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Son wants to cure father of serial infidelity

Adapted from a recent online discussion. Question: I'm wondering what is the best way to confront my father about his behavior with respect to women. I'm 25, the eldest of my father's five children. My sister and I have the same mother, who left him about 20 years ago. His actions precipitated it. He remarried and had a son, now 13, whom I love and know well.

Adapted from a recent online discussion.

Question: I'm wondering what is the best way to confront my father about his behavior with respect to women. I'm 25, the eldest of my father's five children. My sister and I have the same mother, who left him about 20 years ago. His actions precipitated it. He remarried and had a son, now 13, whom I love and know well.

In 2015, my father revealed he had a 4-year-old child with a mistress. This was obviously devastating to my stepmother, but she was extremely mature and allowed the child (but not the mistress) to visit and spend time with his sibling. A year later, my father revealed he has a year-old child with the same mistress, meaning he knew about the second when he revealed the first. This was too much, and now my father and stepmother are careering toward divorce. My stepmother is an intelligent and successful woman who deserves better.

My worry is that he will simply find another woman and do the same things again. I feel compelled to try to prevent this. How do I help him change?

Answer: Prevention and "helping him change" are different things.

You can help prevent a repeat, if you so choose, by being honest when you meet women he dates. It wouldn't be a boundary violation to inquire, in friendly, get-to-know-you conversation, whether she has met all five of his kids and their three mothers.

Your impulse to "help him change," though, sets off boundary alarms. Has he said he wanted to change? Asked for your help?

You have standing, always, to say how you feel. You can tell your dad you're embarrassed/disappointed by his actions. You can tell your stepmother she has your support, and make the effort to be present for your other siblings.

You can also distance yourself from your father based on his lousy behavior.

Again - there are productive, healthy options here. Jumping in to try to fix your father isn't one of them.

Follow-up: I know he wants to change because he told me so directly. He went to marriage counseling, but only in an attempt to win back my stepmother, which didn't work, so he stopped immediately. When he originally revealed his infidelities, he offered rationalizations that his marriage had been rocky.

Neither of us particularly likes therapy/counseling as a solution. What can I do to help him realize the goal of changing?

Reply: Do not make him your project. He is his own project.

One way you can help appropriately is to call B.S. on his excuses; if he really wants to change, he needs to own his frailties in full. That means counseling to fix himself rather than salvage his status quo. That means saying he cheated because he lacked the courage and maturity to face his failing marriage and used the estrangement as permission for self-indulgence.

How you feel about therapy is irrelevant. You are you; he is he. If you don't see the clear border there, rethink your aversion to therapy.

Furthermore, if a skilled pro can help your father recognize that he is making a child's decisions with a man's body, don't stand in the way.

tellme@washpost.com.

Chat with Carolyn Hax online at noon Fridays at www.washingtonpost.com.