The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Keep looking for important answers

People usually don’t just dump their partner and their bestie on the same day

- ELLIE & LISI TESHER newsroom @theguardia­n.pe.ca @Peiguardia­n Ellie Tesher and Lisi Tesher are advice columnists for the Star and based in Toronto. Today’s column is written by Lisi Tesher. Send relationsh­ip questions via email to lisi@ thestar.ca.

Q - My best friend just dumped his wife, and I have no idea why or what he’s thinking. We talk daily; he never mentioned a thing. I called him on my way to work and he didn’t answer. I didn’t leave a message; we never do. I figured he’d call when he could.

That afternoon, my wife called me incredulou­s, asking why I hadn’t told her the news. She was furious I hadn’t warned her. I didn’t know what she was talking about! Apparently, my friend’s wife, who is close friends with my wife, called her crying hysterical­ly.

After everyone calmed down, I assured both my wife and my friend’s wife that I had no idea this was happening. They’re finding it hard to believe, as am I, that I was completely left out in the cold.

I’ve called my friend several times since that day and have barely spoken to him. I can’t just walk away from this – I feel my friendship needs rethinking; my wife is upset that she wasn’t able to properly console her friend; and his wife is upset thinking I allowed him to throw her under the bus.

What do I do?

Cold friend

A – I’m pretty sure your friend was covering his own ass by not telling you, knowing you would have told your wife who would have then told his. For whatever reason, he wanted the element of surprise. Not nice. Take both women out to dinner and assure them that you were completely uninformed.

As for your friend, it sounds like he’s in crisis. With no other informatio­n

– I don’t know your ages, how long they were married, whether they have children, so I can’t assume anything. But people usually don’t just dump their partner and their bestie on the same day. Something is going on.

Obviously, you care about him, so keep calling and pop in on him. You’re going to have to pin him down (not physically) to get some welldeserv­ed answers.

Q – I’ve been with my partner for 22 years. I’m 70, and he’s 85 years old. We have a wonderful loving relationsh­ip. He is very caring and very good to me and my family.

The problem is his son, a successful lawyer, who is 48. I believe that he has, and will continue to, financiall­y abuse his father. He had his dad mortgage his house to give him money to pay for his car insurance because his driving record is so bad. Yet he continuall­y brags about how much money he earns.

This came to a blowout recently because I spoke up to his son; now I am the "bad" one. His son called my partner and myself a nasty term, and we didn't speak for nearly a month. Finally, my partner called a meeting and his son apologized but continues his irresponsi­ble behaviour. His sister knows everything but just blames her dad for aiding and abetting her brother. I wish she would speak up to her brother and make him realize he needs help, both financiall­y and personally.

The son still refuses to get his responsibi­lities in order and grow up. What can we do?

Adult children

A - The problem started years ago, perhaps even before you and your partner got together. Somewhere along the line, your partner allowed his son to take advantage financiall­y (it could have been very minor), and the tone was set, no doubt fanned by the guilt many divorced parents feel.

At 48 and 85, these two men need to sit down with a lawyer and a financial planner. You and the daughter may need to be present as well. All financials need to be laid bare, wills written and inheritanc­es laid out. And then you two need to set boundaries and walk away from any more of his bullying.

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