Waterloo Region Record

My financial situation could scare off any potential suitors

- 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 a 59-year-old man just starting to date.

Ten years ago, I lost my business, my house, my marriage and went bankrupt.

Today I have an excellent well-paying job and I’ve recovered mentally, but not financiall­y.

I rent a house, own a nice car, but live paycheque to paycheque with zero savings. Though living very frugally I still can’t get ahead.

I’m about to have a third date with a very successful executive woman. She’s compliment­ed my good looks, witty conversati­on and strong work ethic. When do I reveal my financial situation, or should I have already done so?

She’s five years away from retirement while I’ll have to work until I die. I don’t want a partner supporting me financiall­y.

Is it unfair for an honest man with a nice car to hide his financial problems on the first date? Poor Guy A: Finances are interestin­g to daters early on, but honesty has a higher value.

Neverthele­ss, the first date is too soon to reveal your cash flow or lack thereof. You’re both just seeing if there’s any interest in each other.

The second date is also surface exploratio­n — learning personalit­y traits, comfort and attraction level.

The third date matters. Between mature adults such as you two, it becomes a statement of deeper interest.

Serious factors must be put on the table: Divorced/separated recently, or attached? Working/unemployed?

Finances? Tell the story matter-offactly — your business failed; you expect to work indefinite­ly.

This woman will understand the impact of your current financial situation.

However, raising whether a future partner would have to support you in time, is conjecture, not fact. Do not present yourself as near-dependent.

Be open and stress the positives: you dug yourself out of major losses, mentally and practicall­y.

She’s either interested enough to keep dating, or not. She may like you for yourself, and if so, may also have some helpful thoughts about your situation.

Just don’t let that topic take over getting to know each other a lot better.

FEEDBACK Regarding the ex-boyfriend who’d remained distant over months of dating and sleeping together, then suddenly texted her months later (Dec. 17):

Reader: “Your response to this is clearly female-based. He wouldn’t text for a fling knowing how it ended.

“He didn’t want to start big so he’s just sending a greeting, like everyone would do if they’re thinking of somebody who was in their life.

“You can do better.”

Ellie: I’m hoping that you can do better, too. Your approach to reading about relationsh­ips comes with gender bias. This guy did what many women have also done … led a person on with frequent dating and sex, while certain about never having a relationsh­ip. He also knew — just as women who behave this way, know — that his former “girlfriend” was devastated by his cold distancing.

No, I didn’t answer from a female perspectiv­e but from my view having spent years reading the painful, personal stories of many men and women, seeking advice when they’ve been rejected and devastated by lovers … then casually approached later on.

This man’s a “user” — a personalit­y characteri­stic which isn’t specific to any gender.

That’s why I find periodic genderbase­d feedbacks like yours a wasted opportunit­y for readers to dig deep into an opportunit­y to learn what others feel.

All of us can do better in trying to understand each other.

Ellie’s tip of the day

By a third date, honesty about your most serious matters, such as finances, legal standing, must be discussed.

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