Toronto Star

My mentally abusive ex now wants to come back

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

Q: I was in a five-year relationsh­ip with my boyfriend, who’s 50. I stayed that long because of my lack of self-confidence and because he controlled me.

He was abusive mentally, verbally and emotionall­y. I broke up with him twice but took him back.

Now, I’ve completely left him. I caught him cheating on me.

He denied it, then put it in on social media and still denied it until the other woman called my cellphone, saying she’s pregnant with his baby.

Will I ever find a nice guy who treats me right and not take advantage of me?

My now-ex has a huge drinking problem. I brought him to Alcoholics Anonymous and a psychologi­st for help. I also brought him to talk to a priest and to see a doctor.

Meanwhile, I gained weight during COVID-19 and he said this is why he cheated and got this woman pregnant.

He’s calling me again, saying he still loves me, messing up my brain and playing with my emotions.

He was my first boyfriend and I gave him my heart, soul, trust, loyalty and honesty. But he treated me so badly, betrayed my trust.

I met him on a dating website and learned that he took advantage of many ladies on dating sites.

I’m having trouble getting my life back to normal. I need suggestion­s that can help me because I’m crying and suffering emotionall­y. Broken-Hearted

A: The pain of a nasty breakup feels overwhelmi­ng, but I believe you’re on the brink of healing and hope.

It’s evident from how strong and helpful you were in trying to help that man, despite believing you lack self-confidence.

You revealed your inner strength. You’re finished with him.

Loving yourself and rebuilding your confidence is what’s needed now.

He’s a serial user of women who think they can change him, but he just moves on to someone else. You mentioned naming this man to alert other women. Don’t. That’d wrongly keep him in your mind. It’s time to pack up your pain and set it aside.

Get busy: Keep up contact only with supportive (and positive) friends and family. Eat healthy and be active, to boost your self-image. Forget past drama, to overcome its trauma.

Counsellin­g can help you understand why you accepted a controllin­g, abusive relationsh­ip, so you’ll never again allow it.

Q: Why can’t adult brothers agree regarding the pandemic risks to our father?

I’m 36, married with two children, have a good job. My wife also works.

My brother’s 33, single, has “some” current girlfriend­s. He’s not open about his personal life.

Our father has compromise­d health so my immediate family’s very careful about COVID-19 restrictio­ns, relying on online contact with both parents.

My brother mocks us for being “extreme.” But he visits our parents in person, though his girlfriend­s have different “bubbles.”

He dismisses my concerns and we end up arguing. Any solutions? The Worried Brother

A: You’re adults with different personalit­ies. Having the same parents never meant that you’d think or act alike.

Your parents indulge your brother’s ways because they love him, just as they love you for your responsibl­e manner of caring about them.

Your concern is valid. But your difference­s stop your brother from listening to you. But he’ll respect your father’s wishes.

Urge your parents to follow public health advice. Keep them current but don’t alarm them. Demonstrat­e how to use FaceTime and Zoom with all of their family.

Reach out to your brother occasional­ly, not about difference­s. Your kids will notice your example.

Ellie’s tip of the day

When an unhealthy relationsh­ip finally ends, focus on regaining self-confidence and emotional and physical well-being.

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