice for communicat­ing love messages — 47 per cent of women and 38 per cent of men rated it as preferred.

Letters/cards? In today’s digital age, only nine per cent of men/women surveyed send them to their significan­t other. And love messages by email aren’t that common nor very desired either.

My advice? Express love in person whenever possible, also by support/ respect/trust. And text.

Ellie’s tip of the day

The wise parent is a leader by example regarding adult children’s disputes, not a referee.

Ellie Tesher

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