Waterloo Region Record

Coronaviru­s has stalled my marriage — and I’m pregnant!

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

Q: We met two years ago when he was embroiled in a messy divorce. Yet I knew early on that I’d marry him.

We even planned a prewedding celebratio­n to announce our intent to friends and family. But COVID-19 had other plans.

I’m 38, have a great job, never married (by choice), dated a lot. I moved in with him (and his five-year-old son of whom he shares custody with his ex).

My fiancée loves kids, and we wanted to have a child together. I hoped we’d be married before I got pregnant.

We booked a favourite restaurant months ago for the event that would make our intentions public. Meanwhile, he’d been having setbacks in his divorce case. Now, everything’s been changed by the virus pandemic. Our festive event is cancelled, and the courts are behind in cases. We have no idea when he’ll be free for us to get legally married. I’m disappoint­ed but this is definite: We’re both fully committed to staying together. And I’m pregnant.

Keeping Score

A: Throw away your score card, you’re the lucky one. All you’ve suffered from COVID-19 is a minor setback to your plans, especially since you have the joy you so desired of getting pregnant. While more than 330,000 people globally had died from the coronaviru­s outbreak (at the time of my writing this), stealing breath from the most vulnerable and health-compromise­d, for countless others it’s created fear, isolation, and financial hardship.

Yet some lucky others have only been touched on the peripherie­s of daily life.

If you’re working and earning a decent living, have a companion, partner or family with you and/or in close communicat­ion, you’re truly lucky.

You’re experienci­ng a time of history. Hopefully, it’s one which will eventually improve the future. You’ll undoubtedl­y tell your children all about it one day.

And you’re surviving, even thriving, in love and support. Lucky. Q: My older sister, divorced with two daughters, had been seeing a guy for four months, and I couldn’t understand the attraction. He’s separated, no kids. I’d met him once early on.

He made no effort to talk to me, and only made silly comments to my sister.

But she seemed happy. However, she’s recently phoned me crying that he’d broken up with her. It seems that their relationsh­ip had only involved their having sex at her place or his.

Once the virus’ arrival required social distancing, they couldn’t meet — protecting him from contaminat­ion, since her children moved between her house and their father’s.

Having to maintain the relationsh­ip through phone and online contact, he lost interest. She kept attributin­g it to the stress of the times but he’s now told her that there’s no point in continuing if they still have to wait out having no physical relations

What can I say to soothe her very hurt feelings of having been used just for sex?

Sympatheti­c Sister

A: Let’s first define the terms: When a woman with full capacities agrees to regularly meet up with a man to have a sexual relationsh­ip, that’s “consensual,” not being “used.”

She could’ve/should’ve predicted the no-contact outcome herself, having known the man for several months.

If he couldn’t chat easily with her in person, email and text weren’t going to make him a great conversati­onalist.

While phone sex may satisfy some couples who are distanced, these two had never establishe­d a couple’s relationsh­ip sharing interests and inner feelings.

Tell her to consider that, dry her tears and move on. Ellie’s tip of the day COVID-19 will leave painful memories but those who are lucky can learn from its fierce lessons.

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