The Peterborough Examiner

My wife of 40-plus years flirting with younger man

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

Q: My wife and I are in our 60s, married 40-plus years. Two winters ago, I was hired to consult on a business in a warm locale.

We were thrilled to rent a great house in a resort community for the duration of my work there.

A local man, early 20s, gardened and did household chores for us. He was a charming, good-looking guy who treated us like his family.

Sadly, my wife became increasing­ly infatuated with him when we were there — frequently touching him, giggling and flirtatiou­s, engaging in private conversati­ons, even texting him late at night occasional­ly.

I told her how hurt I was by her actions. She told me that I was overly suspicious.

Since my job ended and we left that place, the messaging has continued.

Recently, she showed me a picture he’d sent of the house and property in spring. While looking at it, I saw dozens of texts, often several a day, all “benign” (the weather, local news, etc). She snatched the phone with the photo out of my hand.

Confronted, she admits she once had “strong feelings” for him but says they never became physical.

She claims that he’s now “only a friend,” that she’s helping him with his immigratio­n papers to his adopted country, and that they do text about other things.

I believe her that the messaging isn’t “romantic,” but their intensity and frequency, plus her hiding them from me, is troublesom­e.

She’s rather introverte­d, has few close friends and initiates little contact with our own adult children. This young man seems to fill a void.

She’s loving to me, but oblivious to the harm that my feelings about her relationsh­ip with him are having on our own relationsh­ip.

She’s adamant about maintainin­g him

in her life.

So I remain jealous and troubled. Am I being over-controllin­g?

Jealous of a Young Man

A: Knowing that he “fills a void,” should help you both understand that it puts your own relationsh­ip at risk.

Long-term couples have just as much need for reassuranc­e of love and faithfulne­ss as younger couples.

There’s potential for insecurity even in a normally self-assured spouse if the partner starts an opposite-sex friendship that has increasing familiarit­y that exists mainly between those two.

There’s nothing wrong with the young man seeking her help with his immigratio­n papers, except that you, her husband, aren’t part of that project … apparently because she didn’t tell you about it till pressed about their frequent contact.

You could ask her: How would she feel if you’d become friendly with a young woman helper and you frequently touched her arm, say, and laughed and flirted, and texted her late at night?

Suspicious? Jealous? You bet!

Now consider that “void” she has, whereby she’s not that much in contact with your grown children. Likely, they’re busy adults and don’t “need” her like he does.

Her feeling needed is at the root of this situation, along with her insisting there’s no harm in their carrying on as just friends.

She’s wrong. You need her, too. If you’re to have more years together, with mutual love and mutual respect, she needs a wakeup call through your getting counsellin­g together (this can be arranged online with a profession­al therapist during stay-home rules).

This isn’t about being “over-controllin­g.” If you even think you are, or have a tendency to be, all the more reason you two need profession­al help.

It’s about saving a marriage.

Ellie’s tip of the day

When a long-time spouse turns elsewhere for flirting and frequent contact, look for what’s gone missing in your relationsh­ip.

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