The Norwalk Hour

Ex-husband wants to remain friends

- Amy Dickinson Ask Amy, P.O. Box 194, Freeville, NY 13068. e-mail: askamy@tribune.com

Dear Amy: For several years I had been unhappy with my husband’s defensiven­ess and the hair trigger irritabili­ty he had displayed since our younger days (we are both in our early 70s), but I decided to stick with him.

He announced that he was going to start “dating.” He told me that in fact he had already signed up for an online matching site.

I told him that in that case I wanted a divorce, and no I wasn’t interested in working on salvaging the marriage.

To my surprise, he met someone almost immediatel­y, and yet still expected me to live cordially with him. He acted as if this was his right.

The situation was stressful, and I wanted him to leave the home. After six months, he finally moved out.

The divorce was finalized recently and now he expects me to be his friend, which I have no intention of doing.

Our adult children feel distant from him for their own reasons.

Now he feels lonely and blames me for the situation.

I’m happier being on my own, but feel confused about how to have stronger boundaries, even though he had no empathy for me, especially during the months when he refused to move out.

Do I have any responsibi­lity toward him?

Am I too empathetic? I feel like a fool.

Foolish

Dear Foolish: Your divorce severed your legal and emotional obligation­s toward your ex-husband. If this is truly what you want, then you certainly have the right to cut all ties with him.

The most urgent and important reason for couples to maintain a cordial relationsh­ip with one another post-divorce is to protect the emotional connection with the children you share.

Your children are adults, and they can try to maintain their own emotional ties with their father, moving forward.

Your ex-husband’s loneliness is his own burden to manage.

Your job now is to decide on what you want. You could convey your boundaries by explaining them (“I gave this relationsh­ip my all, for many years. Now I’m done,”) and then adhering to these boundaries by refusing to be manipulate­d.

In time, you two may relax into a friendlier relationsh­ip, but your own role in any relationsh­ip with him will be up to you.

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