Toronto Star

Should I end the secret affair I’m having?

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

Q: I’ve been a widow for eight years. During that time, I’ve been having a secret affair with a man who’s living common-law with his first cousin. She found out about us as a few years ago and has been nasty to him. She’s also been stalking me since that time. He and I love each other very much. He can’t just get rid of her as he signed a pre-nuptial agreement with her years ago. She says that she will take him for every penny he has.

Should I continue in this relationsh­ip secretly or should I just give up?

A Widow’s Secret

A: It’s very interestin­g that you left out one other option: Since your lover could seek legal/financial advice on how to separate as equitably as possible from his cousin, you could insist that he do so in order for you two to be together openly.

It’s unlikely he’d be left with nothing at all, that’s just her threat. But he seems to use it as a shield against changing the situation. So, he gets to have his financial comforts, the excitement of a “secret” affair and you get to be stalked.

I suspect that you’ve already arrived at the conclusion that you should move on, which is a positive step toward not having to hide anything in your life. And makes possible your finding a future relationsh­ip which you can enjoy openly.

That’s the hopeful route, instead of “giving up” so that those two can keep their financial connection.

Q: My stepson, mid-30s, was raised with little boundaries and no responsibi­lities. He’s held a couple of jobs in the entertainm­ent industry.

For years, he’s complained to his dad (my husband) about his boss (es), how unfair, how he’s not appreciate­d, how they took advantage of him, etc.

He has a volatile temper and only calls his dad when he needs something. When my husband calls him, he forgets to return the call.

When he visits us, he talks only about his job — bragging about whom he knows, where he’s been, etc. Never does he ask how we’re doing. When he visits, he helps himself to anything without asking (if only out of respect). When we agree to go out for dinner, he sleeps the whole day, has to be “reminded” to get up, and always makes us late. It ruins the evening for me. My husband has enabled his son, having never discipline­d him, and now does things for him that should’ve been his own responsibi­lity.

Lately, he admits that his son should start making his own decisions.

Yet he fears that raising this may hurt their relationsh­ip. I suggested that he speak to a psychologi­st/ therapist for guidance. Is there hope?

Frustrated Stepmother

A: I’m guessing that his father indulged him for so long due to past guilt over whatever occurred in their family before you became part of it.

An adult only in calendar years, self-obsessed and selfindulg­ent, it’s unlikely this man will change without an angry struggle. But there’s nothing like the thought of losing financial aid to affect a situation.

So, yes, his father should still try to “help” him by stepping back and not indulging his rudeness, constant whining and lack of responsibi­lity.

A therapist can help make suggestion­s. So can a financial planner, and a lawyer regarding his father’s will. Your husband should explain ahead what he intends to change regarding their relationsh­ip, then stick to a plan. Ellie’s tip of the day Romantic relationsh­ips kept secret for financial reasons, signals that person’s value of money more than of love.

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