
Itās obvious to avoid people who have betrayed you and sucked away the love you once felt, but sometimes there are reasons to pause before walking back into the arms of someone who clearly isnāt your true love. Todayās letter comes from a woman who calls herself Trish. She writes: Hi Anna ā Iām turning to you for guidance about whether I should try to reconcile with my sonās father. We share more than a decade of history, so Iāll do my best to condense it. Okay, Iāve got my coloured pencil ready to circle parts I want to revisit, but hereās the story of whatās been happening between me and my ex. A bit about my background: my mother died in 2009. She was an alcoholic who also misused pills, though she wasnāt violent. She divorced my dad when I was sixteen and never remarried. My dad has married two other times since then; he runs a business, so although he was around, work often pulled him away. I spent most of my childhood with my mom, and when the marriage dissolved and addiction took hold, my sisters and I sometimes found ourselves acting as her caretakers. There were terrifying moments when she passed out with a lit cigarette in her hand or left food cooking on the stove; once she passed out at the wheel and crashed into a telephone pole, landing in the ICU. About a year before she died, I met the father of my son. That began roughly sixteen years ago. Our relationship started as friends-with-benefits; he didnāt even call me his girlfriend until a couple of years in. I lacked a strong sense of self-worth back then, though I didnāt see it clearly. He was present during the period around my momās death, offering emotional support and reliability when I needed it, and I fell in love and became determined to secure a commitment from him. After two years we finally had a label ā boyfriend and girlfriend ā but I started sensing he might be unfaithful for several reasons: magazines belonging to another woman hidden under his bed, furtive phone behavior, phones always on silent, taking calls where I couldnāt hear. My gut told me he was cheating, yet he was the avoidant type who would stonewall and shut down whenever I questioned him. He gaslit me, and I gaslit myself, convincing myself I was just being insecure. Over time I grew passive because I wanted to keep the peace and hated his shutdowns, but my suspicions festered and I began sneaking around to uncover what I couldnāt get from him. We had our son ten years ago; earlier that year weād moved in together when we found out I was pregnant. Two years after that I discovered proof he was having an affair with a married coworker ā emails, photos, videos of them in the act. It was utterly devastating: my idea of marriage and a stable family was shattered. To make a long story somewhat shorter, I moved out and ended the relationship, then moved back several months later after we tried therapy and he started attending church with me. I wanted to believe we could fix things. We were never married ā I wanted marriage, but he remained indecisive. Two years later nothing had improved, so I left again. I didnāt have hard proof this time, but his habit of shutting down continued when I raised his sneaky behaviours, like taking phone calls in the basement at four a.m. I had become someone I didnāt recognize ā insecure, anxious ā and I hated that person. I even found myself trying to eavesdrop through a floor vent; thatās when I knew I had to go. I moved out in 2018 after seeing him texting his ex and after noticing how Iād changed. Since then I havenāt looked back. In total I moved out twice ā the moves were about eight years ago and six years ago ā and over the years heās tried several times to get me to come back. Weāve both been in and out of therapy. He had a rough childhood too, marked by abandonment and rejection from his parents, and eventually he began to seek help for those wounds. I truly loved him and still love him in a different way now ā more like family love than romantic love. Iāve listened to many of your podcasts and similar shows over the past couple of years to help me move forward. Last year he married a younger woman he met at work and divorced her eight months later. That marriage reopened a fresh wound: after a decade together and a child, I wasnāt seen as marriage material, yet he married someone else without hesitation. That stung and deepened my doubts about my own worth. While he was with that woman he told me he still loved me and wanted our family back; it felt like a repeating pattern ā reaching out to an ex while still with someone else. I know I have my own pattern, too: being drawn to unavailable men. For the past two years Iāve been single and celibate after realizing Iād become fearfully avoidant, mainly attracted to long-distance relationships that had no future. Over two years of celibacy Iāve found emotional and financial stability; my home is calm, though Iām lonely. Iāll be 44 in a few months and Iām losing hope that Iāll meet a healthy, available partner. Sometimes I wonder if I should take him back for our sonās sake: heās available now and insists he wants to try again. I no longer feel romantic attraction toward him after everything that happened, and I carry real PTSD about him, so even imagining getting back together makes me feel a bit depressed. He accuses me of being the avoidant one and calls me unrealistic for wanting a relationship that isnāt tainted by a toxic past. Is that what mature love looks like? Am I holding out for something that doesnāt exist? I donāt want to settle, but I also donāt want to die alone like my mother did after her divorce. Iām filled with fears and running low on hope. I want hope that isnāt limerent ā I donāt want to delude myself or be deceived by someone else ā but I still question whether Iāve become avoidant. Right now I feel numb and confused about my next step. I hope you can help. Thatās from Trish. Okay, Trish ā I hear you. You didnāt say much about your child, but Iām guessing heās ten now, and all of this is wrapped up in deciding whether the parents should try to reunite. Iām curious: would your son genuinely benefit from having his father more fully present? Does he currently have a relationship with him? I hope so. Itās not necessary for a marriage to be restored in order for a child to have both parents in their life. To recap some of what you told me: you had a difficult childhood with a mother who battled alcoholism and pills, a divorce at 16, no remarriage from your mom, and a father who remarried twice and was often preoccupied with work. You spent much of your time with your mother and ended up stepping into a caregiving role. That kind of early responsibility primes many of us to become what I sometimes call people-pleasers who adapt ourselves to unacceptable situations ā we learn to fit ourselves to unhealthy dynamics because, as children, we had to accommodate the chaos. That habit isnāt something you want to carry into adulthood, yet itās common for survivors of parental addiction to gravitate toward partners who are incapable of reliable love and fidelity. If youād grown up without traumatic experiences, those betrayals might have precipitated a quicker end to the relationship; with trauma, the pattern can drag on for years. You do have a child from this relationship, which complicates matters and makes everything about whatās best for your son. If you didnāt have a child, my clear recommendation would be to cut ties with this man: thereās a lot of entanglement and heās shown himself to be unreliable. Even now, when he comes wanting to reconcile, he does so after leaving someone else ā thatās a pattern. It may take years, if it happens at all, for him to change that habitual behaviour. Heās not a safe bet just because heās trying right now. If he had been the one true love of your life ā the only person with whom you felt entirely right ā then joint therapy and a committed effort might have been an option. But you say the feeling is gone, and youāre peaceful on your own. Iām a big supporter of staying together for children when itās healthy to do so, but not if it costs one parent their spirit. From what youāve described, being with him would likely hollow you out, and that deadness would be visible to your son and stressful for him. Your reaction to his stonewalling and deceit ā falling out of love with him ā is a rational response to being lied to and shut out. People who shut down emotionally are extremely difficult partners. Itās good you both tried therapy and that he sought help and even attended church with you; those efforts matter. Still, therapy, faith, or effort canāt recreate a feeling thatās been destroyed. Youāre not avoidant for wanting something sane and non-toxic; youāre making a reasonable choice. If anything, trauma can make someone hold on longer than they otherwise would, out of loyalty to the pattern they grew up with. One major reason people stay together is for the child ā raising a child alone is hard and lonely. When possible, a cooperative relationship between divorced parents, a functioning two-household family, is one of the best gifts you can give a child. That doesnāt require remarriage; itās about both parents providing loving homes and working together practically: coordinating who drives to sports, who pays for clothes, how holidays and vacations are shared. If your sonās father treats him well and can play a consistent, loving role in his life, maintaining a civil, cooperative friendship with him is in your childās interest. Yes, friendship between exes can complicate future romantic relationships, but the child-centered reason for keeping the other parent involved is strong. A word of caution about new partners: statistically, a stepparent can often be the person more likely, relative to others in a childās life, to cause harm ā not that abuse is the norm, but itās a risk to be mindful of. If you bring someone new into your sonās life, take your time. Donāt rush introductions; vet people carefully and set high standards. Make it clear that anyone you consider dating seriously should be willing to commit to being a positive step-parent and to foster a respectful, cooperative relationship with your childās father if your family arrangement requires it. A practical rule I recommend is to wait at least a year of steady dating before your children meet a new partner. Early on after divorce I made mistakes introducing kids to people who werenāt ready for that role; later, with my current husband, we waited a year and only then introduced him to the children when we were sure our relationship was serious and stable. That precaution really protects kids from the emotional whiplash of a parade of brief relationships. You also mentioned your own fatherās remarriages and the upheaval you experienced ā being moved away from a beloved parent ā and that underlines how important it is to think long term about whatās best for your childās emotional continuity. When exes cooperate, the practical details of parenting split across two households ā holidays, weekends, school events ā get handled more smoothly. Wobbly boundaries and confusion about whether youāre a couple again create drama, especially in adolescence, which you want to avoid if possible. Ultimately, you get to decide whatās right for you. If therapy or time leads you down a different path, thatās your choice. Wanting a relationship that isnāt scarred by a toxic history is not unrealistic. Mature love exists: some couples rebuild and grow stronger after hard times, while others never recover. Starting fresh with someone new can be a real blessing, too ā though it lacks the history that initially makes an old partner feel like home. Being in your early forties is not late; thereās plenty of life and opportunity ahead to build a meaningful partnership, even if it doesnāt happen until later. If you want to examine which of your own patterns might be holding you back ā for example, returning to partners who have treated you poorly ā that sort of behaviour is often self-defeating. Iāve put together a checklist of seventeen or eighteen common self-defeating behaviours people who grew up with abuse or neglect tend to adopt. You can review that list, identify which habits of yours are most important to change, and make one of them your practical project in the coming weeks: pick a behaviour to work on and take concrete steps to shift it. If youād like that checklist, itās available as a free download ā you can get it by clicking on the link right here. Take care, and see you very soon.





