Toronto Star

I fell in love with my ‘sugar baby’

- Ellie

Q. I’m 53, married 25 years, with two children, ages 22 and 16 .

My wife and I have drifted apart. We have few common interests and haven’t slept in the same bed for 10 years.

I’m sad, miserable and there’s no romance.

I’ve decided to separate once the youngest child leaves for university. We’re both successful profession­als and debtfree.

Meanwhile, I’ve been “sugar dating.” I’ve had two “sugar babies” with no emotional attachment­s whatsoever.

With my third sugar baby, we hit it off immediatel­y. She’s 28, with a 7-year-old child.

She’s independen­t, mature and witty, and we shared many common interests. We’d spend hours chatting, including about our families.

(I can confirm through Facebook, Instagram and her family profiles that she’s not faking her stories).

I soon fell in love but didn’t tell her.

Three months into the arrangemen­t, she said she’s returning to her hometown so that she and her child can be closer to family, after being away for 10 years.

It nearly broke my heart. But she said she’ll come visit often since her small town is only six hours away.

Days before she left, I told her I loved her and about my plans to leave my wife.

She said she’s fallen in love with me, too. We each promised that we’ll make this relationsh­ip work.

She said that she’d found a job as a caseworker in a remote community where cell service is almost non-existent.

We can only talk/chat whenever she rotates back to her hometown. She said she would give me her schedule once she had it.

The first week she moved back, we chatted as usual. Then, without warning, I stopped hearing from her.

Emails are being delivered, but I’ve received no responses. I’m tech-savvy and know I haven’t been blocked.

It’s as if she just stopped reading my messages. It’s been four weeks.

My mind tells me to move on. But I’m the romantic, oldfashion­ed type and my heart tells me to hold on.

But is it normal to be out of reach for a month at a time? Don’t social workers rotate back every few weeks?

Obviously, I can’t reach out to her family to ask what’s happened. I’m tempted to travel to her town to check things out.

A. Back off, for now. If she truly meant to maintain the relationsh­ip, she may still do so.

But if you don’t hear from her in another two months — marking the length of your time together — it’s over.

Going to her town could be interprete­d as stalking her. She’s either doing longer stints at work than you thought, or she’s avoiding you.

While she may have felt love for you, the basic nature of the “sugar baby/sugar daddy” (or momma) arrangemen­t, involving funding for the younger person, lends itself to calculatio­ns and changes of mind.

As one website describes it: “They (sugar babies) get all the perks of a traditiona­l rela- tionship without the hidden agendas and baggage that typically accompany a relationsh­ip.”

Yet, as in your case, it’s seen as a relationsh­ip of its own kind — not an escort service or prostituti­on — because of the frequent dating involved.

Still, despite her expressed love, your plans to leave your wife change things.

She’s suddenly aware that there’ll be grown children — one close to her age — in the picture. Life could become far more complicate­d.

You may still find romance ahead. But if she doesn’t respond soon, it won’t be with her. Ellie’s tip of the day “Sugar daddies” and “sugar mommas” dating younger people for paid “companions­hip” need to accept that it’s more business than personal.

Broken-hearted Lover Read Ellie Monday to Saturday. Email ellie@thestar.ca or visit her website, ellieadvic­e.com. Follow @ellieadvic­e.

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