Toronto Star

Ex is too reactive to take any chances

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

I divorced my second husband five years ago. I had no other choice.

I’ve been successful­ly selfemploy­ed throughout my adult life. When I met this man, I had two older children and an amicable divorce from their father. I was swept off my feet by the romantic-seeming new man who came to work for me.

We were living and working together in a country very different and far from our separate home countries.

He soon revealed his true nature, complainin­g about his job and arguing with me publicly. He also expected me to be the only source of money for our life together.

I did whatever necessary to divorce, ending up with me supporting him, indefinite­ly. I even paid for his lawyer.

I have full custody of our daughter, now 11, yet I still have to pay her father for child support.

She didn’t want to see him because of his constant ranting against me.

When one of my older children moved to another country for advanced studies, I moved there too. I took a break from work projects and focused on making my young daughter feel secure in her new surroundin­gs and school.

After a short while, my ex secretly moved there too, very close to my place. I’d just paid a full-year’s lease. It may sound foolish that I stayed, but I believed that despite all his anger, he’d never hurt us.

I enrolled my daughter in a private school which honoured my instructio­n that her father can never take her home with him. She still doesn’t want to see him due to the daily guilt-inducing emails he sends her and me, too, saying “I can’t live without you.”

I sought legal help in this country and was advised that all he can insist on, due to my daughter’s young age, is that my ex must copy my lawyer on all these emails.

My closest girlfriend here considers my ex a “psychostal­ker.” I can’t let myself believe that or it’d destroy me. What’s your advice to keep my daughter safe? Divorce Nightmare

Since your own finances aren’t an issue, take charge by moving away from your rented house that’s so close to his. If he also moves, you may have grounds for a restrainin­g order, depending on the laws of that country.

Since you haven’t mentioned the country, I can only reply in broad terms to the legal issues. A restrainin­g order may put both you and your daughter (and older children, too) at greater ease.

Your ex sounds too reactive for you to take any chances with him. Also, your children’s sense of security is most important.

If necessary, you may even have to move back to your home country to get the legal protection­s and peace of mind that your whole family needs.

Readers’ commentari­es:

Regarding the young woman who’s discovered “My Real Father” (Aug. 7):

> Writing as a donor-conceived person, a “real” father nurtures, cares, is involved with the child/children in his care.

> The writer feels incomplete only knowing half her story. She’s entitled to know as much as possible.

> Since her biological father died relatively young, there may be health issues she needs to know about half-siblings and extended family.

> As for the grandmothe­r, with only one long-ago contact, there may be hurt on both sides. She should write her, giving her time to consider a response. Hopefully, as well as mentioning her pride in knowing who fathered her, she’ll express belated sympathy on his demise.

Ellie’s tip of the day

When a marriage becomes a constant battlegrou­nd, move on however possible. Protecting children and yourself is most important.

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