The Niagara Falls Review

No need to apologize for dating widower

- ELLIE ELLIE TESHER AND LISI TESHER ARE ADVICE COLUMNISTS FOR THE STAR AND BASED IN TORONTO. SEND YOUR RELATIONSH­IP QUESTIONS VIA EMAIL: ELLIE@THESTAR.CA.

Q I’m a woman in my early 40s who, with my then-husband, became close friends among four married couples. My marriage was rocky (separate goals, many disagreeme­nts). I sought a divorce four years ago. He soon moved away and remarried.

The other three couples were initially awkward about it but included me in plans for the next get-togethers (bowling/a new play, etc.) followed by dinner at someone’s home, and discussion­s.

Then, one of the men revealed that his wife had been diagnosed with a serious illness. She died six months later. We all attended her funeral, helped him with bringing meals and encouraged him to rejoin us after his year of mourning.

Several months later, I arrived at the meeting-place by taxi, as my car needed repairs. He drove me home. We talked for hours, comforted each other and attended the next group gathering together. One of the women was outraged, shouting, “Are you kidding me?” This was directed only to me.

After two more tries to have the group accept our being together, we stopped attending. Only one friend, a man, offered an explanatio­n. He said that the women especially felt insecure about what happens as we all age, have health issues and a partner dies. One even said that single women become predators to regain security.

I was shocked! How do I handle this attitude in once-close friends. It’s so hurtful! Not A Predator

A Focus on your own truth about this new relationsh­ip. Discuss it with your partner. Assure yourselves that the connection was spontaneou­s and mutual, and that you both still honour his previous marriage through fond memories. If he had grown children who lost their mother, reach out as a caring friend, not a stepmom (unless a child of his seeks that in you).

Your couples’ group may eventually adjust to your new situation. If not, stay polite. You’ve no reason to apologize.

Q My daughter informed me that her husband bought a bigger boat! He was terminated at the pandemic’s start, didn’t work for two years. He finally has a job. They’d previously mortgaged their house to buy the cottage.

Now, instead of paying off the mortgage, he “needs” another boat for more pleasure at the cottage.

Their kids seldom use the cottage, hardly ever go in the water, he doesn’t swim.

I didn’t agree with this expenditur­e. Soon, their kids will be attending college/university and that’s not cheap.

I intend to rewrite my will so that the grandchild­ren receive money, not my daughter. The way her husband operates, I imagine him just getting a bigger cottage with any inheritanc­e.

Am I A Grinch?

A Well, you do show some Grinch-like grumpiness of not appreciati­ng others’ enjoying themselves.

Yes, your son-in-law spends easily on bankborrow­ed money for a more pleasurabl­e boat. But he’s apparently not asking you for that handout.

Until he does, it’s not your business.

As a mom and grandmothe­r, you have a better role than Grinch if you gently discuss basic finances with your daughter.

Ask her their plans for the kids’ higher-education costs. Suggest that she gets more informatio­n/guidance from their bank. Show that you care about their future instead of just listing your disapprova­ls.

However, your will is your business. Ask a lawyer at what ages children can inherit without having parents be named executors in charge.

I’m betting those “kids” will ultimately carry similar sentiments their father’s about the cottage and boat … hopefully, at whatever cost they can manage.

Ellie’s tip of the day

After a life-partner’s loss and grief, some people ultimately find new, loving relationsh­ips. It’s a cycle of life, not a rejection of the past.

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