Toronto Star

How wife should handle new email from old flame

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

Q: My wife received an email yesterday from a man she knew 20 years ago before we met and married. He wanted to reconnect. She showed me the email and confessed that she’d had “a brief fling” with him when she was single.

I trust my wife and she trusts me. We’re both busy with our children, work, friends and travel.

We don’t read each other’s emails or check each other’s phones. We have a close, happy, emotionall­y and sexually satisfying relationsh­ip.

I’m not naive, yet I find it curious that a man would reach out like this (and I’m aware that some women also do this) from a two-decades’ absence of contact, to suggest they connect again.

To talk about what? Her entire life, including work, interests, physical pursuits, etc. have all changed and progressed. Does he want to be “friends” and also meet me? Or is he trying to light a spark to see if he can create a flame? Then I think, maybe he’s a man who’s on his own, possibly lost his partner and lonely, reaching out to someone he once thought was a good person. BUT they had a “fling” way back then and, to me, that’s territory you don’t cross again out of nowhere. What do you think she should do … not respond? Tell him she’s happily married? Ask what it’s about and bring me along? The Husband

A: Blame the internet, which has brought us all the possibilit­y of some great new connection­s and the ease to pursue some old ones, even if they could cause problems.

Then, be pleased that your wife is obviously worthy of your trust. She told you about the email. She also revealed the background informatio­n despite knowing that it would cause a reaction of concern. No need for worry. Yes, he may’ve been lonely and reaching out to someone he remembered as a nice person. There’s no suggestion of anything more. He doesn’t even ask to meet, leaving it open for her to say whether she’s available.

She need only respond that she’s very busy with her marriage, children and work and hopes his life is happy too. What do readers think? Q: My wife and I hadn’t yet made our marriage official with a paid dowry, according to our custom.

During my university studies, she pushed for marriage, which I accepted, because I loved her.

She/her family supported me financiall­y. When I graduated, I got a job in town and we agreed that she’d stay separately at home, managing investment­s. We had a baby daughter and every Friday I visit them. Shocking news reached me that she’s cheating. She cried and begged for forgivenes­s. She admitted (cheating) and blamed Satan. I got stressed and went to bars.

I choose to look for another woman, but I love my daughter dearly. And my wife writes hundreds of apologetic texts. What can I do? Shocked and Stressed A: Whether it’s a woman or man who cheats, the heartache it causes the innocent partner is difficult to bear.

Yet, with a child affected, it’s worth looking at all options. Start with getting couples’ counsellin­g to find out what’s behind “Satan” as her excuse. Was living apart a poor decision? Was she overwhelme­d with a new baby and her financial responsibi­lities? Do you two still have a love that can be renewed through explanatio­ns from her and forgivenes­s from you? If yes, therapy may help renew your relationsh­ip. Ellie’s tip of the day Heard from a past fling? Respond that you’re busy.

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