Toronto Star

My best friend also fell for my former flame

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

Q: I’m a happily married man, age 36, with a good job, a wife I love, and three great youngsters. But I’m very sad and disturbed after hearing of the death of my first serious girlfriend and the reaction of my former best guy friend.

We met in university, the three of us from different countries, all good students with big dreams for our futures.

I felt so lucky back then to have met and connected with my girlfriend. I was also glad to be close with my buddy who was very smart and seemed destined for a big role in whatever field he’d choose.

When we graduated, we all went separate ways for the necessary task of getting work which would ultimately affect our deciding where we’d each settle. As expected, we landed in three different countries again, and so, over time, kept contact less and less.

I visited my girlfriend once after a couple of years, and still felt close to her based on our shared memories. But I had recently started to date my now-wife.

Learning from a former classmate who kept track of us all, that my dear friend has died suddenly from a ruptured brain aneurysm, has disrupted my world. I told my wife all about her, and she’s very understand­ing of my sadness.

But what’s made this news even harder to bear, is that my once-best friend wrote for our class newsletter that my girlfriend had been his great love!

How could he have gone behind my back to be with her romantical­ly? She and I were a known twosome. He’s the one who went on to live in several other countries over years, climbing his success ladder. They were never openly a couple.

Now I’m double-shattered, by her tragically early death, and his hidden poaching of the girl he knew I cared about so deeply.

Do I call him out on this? Or end any further contact?

Shattered and Sorrowful

A: Grief brings back many memories and sometimes revelation­s you weren’t expecting, all of which are part of the sorrow you’re feeling.

The sudden passing of your girlfriend from the happily remembered days of university bonding is very sad. You’re fortunate to have an empathetic wife for support and children for distractio­n.

While the informatio­n from your onceclose male friend was disturbing, he apparently didn’t say that he and your girlfriend were ever lovers. She may have been his ideal or fantasy love, while he respected that you and she were openly together.

It’s shock and heartache that are disturbing your thoughts. Don’t dwell on speculatio­n. All three of you went separate ways.

Your grief will ease over time. Keep the happy memories of that past period and gain strength from the full and rewarding life you now have.

FEEDBACK: Regarding the man suffering from painful triggered memories (Aug. 2):

Reader: “Besides getting profession­al help, he should tackle the issues by doing self-research in subjects applicable to him, e.g., psychology, psychiatry, law and health.

“It’ll enable him to ask more directed, pertinent questions during his profession­al help sessions.

“I was around his age when I became more educated in employment law. I too had ‘allowed’ myself to be bullied in the workplace. The first time I stood up to the bullying it was extremely stressful with much anxiety.

“But when the ‘bully’ and the employer received the letter from my lawyer I was suddenly commanding new respect and had gained much self-confidence.”

Ellie’s tip of the day

Every source of grief is hurtful. Focus on the strength and joys you have in the present.

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