Welland Tribune e-edition

Trust, understanding key to relationship

ELLIE ADVICE ELLIE TESHER AND LISI TESHER ARE ADVICE COLUMNISTS FOR THE STAR AND BASED IN TORONTO. SEND YOUR RELATIONSHIP QUESTIONS VIA EMAIL: ELLIE@THESTAR.CA.

Q I’ve written to you previously about an off-on relationship that left me devastated. We’re both in our 60s and met on a seniors’ dating site. He’s healthy, hardy, loves camping/canoeing/fishing. I’d never done any of that. He dumped me.

But, due to our incredible chemistry, he kept coming back to me and I always accepted him.

In between, I dated some wonderful men who wanted to be my partner. But, finally, my love and I reunited this past spring. Though I love him passionately, there’ll be no more declarations of undying love from me. I now realize that he broke up with me because I was more passionate about him than he was about me. And he didn’t want me getting hurt. I was in love from “first sight,” which had never happened to me before.

We’re now happy together and I’m working at staying calm, making no demands on him, not even about commitment.

It’s a gift to have this incredible chemistry at our ages. He’s honest and would never cheat on me. I don’t ever want to be with anyone else. It isn’t merely physical, because the intimacy wouldn’t work for me if I didn’t love/appreciate the entire person. He’s my intellectual equal, sensitive, kind and caring, and has survived many of the same struggles as me. He’s told me he loves me, and has only loved one other woman, his very first love, many years ago.

You, Ellie, have helped me immeasurably regarding this relationship.

Grateful

A You’ve developed the self-respect needed to face this relationship realistically: Both passionate sexually, with you overwhelmed by “first” deep love, and he realistically wary of hurting you.

Mutual chemistry is luck. But you needed personal self-assurance and mutual trust.

You’ve come a long way in understanding yourself, and in respecting this man rather than trying to “win” him.

A happy future now depends on each of you maintaining an enduring commitment to the other.

Reader’s Commentary Regarding the concerned grandmother of a child exposed to a convicted pedophile who calls himself “Grandpa” (July 12):

“I agree that becoming more informed is crucial, but, at this point, the safety of this child is paramount.

“As a very senior nurse who’s worked in many departments of hospitals including emergency departments, pediatric units including child mental health units and in adult mental health, this letter gave me chills with every alarm bell ringing.

“During my career, I’ve witnessed the destruction and sometimes death of children at the hands of pedophiles.

“To hold a dying six-month-old infant who was so sexually traumatized that doing ‘all we could do’ was simply not enough — that kind of experience reduces a team of doctors and nurses because we could not save an innocent.

“The letter writer doesn’t say if this person is on the sex offender’s registry. Regardless, this concerned grandmother needs to contact police IMMEDIATELY. The child is being groomed, and requires immediate protection from this man. The fact he’s ‘always taking photos’ (a red flag), is cause for real concern and may even be a criminal offence for him (depending upon his release conditions).

“The daughter’s partner is to be commended for trying to protect this little boy and requires all the family support he can receive.

“If you ever make exceptions to your rules of anonymity (and have a contact number), please consider helping this vulnerable child.” Ellie’s tip of the day

Finding passion in senior years is a gift. Handle it with care and build respectful boundaries into a thriving relationship.

ARTS & LIFE

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2022-08-12T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-08-12T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://wellandtribune.pressreader.com/article/281698323525986

Toronto Star Newspapers Limited