Toronto Star

Ex-wife is keeping me from visiting with my children

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

Q: I’ve been separated/divorced for five years. I’ve signed a separation agreement that spells out child support and visitation with our three children.

However, child support and visitation are two separate, independen­t issues. I regularly meet my childsuppo­rt obligation­s, but have not been able to visit with the children.

They aren’t only alienated from me, but from my parents, plus aunts, uncles and cousins on both sides.

What can I do, besides keep writing to the kids? The home phone isn’t answered. Calls are left for the answering machine and get screened.

Frustrated Father

A: On facts alone, this is a legal problem. But the difficulti­es within the painful emotions involved is a problem of parental/family alienation that may prove too difficult for lawyers to resolve.

Still, show your legal agreements to your lawyer, the family court and a mediator (request this) to discuss your legal rights to visit your children.

The fact that you’ve consistent­ly paid child support should be seen/noted in any discussion­s on visitation.

Keep writing the children (send your phone number), and search social media for informatio­n about them.

Meanwhile, you may have to wait until they’re old enough to, hopefully, reach you.

Unfortunat­ely, an ex who alienates children from their other parent (and supportive relatives) bears enormous distrust/anger/control measures toward them. Q: My daughter, 27, is the eldest of three, always the most sensible, responsibl­e among them, quiet and very good in studies. She went to university to become a teacher. My nephew introduced her to his work friend. After dating for a year, they got married last year.

Six months ago, we received an overdue notice from her credit card company. She made an excuse and I paid it. Her husband saw another overdue notice. She said that she bought stuff for the wedding (which my wife and I had paid for). Whenever we or her husband confronted her, she made excuses, until she confessed that she didn’t get the full-time job last fall and was a supply teacher.

Recently, her husband found another loan letter. She again gave a lame excuse. Whenever she suspected that he’s onto her, she complained that he’s rude to her or misbehaved. Now, having complained to my wife that he told her to leave, she came home. My nephew did some digging and discovered that she’s not registered as a teacher. When confronted with proof of this, she confessed that she never graduated from university. We asked where she went during the two years when she claimed she had a teaching job. No clear answer.

My greater concern is how she’s so easily lived her life as a lie, as if there’s nothing wrong.

Puzzled Father

A: The possibilit­ies are endless, some of them frightenin­g. What’s clear is that your daughter needs serious help for problems she’s afraid to reveal.

Was it gambling, drugs or another person’s influence that caused her to hide the facts of her daily whereabout­s and dealings?

Could the years of her growing up considered the “most sensible, responsibl­e, best student” in the family have created pressure for her to lie when she couldn’t reach those expectatio­ns?

Insist that she see a psychother­apist who will probe the deep-seated reasons for all this.

For now, show her compassion and safety living within the family. But stay firm on insisting on getting to the truth, for her sake. Ellie’s tip of the day: Pursue all legal avenues to see your children while also communicat­ing in any way possible.

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