Toronto Star

Why do women face gossip when it ends?

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

When a man leaves his wife and family for another woman, why do people assume he’s having a “mid-life crisis,” especially if the woman’s younger? Everyone nods agreement, some pals even consider him, “lucky,” and he moves on.

But when a woman leaves her husband, the gossips are vicious: She’s a “terrible person ... she should never have had children ... she’s probably been cheating on him for years.”

But she doesn’t move on easily, because it’s the most wrenching thing she’s ever done.I know, because I finally left a man I’d not loved nor respected for years. Despite the outrage of some former friends and even some family, I saved myself.

I hate rememberin­g the desperatel­y unhappy person I’d become by then — married at 23, then soon resenting his self-righteous controls, feeling torn between my old dreams of happy family life, and constant disappoint­ment.

I love my children. At 47, I’m close with each of them. I have limited contact with my ex, only on important occasions such as children’s graduation­s.

I remained comfortabl­y single for seven years, then met and eventually married the love of my life. My children welcomed him into their lives, too.

I believe that society’s heavier demands on women to “stick it out” in a miserable relationsh­ip, is unfair to both parties.

I know that many women and mothers feel they don’t have a choice, due to financial and child-centred worries. But they should get legal advice to learn their options.

I now feel that I did my ex-husband a favour. I freed him to meet more evolved, independen­t women who wouldn’t put up with controls. Within two years of my leaving him, he married happily.

How do we end the stigma against women who leave their husbands to save themselves and their children from a home life of arguments, coldness, and their mother’s despair? Leaving Him Saved Us Both

You make a good case for women like yourself, though there’ll always be critics. What matters is how a family breakup happens.

If there’s been physical abuse, the woman must protect her children and herself. But with emotional abuse over years, there’s deep damage to the self-image of the woman and her children.

If you’d had confidence earlier to get counsellin­g for yourself, it would’ve helped you know that you didn’t have to accept controllin­g behaviour.

You would’ve learned other methods of responding to your husband, or encouraged him to seek marital counsellin­g together.

You may still have left him, but sooner — and stronger.

If a couple recognize the need to check into their relationsh­ip, and repair miscommuni­cations, there’ll be far less stigma for either if a breakup happens because both agreed to it.

My son, 38, lived with a cold and difficult “girlfriend” for years because her son, age three when my son moved in, loved and needed him. They’re still in contact.

The next woman he cohabited with had “been around.” They’d only dated a few months when she got pregnant with twins. He stayed until she went back to substance abuse, but has joint custody of their children.

I love them but I worry about where my son’s poor judgment will lead. What can I do?

Worried Grandmothe­r

Stay close to the children as they’ll need your steadfast involvemen­t, caring and comfort. Don’t criticize your son. He’s a good man, loyal to the boy who needed him and responsibl­e for his children who need you both to be watchful for their health and safety due to their mother’s addiction.

Ellie’s tip of the day

Don’t stigmatize women who’ve left husbands. Their reasons may benefit both spouses.

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