Waterloo Region Record

Don’t disclose hookup with your instructor’s husband

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

Q: Help! I joined an online art class and enjoy the instructor’s teaching. She uses her maiden name, so I only just realized through a reference she made that I slept with her husband once, three years ago.

I’d just been dumped by my boyfriend, went to a bar seeking a hookup, and swiped back to a stranger. I never saw him again. Should I tell her? She should know that he cheated then and may still be cheating.

Disgusted

A: She’s not a close friend. She may already know that he cheats or did. They may’ve got past it. Find another art teacher.

Q: My son and his fiancée recently parted ways. We loved his fiancée and her family. There were several visits, and we were all connected on social media.

Today, I wished a member of my son’s ex-fiancée’s family a happy birthday. I’m wondering if this is appropriat­e. There doesn’t seem to be any animosity.

Is it healthier to cut all ties? How do we do this without offending?

My son doesn’t communicat­e well with us so I’m somewhat in a vacuum when it comes to how the other family’s feeling. This was a threeyear relationsh­ip, and we loved this young woman and her family.

Confused Over Son’s Breakup

A: Tell your son, by phone or email, that as parents you support him personally in his recent breakup. You haven’t said or don’t know why the couple parted ways, so he may be very hurt about it and appreciate your support or is the one who ended it.

Then ask for his thoughts on your own confusion about how to handle the three-year relationsh­ip that was built between you and the young woman and her family.

Be aware that he may be hurt, angry or have privacy issues regarding why he doesn’t want to discuss this. If so, it’s likely wiser for you and better for your own parent-son relationsh­ip to lessen your outreach to his ex and her relatives.

Meanwhile, your recent birthday wish was well meant and undoubtedl­y accepted as such. And hopefully, a simple note to his fiancée can help ease the situation. Tell her that you and your husband loved getting to know her and wish her all the best for her future.

If you feel moved to write her parents, keep it equally simple: You very much enjoyed getting to know them over these past years, and for that reason and your high regard for their daughter, you’re sorry about the breakup and wiszh all their family well for the future.

Feedback Regarding the woman ghosted by her boyfriend of 18 months after she asked him where he thought their relationsh­ip was going (Feb. 15):

Reader: “I ghosted a former on-andoff lover of almost 14 years because it was the only way I could move on with my life.

“Every time that I'd break up with him, he'd manage to get back in my life. Your tip-of-the-day was about people who ghost their former lover being ‘emotionall­y cold and distanced despite your pain.’

“But my situation with this man was very different. I’m not emotionall­y cold/distanced, I needed to protect myself from his toxicity.

“I was the one in pain. That was four years ago and I’m pain-free now.”

Ellie: Yes, your situation was different from the one in that day’s column which is what my “tip” was referencin­g. Good for you in this case for extricatin­g yourself from a serial on-off lover.

Ellie’s tip of the day

If you know someone who’s cheated, examine why you’re planning to expose them.

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