Women who inspired me in 2018
Many women inspired me this year. Some are women I am lucky to know and love personally, from family elders in their nineties, remarkably still functioning near the top of their game, to friends who survived deep personal tragedy or serious setbacks with strength and grace.
Some are high-profile Canadian politicians who calmly continue to navigate fraught political roles. Two of them made headlines this past weekend.
Chrystia Freeland, Canada’s minister of foreign affairs, was in Buenos Aires for the signing of the new Canada-U.S.Mexico trade pact, the changing acronym of which continues to elude me. (Can’t they even make that easy for us?)
As the minister responsible for overseeing the negotiations for Nafta’s replacement deal, the Liberal MP for Toronto’s University-Rosedale riding notably kept her cool throughout one of the most lengthy, difficult and unpredictable trade negotiations in Canadian history, even when she and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau were petulantly insulted by President Donald Trump.
Freeland also spoke out against Saudi Arabia for human rights violations well before the Khashoggi murder.
Preternaturally calm, articulate and poised, Freeland’s demeanour suggests she takes her job very seriously but she’s not full of herself.
A rarity in political life. She even dropped off popsicles for the media on a sweltering summer day in Washington DC.
And a speech she delivered last June was a thoughtful rebuke of everything Donald Trump stands for. “Facts matter. Truth matters. Competence and honesty, among elected leaders and in
Q: I’m a single woman, early 40s, who thought I’d met my perfect partner a year ago.
We shared a few interests from the start.
We also enjoyed an active social life.
That’s how I first noticed that he used drugs — not my choice — but I thought he could handle them, until he overdosed and I feared he’d die. It didn’t stop his using nor drinking to excess. After some months, when we went out, he always had some reason he had to leave early, and I’d go to my home alone.
I was starting to suspect something, so I checked his phone and found that he’d been meeting up with several different women, though he’d led me to believe that we were exclusive. I was devastated.
I ended the relationship, and it took me a while to get over him.
Recently, he called to say that he’d lost his job, just weeks after his father died suddenly. He says he’s miserable, misses me and needs my support.
I lost love and respect for him when I discovered he’d cheated and deceived me for months. But I feel conflicted now about ignoring his plea for help. Do I owe him my support? What’s Owed or Lost?
A: Trust is lost, so is respect, and little is “owed” other than some compassion for his grief.
Don’t even consider renewing the relationship. His serious issues — addictions, lying, cheating — will drag you down while he relies on you to rescue him.
He needs to turn his life around himself — addiction counselling and rehab, a support group of recovered addicts and therapy to understand why he lies and cheats, so he can learn other ways to deal with people.
That’s his challenge but not your responsibility.
Tell him what serious supports he must find on his own, and wish him well. Q: You previously gave me sound advice so I’m writing to you again. I’m early 60s, still working enjoyably, divorced. My children are grown and gone.
I’m divorced and recently reconnected with a male friend (late 50s). This summer, he sold his dad’s home and moved him into an apartment, and I think he was feeling tired and vulnerable. We once again started seeing one another but soon fell back into old patterns. He comes over before or after work to cook a meal, watch some TV and sleeps on the sofa.
He refused to see an art exhibit with me, but I always go to events he likes.
He’ll hug and hold hands, but no kissing and no sex — his rules.
I’m frustrated. I feel he controls this relationship.
Since it’s been an on-off one, I had been on dating sites for the past two years and met some men.
But, though genuinely trying to move on, I haven’t connected with anyone.
Should I keep trying and hoping that I’ll meet someone, or tell this man that I want more from our relationship?
Or, should I be satisfied with “crumbs from his table?”
Undecided
A: You already knew your own response from the moment you wrote “crumbs.”
Here are the obvious reasons for moving on:
1) he offers no concern or discussion about what you want or need in the relationship;
2) he stays distant from your interests;
3) his main contribution is a cooked meal but little emotional warmth. End it. Try other ways to meet men — e.g. pursuing your interest in art events, other group activities through www.meetup.com in your area.
Never settle for crumbs. Ellie’s tip of the day
A controlled friendship offered instead of a romantic relationship will always feel like “crumbs.”
Read Ellie Monday to Saturday. Email ellie@thestar.ca or visit her website, ellieadvice.com. Follow @ellieadvice.