The Niagara Falls Review

My husband in prison is jealous and insecure

- ELLIE

Q: My husband always says that I’m talking to other guys. He’s in jail, and when I say I’m not, I’m not lying. I’m always with our three kids. Sometimes I want to give up because he’s in jail and not here helping me. I feel that way whenever he says that I’m cheating by talking to other men. We fight on the phone daily. I have Crohn’s disease and sometimes feel he doesn’t care about my health. The more stressed I get, I can end up in hospital. I wish we could be happy again like when we started seeing each other. I love him, but I don’t know if I can go on with all the fighting. I don’t have friends, I’m not a people person. I talk to no one, just my three children.

Fed Up and Stressed

A: It’s not easy to be a prison spouse, and not easy either for the one doing time.

Sure, if a crime’s been committed, jail time is the price paid by the inmate. And few outsiders realize the emotional toll on the spouse and children left behind.

Yet every website for helping the spouse at home will tell you that providing love and support during your partner’s incarcerat­ion is crucial.

Your guy’s not making it easy for you. He’s jealous and suspicious, worried that you’re cheating. Even though you’ve done nothing wrong, he may be getting wound up by mean taunts from other inmates — an emotional form of prison bullying.

Meanwhile, you have to try to reassure him and carry on being a strong woman and mother.

Some resources: 1. The Prison Wives Diary — an inexpensiv­e paperback by Theresa Zollicoffe­r, based on women experienci­ng the difficulti­es of being married or involved with men in the prison system and how they remain strong when it comes to being faithful, keeping sane and making ends meet. Order online from Amazon, new or used (cheaper).

2. Log on to www.facebook.com/Wivesof-Inmates-2537506179­68585. It’s a support group for wives/girlfriend­s.

3. Psychologi­a.co/partner-in-prison/ You don’t have to be an outgoing “people person” to read about others in a similar situation and to learn about how some prison wives handle the difficulti­es they face.

FEEDBACK Regarding the woman who feared that a man with whom she had a one-night stand was stalking her (Oct. 20):

Part One Reader: “I’m a countervio­lence and advocacy trainer. I would characteri­ze this man as escalating (his pursuit).

“Escalation point: 1) He’s willing to take just a little bit of informatio­n said in a chance meeting after nearly two decades and act on it to be near his target. 2) At the bar and fuelled by drink, he spent a lot of time with his target … he’s ‘persistent.’

“3) He had drunken sex with someone he hadn’t seen since his teens (Ellie: as did she). 4) He communicat­ed with his target in ways that contact became undesirabl­e. This is where he needs to stop. 5) When told to ‘back off’ he ‘angrily’ lays blame for ‘emotional abuse,’ on her ‘leading (him) on.’ This is a serious red flag. It speaks of entitlemen­t to someone’s romantic and sexual attention. 6) He’s ‘repeatedly messaging and phoning daily.’

“Forced contact like this is abusive behaviour, regardless of intent or impact.

“Best practices for dealing with an escalating man: I advise speaking directly to the issue of his behaviour while taking any steps toward securing your safety that you feel necessary.”

Ellie’s Tip of the Day:

When someone goes to jail, the spouse and children also live a form of hard time, emotionall­y.

Read Ellie Monday to Saturday.

Email ellie@thestar.ca or visit her website, ellieadvic­e.com.

Follow @ellieadvic­e.

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