Penticton Herald

Boyfriend won’t commit to ever getting married

- Send relationsh­ip questions to ellie@thestar.ca. Follow @ellieadvic­e.

QUESTION: I’m a single female, age 29, never married, and in love with a man who says that he loves me. He’s five years older than me, and divorced. He had a girlfriend for several years, but they only lived together on weekends.

I recently learned that they broke up because she wanted to move in with him full-time, and he wouldn’t agree to that plan.

I mention this because I fear something’s going on with my boyfriend, not cheating or anything like that, but regarding his not wanting to become “a couple.”

We’ve been dating as lovers for 18 months. We’d met online before COVID, then grew close emotionall­y during lockdowns, until we could meet in person.

We’ve been devoted to each other ever since —talking/texting several times a day, having dinners at my place at least twice a week, and staying at Airbnb’s for weekends every couple of months.

Recently, I told him that our relationsh­ip feels like a whirlwind romance and he said he agreed.

I then said we should start planning our future together, because by 30 or even 31, I’d like to get married and consider starting a family. I thought he’d be excited to get started on that part of his life.

Instead, his whole attitude changed, and he said, “been there, done that.”

I was shocked but decided to wait and discuss it at another time. His reaction was even colder.

He said our life together was “perfect” as is, that he was never again going to risk a divorce because he’d already lost half of his hardearned money, and had to sell the house he’d loved, to pay off his greedy wife’s demands.

I’m beginning to believe that this is the reason he never wanted to live together full-time with his previous girlfriend, and now not with me, either.

I thought we were perfect together. Should I consider just carrying on as before, and hoping he’ll realize he has nothing to worry from me?

Do you see any chance of my getting him to change his mind, since I’m so openly in love with him and would never try to “take him for everything” in the unfair way that his ex did?

I thought we were perfect together. Also, I do own my own place, so should I just consider carrying on as before?

Please tell me if I’m overreacti­ng.

— Devastated

ANSWER: You’re definitely not overreacti­ng!

The seeming quality of your love relationsh­ip was a natural at both your ages, for planning ahead toward a full-time union . . . including marriage, and the possibilit­y of having a child.

But that’s a door he closed firmly after his divorce, and hasn’t opened at all since. He’s a man who still feels he was done in by his ex.

Instead of just accepting his view and hoping he’ll change it, get better informed about the family court laws on divorce in your jurisdicti­on. His ex may’ve received, financiall­y, exactly what she was legally entitled to receive . . . e.g., half the shared assets.

As you learn such legal realities, it’ll seem even more apparent that this man is fixated on his resentment from the past.

To be fair, his ex may’ve been as grasping as he describes. There are angry/stubborn/selfish people of all genders, in some very difficult break-ups. But that’s not you.

My advice? If you want marriage and kids, he’s not the man for you.

FEEDBACK: Regarding the parent whose question revealed a terrible inner struggle with the overdose death of a 20-year-old son:

READER: In most communitie­s there are support groups specifical­ly for those people who are bereaved from a death due to overdose.

Also, there are many communitie­s which have a chapter of The Compassion­ate Friends, which is a support group run by parents who have lost a child and include welcoming anyone who has lost a child at any age through loss of any kind.

ELLIE: Thanks for this. Compassion­ate Friends is a peer support group. It’s a registered charity formed by and for parents whose children have died, irrespecti­ve of the child’s age at death and the cause of death, and is independen­t of any religious, philosophi­cal or government body.

Also, Open to Hope is another non-profit with the mission of helping people find hope after loss.

Also, Save the Children Canada is a charity through which grieving parents can honour their beloved child’s memory through donations to needy children’s lives, giving special meaning to their unfortunat­e loss.

ELLIE’S TIP OF THE DAY

When a romantic partner equates ìmarriageî as a divorce trap/money grab, reassess the relationsh­ip.

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