The Peterborough Examiner

Mother is upset with son’s treatment of his wife

- Ellie Ellie Tesher is an advice columnist for the Star and based in Toronto. Send your relationsh­ip questions via email: ellie@thestar.ca.

Q: My daughter-in-law is a lovely 35-year-old woman who’s being disrespect­ed by my son through his recent cheating on her. They’ve been married for nine years and have a son, 7, and daughter, 5.

My son’s behaving badly and I don’t know how to talk to my daughter-inlaw about it, and about our relationsh­ip going forward. My husband passed away several years ago, so

I’m on my own trying to deal with this.

My son had previously seemed to follow in his father’s character type — faithful, responsibl­e, a cut well above common. His wife had worked in a demanding field so changed to part-time when the children were born. She’s been a full partner to him, an excellent mother and my late husband and I loved her.

Something changed over 18 months ago and slowly we saw changes in our son ... restless, hurried visits with us and then an admission he was involved with another woman. We heard nothing else until recently when he said he’s already been living with that woman for several months.

I immediatel­y called my daughterin-law and she confirmed the news, saying she’d wondered what we knew or didn’t know but didn’t want to hurt us ... that was up to him.

She has close family and strong friendship­s, so she’s getting good support. Divorce discussion­s between the couple began those few months ago. Do I keep in steady touch and support her, as well? Is it really possible for a mother-in-law to maintain a good relationsh­ip with a divorced daughter-in-law? Will I lose my son through this?

Son’s Cheating Affects Everyone

A: The grandchild­ren are your ongoing link, which is bolstered by the good relationsh­ip you and their mother have had through the years. There’s no reason why you can’t continue to share the same mutual respect.

Offer to spend some time with the children and/or have them visit at your place so their mother can be free, if she wishes. Give your son the opportunit­y to tell you what prompted this major change in his life. Your maternal interest should include caring about his well-being even if you disagree with his choice.

Tell him you intend to stay connected to your grandchild­ren and their mother, as well as to him. And that you’d also like to meet his new partner, in time. FEEDBACK Regarding the angry, uncommunic­ative and unmotivate­d husband who turned out to be suffering from low testostero­ne (March 24):

Reader: “A dear friend could’ve written that letter. They read your column but have no idea how to present this positive informatio­n about turning around a health problem to their similarly affected, pandemic-cloistered and long-term devotee of alcohol and cigarettes, who’s also a much-loved spouse. “Your input would help.”

Ellie: That letter-writing spouse did some research and so can the person who needs similar informatio­n. So, I’ll repeat it. A simple search on www.healthline.com yields this:

Both males and females produce the hormone testostero­ne, but much more in men. Because it affects many functions (including sex drive and sperm production) its decrease can cause significan­t physical and emotional changes. Physical changes include decreased sex drive, fewer erections, less muscle strength and increased fatigue. Emotional changes can cause sadness or depression, trouble with memory and concentrat­ion, lowered motivation and self-confidence.

Next step: Get the person to a doctor. The previous letter-writer’s husband is now seeing a men’s health specialist, getting vitamin D and testostero­ne supplement­s. And she got her husband back.

Ellie’s tip of the day

A mother-in-law’s good relationsh­ip with a son’s ex-wife maintains essential ties to grandchild­ren, as well.

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