Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Husband's online flirting a betrayal of marriage

- Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column.

The following column was originally published in 2017.

Dear Annie: A few months ago, my husband mentioned that he'd responded to an email from a girl he used to know. I didn't think much about it, but then I saw him composing an email, and every time I walked near him, he shielded it from me. He started spending more time on the computer, and I got curious. Finally, I checked his account and saw that he and this girl had been correspond­ing every day. There was nothing sexual, but there was a lot of flirting.

I confronted my husband, and he insisted it was all innocent, that they were only friends and he had no intention of taking things any further. We talked about it, and I let him know how hurt I was. I said this is how affairs start. He promised there would be no more emails. I told him that would go a long way toward helping me to forgive and forget.

I thought he understood, but tonight he showed me an email he was sending her. I guess he thinks that makes it OK. But, Annie, he promised he would stop communicat­ing with her. I cannot understand why he would keep emailing when he knows how much it upsets me — unless he has feelings for her.

I want to trust him again, but how can I when he keeps doing this? I have loved him for 40 years and don't want to lose him, but I don't think I can live with this situation.

Desperate Housewife

Dear Desperate: Your husband doesn't understand that this is a betrayal of your marriage. And although he may not have any real feelings for this woman, he sounds mildly infatuated, and the correspond­ence boosts his ego. He enjoys the flirting and wants it to continue. First, try revving up the action at home so your husband appreciate­s what he has. He needs more flirtatiou­s attention from you. Then tell him the emailing needs to stop, because the next step is marriage counsellin­g.

Dear Annie: Some time ago, I attended an event at a friend's church. There was an empty seat at our table, so a solo man was seated with us. He seemed agreeable until he was finished eating. Then he took a flosser out of his pocket and proceeded to clean his teeth at the table. I almost threw up.

Would it have been acceptable for me to ask him to please go to the restroom to perform that ritual?

If not, how else might I have handled it?

Turned Stomach

Dear Stomach: People are often inappropri­ate in public and either don't realize or don't care that others find it unappetizi­ng. It would have been fine to say with a slight grimace, “Would you mind flossing in the restroom? It's such a private activity, and some of us have sensitive stomachs.” Of course, there is no guarantee that he would listen.

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