Toronto Star

I’m divorced. Will I find a real partner?

- ELLIE ADVICE and based in Toronto. Send your relationsh­ip questions via email: ellie@thestar.ca.

Q: I was married for 22 years when I finally had the certainty and courage to tell my husband we should go our separate ways.

He now tells everyone I walked out on him. It’s not true. I’d opened up to him over the previous five years about our marriage needing a reboot.

He went with me to counsellin­g just once, then he said all I had to do was go golfing with him so we’d have a common interest ... his interest.

He was a good father to our two children ... again, mostly when they joined him in the things he liked to do ... sports and watching TV. Otherwise, outside of dinnertime at home, he was working late, or out with his buddies, or arranging our getting together weekly with friends.

There’s wasn’t much alone time for us as a couple. Our sex life was sporadic and often one-sided.

To be fair, I began finding my own place in all this by getting a job after spending six years at home with our children until they started nursery school. At work, alongside colleagues — some from very different and interestin­g background­s — I gained self-confidence as a person. I’d return home to the family full of stories about my day.

It brought a new focus to the dinner table where I could talk about other people’s lives of struggles and successes, and encourage my children to contemplat­e a bigger world than they yet knew.

But my husband was never interested in my stories. He’d always interrupt with what he thought was a joke.

Four years after my insisting that we divorce, I know I made the right choice. I’m still working, have a wide circle of interestin­g friends and am currently dating a nice man but with no immediate plans to become a serious couple. I feel very happy with my current life.

Our now adult children, ages 21 and 20, are both in university. They still see their father, who remarried the year after our divorce.

My question: Have I made myself so independen­t that I’ll always distrust the possibilit­y of having a real partnershi­p along with a romantic relationsh­ip?

Also, I’m so afraid of becoming another man’s sidekick taking care of his needs from old habit. As I age past my current 43 years, how do I also avoid becoming some equally older man’s “nurse or purse?”

Independen­t and Wary

A: You’ve already shown the inner strength and determinat­ion to reshape your life as you wish. Your story’s inspiratio­nal to those who feel “stuck” in a life slot that doesn’t reflect their wider abilities and possibilit­ies.

Independen­ce should be helping you stay wiser and more thoughtful about your choices, not mired in distrust from your past. Also, at 43, you have years before you and a potential partner will be seniors. Meanwhile, take care of your health and organize/secure your finances now.

Reader’s commentary regarding the wife who criticizes her husband’s weight in front of friends (Nov. 1):

“Criticizin­g physical appearance in front of others is completely unacceptab­le in any healthy marriage. The weight problem is a different and secondary issue for this man.

“He should confirm the marital ground rules with his wife!

“Happily married spouses trust each other to have their back. And they communicat­e on sensitive topics directly, not as entertainm­ent at a dinner party.

“This covers everything from stretch marks to hairy back, weight, baldness and sexual performanc­e.

“(Similarly, he doesn’t need to critique his own body with friends.)”

Ellie’s tip of the day

Independen­ce and self-realizatio­n are proud achievemen­ts. Don’t cloud it with unnecessar­y worries and distrust.

Ellie Tesher is an advice columnist for the Star

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