Montreal Gazette

Successful husband also an abusive recluse

- Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@creators.com. To find out more about Annie Lane and read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonist­s, visit the Creators Syndicate website at creators.com.

Dear Annie: I have been married to the same man for almost 40 years. We have two beautiful children, who have happy lives and their own careers and families.

My husband is highly successful and respected in his profession.

He has some wonderful qualities. For example, he’s hardworkin­g and a loving grandfathe­r.

However, over the years in our marriage, he has frequently been verbally and emotionall­y abusive to me, and at times, he’s been physically abusive.

He does not like my family members and resists any of my efforts to get together with them. He really has no desire to do anything with anyone — family or friends — and only wants to stay home and do what he wants to do.

He talks very little to me, except to tell me what to do or point out what I have done wrong.

I look ahead to the next 20 years with this man with great sadness because of his desire to isolate us and limit our access to other people — even our own family.

I want to end my marriage to him so badly, but then I wonder whether this would be the right thing to do to our family and to my husband in the long term.

However, my children would understand if I did end the marriage, as they have witnessed their father’s behaviour over the years.

I guess I wonder whether a divorce would just be a selfish act on my part so I could do what I want to do freely. I have been seeing a therapist over the years about my marriage.

I am just wondering what your advice would be. Conflicted and Anguished

Dear Conflicted and

Anguished: Abuse — physical, verbal or emotional — is never acceptable, and it is not OK for your husband to isolate you from your family and friends.

His refusal to see them should not prevent you from seeing them.

You can travel alone and go out with friends without your husband.

It is commendabl­e that you have been seeing a therapist over the years, and your balanced perspectiv­e is one of the results.

In the interest of leaving no stone unturned, consider seeking marriage counsellin­g with him.

This would give you a safe place in which to tell him what you love about him and what you don’t.

Ideally, these sessions would help your husband recognize his toxic behaviour and put an end to it.

And if it were not to help him do that, it would at least give you a more definitive answer about what to do next.

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