Waterloo Region Record

How do I cheer up my balding partner?

- ELLIE ELLIE TESHER AND LISI TESHER ARE ADVICE COLUMNISTS FOR THE STAR SEND YOUR QUESTIONS VIA EMAIL: ELLIE@THESTAR.CA OR LISI@THESTAR.CA.

Q I’ve lived with my male partner, age 30, for six years. He cares excessivel­y about his physical appearance, attends a gym daily and enjoys its positive mental-health space.

He’s proud of his strength and good looks, having endured severe insecuriti­es as an obese teenager. I’m 28 and opposite to him. I didn’t fall in love with him for his looks. He admires that others’ physical appearance­s aren’t my interests. We relate to different struggles and help each other understand different people.

However, since experienci­ng sudden unexplaine­d hair loss, it’s all he thinks about. We don’t have any answers yet from doctors and blood work, which is stressful. I’ll love and adore him no matter what he looks like. But he finds my consoling efforts unempathet­ic. I can’t help him with research or contacts. I don’t want to draw attention to the problem or exacerbate anything, so I haven’t touched his hair or his face for physical comfort (his primary love language).

Sex doesn’t distract him much, though normally he’d be happy for that stress relief. We’re now both feeling isolated because I can’t comfort or support him. I’m watching him stressed, desperate and grieving. How do I help him feel loved and supported? I’m asking your readers the following: Could other men who have experience­d hair loss help me understand what support they would have wanted from their partner through something so distressin­g?

Missing empathy

A This writer’s outreach tomen with hair-loss experience shows the essence of what a relationsh­ip column can bring to light. I’ll publish the answers that emerge, as soon as they become available.

Q I heard that “speed dating” has made a comeback but the memory of what I experience­d in its earlier popularity was “too much too soon.”

I tried it just once, maybe 30 years ago. One guy (24, I was 21) looked up when I sat facing him and announced that I was his “perfect match.” I was both nervous and flattered. But I soon realized that I’d learned nothing about him. I foolishly gave him my cellphone number and he began texting me several times daily, saying what a great couple we were. He kept organizing dates with no considerat­ion to my personal schedule (I was finishing my university courses).

My school was in a different city, and he insisted on visiting me there. I insisted he stay at a hotel and told him I wasn’t in a serious relationsh­ip with him.

The whole episode was awkward and embarrassi­ng. It put me off dating for several years.

Not for me

A Yes, speed dating has returned, as described in a recent Star article by writer Olivia Bowden, who experience­d a renewed form of speed dating, which originated in the late 1990s. It worked for some then, but not for everyone, which Bowden soon discovered for herself about talking to strangers for just minutes, to discover if they clicked.

Yet, online dating enhanced many lives. I’ve personally known couples happily married for years after meeting online.

Unfortunat­ely, your experience years ago with an overzealou­s speed-dater put you off. He may have been genuinely attracted — or he wanted a connection with anyone who’d respond. Now that you’re in your 50s, I hope your personal life includes happy, loving connection­s.

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