Toronto Star

I can’t stay interested in a relationsh­ip

- Ellie Twitter: @ellieadvic­e

I get obsessed with certain women I date and really like. I treat them like gold for a while.

Then, through no fault of their own, I get tired of them after a short honeymoon period.

Tiny things I used to enjoy about them annoy me.

It’s not a sex issue; I’ve never had a high libido, and I don’t cheat.

My current girlfriend’s a wonderful woman whom I now cannot stand.

Initially I loved everything about her and treated her like she was the most important and beautiful person in the world. Nowadays I get angry at the sound of her voice and find her a nagging emotional mess … but she’s still the same beautiful person I first met.

We’ve been dating for five years (I work away so it makes things easier) and I fear leaving her will result in her coming after me financiall­y.

Am I just an A-hole or is something wrong with me? Why do I do this to genuinely nice people? Bored I can almost hear the response of so many readers agreeing with your first self-assessment!

Yet you already know that this is about you and wonder if something else is “wrong” with you.

Well, there’s something not perfect in everyone — yet most people accommodat­e to others’ imperfecti­ons, and try to make good relationsh­ips last.

But you repeatedly get bored and upset instead. Maybe you have repeated fears about being abandoned or suffering other losses (e.g. financial), perhaps from your past. Or maybe you choose women for superficia­l reasons.

Only a process of therapy will help you answer your question: WHY are you unable to stay with someone you genuinely like and admire?

Just taking this one moment to ponder it, is as fleeting as your ability to invest in an ongoing relationsh­ip.

An honest self-examinatio­n and personalit­y probe takes time. Get to a therapist soon. My wife of 18 years and I have two children.

She claimed she wasn’t into sex, so we didn’t have a lot of it throughout the years (very frustratin­g). I think our problems stem from lack of finances.

When we’re financiall­y stable, we’re happy and there’s intimacy.

But when things are tough, like now ( bills piling up, things are getting cut off, going to homeless shelters and missions to get food), she threatens divorce, taking the children and running away.

Sometimes, I selfishly think about cheating or divorcing. But, where would I go?

As long as we’re together I have a home, a family. I don’t know what to do. Searching for Answers It’s a tough time for all of you. Your wife’s naturally frightened about the future and threatenin­g to leave because she also doesn’t know what to do.

You both need solutions, not just reactions — hers is to escape (to what?), and yours is to pretend you’re OK.

You both need a plan — for social services help, for employment, for training that’s targeted to job possibilit­ies.

Wherever you live, use the internet to seek out all the agencies and programs available to low-income people. When your wife sees you being proactive, also seeking any available odd jobs in your community (even if temporary), she won’t feel so afraid for herself and the children.

She can also take advantage of training that provides opportunit­ies to work from home or prepare for seeking other jobs.

Thinking about cheating or divorce is a wasteful diversion. Intimacy isn’t the issue here. Tip of the day Instead of having repeated hitand-run relationsh­ips, get profession­al counsellin­g to understand your own imperfecti­ons and fears.

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