Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

EX- ETIQUETTE

- JANN BLACKSTONE

Q I recently started dating a wonderful man who has been very honest with me about his current living situation. He told me he’s still living with his ex and her teenage son. They have been living together for a little more than a year, and when they decided to break up, he felt uncomforta­ble asking her to leave because her son goes to the school around the corner. He tells me they sleep in different rooms and as soon as they move out, I can move in. But the fact that they are still there makes me very uncomforta­ble. Should I continue this relationsh­ip or wait until his ex and her son are out of the picture? A Those are my two choices? Continue a shady relationsh­ip or wait for him? How big of a red flag do you want? Her son can go to the same school from another address. If she’s living with him, she’s not really his ex. Exes have new addresses and new phone numbers.

Granted, sometimes breakups aren’t exactly clean breaks, and it takes a while to sever the ties, but it sounds as if this guy likes a “let’s move in together to see if it will work out” sort of arrangemen­t. One moves out; he moves another one in. If that’s the case, he tries on new girlfriend­s like he tries on hats. Unfortunat­ely, his last experiment included a child who is watching his mom and her boyfriend break up, and continue to live together while the boyfriend is seeing someone else. If there was no child in the picture — although I question your self- esteem quotient to put up with his antics — you could do whatever you want. The fact that there is a child involved sets a terrible example and is very bad ex- etiquette. ( Ex- etiquette rule No. 1, “Put the children first.”) That should be another red flag. His character is in question.

If you want a committed relationsh­ip, and it sounds as if you do, don’t set yourself up with people who aren’t ready to commit. This guy may be the sweetest guy in the world, but if he has a woman sleeping at his house, perhaps in his bed, for two months after he’s supposed to have broken up with her, he has very little he can offer you right now. Moving that fast from relationsh­ip to relationsh­ip gives you no time to weigh what you really want or consider how not to make the same mistake that contribute­d to your last relationsh­ip failing.

You asked, so let me be even more blunt. A good relationsh­ip works for both parties. It’s a give- and- take propositio­n, with compromise at the core. The relationsh­ip you have described works for him. You don’t have to settle for someone else’s relationsh­ip. Design your own — and the rules of ex- etiquette are an excellent guide for doing that.

Jann Blackstone is the author of Ex- Etiquette for Parents: Good Behavior After Divorce or Separation, and the founder of Bonus Families — bonusfamil­ies. com. Contact her at drjannblac­kstone@ gmail. com

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