Ottawa Citizen

Moving in together is a big test for a relationsh­ip

- ELLIE TESHER Advice

Q As news of the pandemic gained momentum, I realized that I didn’t want to be separated from my girlfriend. So I invited her to move into my apartment. It’s a one-bedroom — when there alone, it felt pretty spacious.

I’ve since been working from home, bringing in my normal income. My girlfriend’s retail job ended when the store closed. However, money isn’t what’s bothering me — it’s her lack of neatness and organizati­on.

In a living space surrounded by windows, there’s less room for furniture and cupboards in the main living area.

Keeping clothing on the couch, or over chairs just makes for clutter, especially when we each have a cupboard in the bedroom and one to share in the entrance hall.

I use an end of the dining table for the computer, with the printer and other needed items on the wall unit behind me.

My girlfriend just puts her laptop wherever she was last sitting and piles books/notepad/markers on the floor at her bedside.

We also cook very differentl­y, but she makes some great dishes. I know these are unusual stressful times, but I’m left wondering if my girlfriend and I are just not suited to each other since we can’t get through normal living adjustment­s. Limited Space, Big Fights

A Moving in together suddenly sounded alarms for you two.

Things had gone smoothly enough while just dating, for you to ignore her messiness, and her to sidestep your controls.

Yes, “controls.” You asked her to move in. That put a new label on the glass-walled haven — it’s a shared accommodat­ion, a home for two.

You appreciate her cooking, so you accept her culinary style. Apply that to her as a person.

In considerin­g your future together or apart, the operative clue is “love.” You felt it before you found her books on the bedroom floor, and now must decide whether you still feel it.

She needs to consider whether she can still love someone who’s continuall­y monitoring her.

The pandemic will eventually pass. Will you both have learned about your own natures, that future stress is inevitable, and that it takes two to compromise?

If so, you might both be happy together again.

Q My deceased cousin was conceived through an extramarit­al affair of my cousin’s mother, my aunt. Her husband never knew.

My aunt confided in my mother, who told me and no one else. Should I share this with my cousin’s children (we’re in contact) and tell them that the man they thought was their grandfathe­r was not?

I was also told the identity of the late biological father/ grandfathe­r and could provide that informatio­n.

The only reason to disclose would be, if the living descendant­s have a DNA test and discover different ancestry from their first cousins, who had the “known” grandfathe­r. But they’ll have no source for the truth.

Should I Disclose?

A No. I advise against unsought intrusions into others’ lives, unless there’s a direct, necessary request for informatio­n.

OR, you could disclose if a serious medical situation arises and makes any unknown genetic history obviously needed.

Read Ellie Monday to Saturday Send questions to ellie@thestar.ca Follow @ellieadvic­e

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