Toronto Star

Ex alienated me from my kids

- 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 ex of 30 years had always alienated and coercively/financiall­y controlled me. My family and friends didn’t know any details; e.g., my ex threatened to separate during my father’s funeral because I wanted to go in the limo to the gravesite with my siblings.

Years later, when confronted about being controllin­g, she responded, “You let yourself be controlled.”

Indeed, being a co-dependent and peacekeepe­r, I appeared to be happy.

Yet, I knew our relationsh­ip involved me always giving in.

I dedicated myself to raising my three kids (often working two jobs so their mother could resign from a good-paying job to stay home with them).

Later, I fell in love with another woman and left their mother, who receives half my pay for spousal support and child support for one still at university.

Now the kids (all in their 20s) refuse to have anything to do with me.

False informatio­n was shared with them, plus confidenti­al details between myself and my ex. I know they’re hurt and believe I’m the sole cause.

But six years later, after repeated attempts to connect with them, I’m feeling they’ll never see me again. What do I do? Alienated A: Controllin­g a partner often has a cyclical effect.

In your case, your ex was the controller, you were the accommodat­or, which confirmed her ability to control you.

That’s in the past, but she’s also controlled the story of your split.

In their 20s, your kids don’t want any further details about your required payments or your falling in love with someone else.

It’s unfair to you, but you have to work with what exists.

Reach out periodical­ly through emails/letters — not with long explanatio­ns about who did what to whom — and separately tell each that you care about them.

Send birthday/holiday cards, ask about them and what’s happening in their lives, without saying too much about yourself.

Occasional­ly say you miss each one.

Ask, from time to time, to meet.

If you get the chance, apologize for their being hurt by your leaving.

Do NOT tell your children the story of being controlled as it’s just asking them to choose sides yet again.

Remember, it’s the contact and hope of a future relationsh­ip that you want.

Dear Readers: Regarding the married woman who wonders if her one-time act of cheating “defines” her (Aug. 19):

Ellie: Some readers took my response to mean that I always believe that it’s OK to cheat and not confess.

Not so. Often, a repeatedly sneaky/lying cheater eventually gets found out anyway. Confessing is honest.

But the situation for someone who has a one-off sexual encounter (no affair) usually involves different circumstan­ces. If it’s excess alcohol/ drugs, or being away alone, those are circumstan­ces that will repeat.

So the person must confess to deal with their own addiction or lifestyle issues.

This particular woman felt ignored, lonely and unhappily married to a man with no time for her or for sex.

A random man was attracted to her, there was a brief encounter in his hotel, she’d never see him again, but she feared what it meant.

I strongly believe the husband and wife needed marital counsellin­g, for reasons that already existed, rather than focus first on this event.

There’s a huge likelihood that she’d end up confessing during the therapy process, as her way of telling her husband how lonely and sexually unsatisfie­d she was.

Counsellin­g was the best forum for the couple to discover whether they could reconnect or should separate. Ellie’s tip of the day Despite purposeful alienation of you, a parent, don’t give up reaching out to your children.

Often, a repeatedly sneaky/lying cheater eventually gets found out

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