Toronto Star

Friend must acknowledg­e unhealthy pattern with wrong guy

- Ellie

My friend’s been dating this guy on/off for a year. Whenever she has tried to break up, he “wins her back.”

Her friends, family and I are concerned — he’s jealous, can’t take “no” for an answer and seems controllin­g.

During their recent split, he was still contacting her, hounding her with calls, texts and voice mails.

I’m hoping my friend will realize this so-called relationsh­ip is ruining friendship­s and her relationsh­ip with her parents, who’ve begged me to help her. The Wrong Guy Everyone’s concerned but her . . . there must be a reason but you give no clues.

She’s broken off with him in the past, so she did recognize problems.

Friends and parents can only do so much.

She has to acknowledg­e the unhealthy pattern between them and then find the strength in herself to demand better.

She’d benefit from talking to a therapist about why she repeatedly takes him back, and that rather than him “winning” her, she may be “losing” herself with the wrong guy.

The therapist can help her find the best strategy and determinat­ion to make the next breakup she wants, be the one that sticks. Dear Readers: The many responses to one father’s complaints about his adult son’s and daughter-in-law’s distance were so consistent­ly negative that I’ve given him the opportunit­y he’s sought for further explanatio­n: Reader’s Commentary: “Looks like I got crucified today in your column, (June 27 re: my May 24 letter):

“I now realize that providing too much detail poses a risk of people holding on to minor points of the story, thereby distorting the real issue at hand.

“My desire to have ‘alone time’ with my son is interprete­d out of proportion.

“When the couple comes over for dinner, they stay on average four to five hours.

“Yes, when we sit in the living room, my fiancée and her daughter enter- tain my granddaugh­ter as do I and my son.

“But in between, he and I do chat about his job, politics, finances, etc., but only intermitte­ntly, as the priority is his daughter when she wants his or my attention.

“I’ve since delved into the real issue some more with my son.

“As the readers said, his loyalty is with his wife, as I take a background seat or so I should.

“Yesterday, he came with his daughter for a belated Father’s Day. All these years I’ve been second fiddle — Thanksgivi­ng, Christmas etc., but I’m used to it.

“I can live with this as daughters-inlaw have priority with their immediate family most times.

“Yesterday, I told him that his priority is his wife and his two small children.

“For two years now, his wife wouldn’t accept my invitation­s for lunch/dinner (though he comes with his children).

“Meanwhile, he told me there’s a reunion planned on my ex-wife’s side — 50 people, uncles, aunts, cousins from the United States.

“His wife refuses to go and is giving him a hard time if he goes, as it’ll spoil her long weekend.

“This reunion happens only every 15 years or so.” Ellie: It seems you’re saying that the issue of any divide between you and your son stems from his wife’s insistence on their time as a couple, her own parents’ priority for major holidays and her own private time (whenever that’s possible with two young children).

Instead of feeling “crucified,” enjoy the relationsh­ip you DO have with your son, since he visits willingly, be respectful to his wife and understand­ing of her personal needs.

And stop complainin­g.

Tip of the day Changing or ending an unhealthy relationsh­ip requires understand­ing why you’ve accepted it. Email ellie@thestar.ca. Follow @ellieadvic­e

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