Boston Herald

Sex-talking ex needs to show more respect

- By JANN BLACKSTONE Dr. Jann Blackstone is the author of “Ex-etiquette for Parents: Good Behavior After Divorce or Separation,” and the founder of Bonus Families.

My husband has been divorced from his first wife for 35 years. He has adult children and grandchild­ren. His ex visits for months at a time, which is great for the grandkids, but when she’s here, she’s far too familiar, talking about how good their sex life was and how she was the one to leave. It makes me so uncomforta­ble I don’t want to go to family get-togethers when she is in town. I expressed this to the family and my husband’s children turned on my husband and me and we didn’t see them for months. What’s good ex-etiquette?

Sounds like it’s time to check the family dynamic. Let’s start with your husband’s role. He is the senior member and there is a certain amount of respect that goes along with his age and position. If his children have not been brought up to understand such a family dynamic, he is paying for it now.

Divorced parents often feel so guilty for being divorced that they allow their children to run the show. They don’t call them on bad behavior for fear it will hurt them further or they won’t want to come see them. That’s really counterpro­ductive. Children look to their parents for direction. If direction is not offered it forces children to fend for themselves — and they are unprepared. They then develop a dynamic they think works for them. Someone has taught these adult children that not talking to someone for months gets them what they want.

The implicatio­n is that the kids think you are out of line and grandma’s behavior was appropriat­e. It was not. How it was handled was ineffectiv­e, which gave the adult children the impression it was OK to dictate policy.

Feel free to rely on the 10 rules of good ex-etiquette for parents. Each rule applies — and you can find all 10 on the ex-etiquette website. Of particular interest, rule No. 8, “Be honest and straightfo­rward.”

Your husband initiates the discussion with his family. He states very clearly to his family members there is simply no place for openly discussing his former sex life, the reason for the break-up, past issues, etc., when the children or his new partner are present. No manipulati­on, no ultimatums. His request for silence openly respects his ex, his children, your place in his life and himself.

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