Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Responding to abusive ex is playing their old game again

- CAROLYN HAX tellme@washpost.com

DEAR CAROLYN: I was in a relationsh­ip from age 24 to 36. I’m now over 60. The relationsh­ip was abusive, but subtly so — or so it seemed to me. Lots of gaslightin­g, lots of picking fights at dinner (until it got to the point I’d lost 20 pounds), lots of, “Why aren’t you like this?” or, “When you did X, were you being obtuse or were you just being mean?” Even things like waking me in the middle of the night to discuss some point about my personalit­y or actions that offended or hurt them, when they knew I struggled to sleep.

This person had been a mentor first, and my gratitude combined with an ever-disappeari­ng sense of self kept me with them far too long. I finally did get out by listening to my friends who claimed the relationsh­ip was abusive, getting a therapist, going on antidepres­sants and making a pact with myself not to have any contact with this person again.

Although they tried to pull me back in, I never gave any response: gifts went into the dumpster unopened, letters were shredded unread, and I changed my phone number. For the past 15 years, I have heard nothing and not even spotted them in public (we still live in the same town). I have been married for 20 years to a loving spouse. I am truly as happy as I’ve ever been in my life.

I’ve now learned this person is likely dying from cancer, and they have asked through a friend of theirs if

I would agree to one joint (the friend’s words). meeting with a counselor so I am not going to do this. they can “finish” their life But I wonder about how to “with nothing left unsaid” reply to the friend’s email. I don’t wish them ill, but I feel I barely made it out of that relationsh­ip alive. I have no wish either to give absolution or argue anything out again. I’m thinking I should just … not respond, which of course is a response. Or should I try to be kinder with my “no”?

— Anonymous DEAR READER: No. Because the request itself is a renewal of the abuse.

Your ex could say the “unsaid” in writing. Instead, they conditione­d it upon your engaging with them again. That says they have not changed, grown, gotten healthy or learned a blasted thing in the decades since you left.

Abuse is a transactio­n requiring two people to complete it. For your ex to manipulate you, you need to change your behavior at their bidding. Just by dwelling on how to respond, you have already been manipulate­d. That’s why it was selfish of your ex to reach out to you this way. The “with a counselor” element is just a false promise of your protection, and likely a disingenuo­us one at that, intended to draw you in.

So choose actions toward your goal of complete detachment.

Counterint­uitively, that doesn’t mean not responding, which could passively invite the friend to keep trying — and also leave you with something to dread. Instead, pull the plug firmly and clearly in an emailed response: “I want no interactio­n with [ex]. Please do not contact me again.” Block addresses and numbers as needed, and live without apology in your hardwon peace.

Chat online with Carolyn at 11 a.m. each Friday at washington­post.com. Write to Tell Me About It in care of The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071; or email

 ?? (Washington Post Writers Group/Nick Galifianak­is) ??
(Washington Post Writers Group/Nick Galifianak­is)
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