The Niagara Falls Review

It’s never too late to find love, even in your 40s

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

Q: I’m in my early-40s, still single. I’ve never been married, had kids or been in a relationsh­ip.

I feel sadness and despair, grieving the love and family I’ve never had.

Is it too late to find love? Am I too old to find a partner?

I don’t know what to do.

Alone

A: Your own “clues” inform my answer: You’re only starting early mid-life yet you’re already grieving as if there’s no chance for positive change.

And you’ve thrown up your hands, without any ideas on how to try to meet people, seek those with common interests, try something completely new for fun and expanding your circle, etc.

Yet there’s hope ahead in having so much groundwork to cover. But YOU have to get motivated to do it.

I recommend counsellin­g with a therapist (online is common during the pandemic) who helps you see yourself still in progress.

Even small steps — like joining a virtual book club or art-study group or (you name the interest) can boost your selfconfid­ence if you stick with it.

It means putting yourself out there, being friendly, sharing ideas.

That’s how meeting people starts. Some leads to dating, some to relationsh­ips. But nothing happens if you don’t try.

Answer — No! It’s never too late!

Q: My friend has young daughters ages eight and six, whose beloved “pets” are playful gerbils.

My friend’s been in a two-year, on-off relationsh­ip with a man who also has children.

Tired of the uncertaint­y, she decided to take her daughters to her parents’ cottage for the weekend, instead of relying on the uncertain possibilit­y she’d be seeing this man.

She told him her plans and asked if he’d please look after the gerbils for the two days. He agreed.

When she returned, he said his own children had taken a liking to the gerbils. He refused to return them.

My friend’s outraged. Her children are crying. What should she do?

Pet Wars

A: She should break up with this man, he’s mean-spirited.

His “on-off” attitude to the relationsh­ip also extends to his respect for her. He has no right to keep her children’s pets but is acting as if his entitlemen­t to do whatever he wants comes first.

As for taking action to retrieve the gerbils, she should walk into her local police station (instead of tying up police calllines) with a screenshot of her daughters and their gerbils and ask what they recommend that she or they do to get their pets back.

FEEDBACK: Regarding the divorced father who’s ordered his daughter to bar her stepfather from her wedding or he won’t attend, Oct. 24.

Reader: When I got engaged, my own father announced his refusal to attend my wedding if my mother would be present.

My parents divorced when I was 10, both were remarried. I told my father that I was sorry that he couldn’t.

Six months before the wedding he changed his mind and walked me down the aisle.

We sat my grandparen­ts between both couples to keep things civil.

It’s now up to this daughter to set the rules, even it means that the father decides not to contribute to the wedding.

She needs to be sensitive to everyone’s feelings on her wedding day, but she also needs to consider what she wants for her future family.

I invited everyone when we had family birthday parties for our twins. Both couples attended and were civil to each other and continue to attend all family functions.”

Ellie’s tip of the day

Giving upon yourself is what makes it harder to find love and a relationsh­ip partner.

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