
"Some people need constant reassurance that they are attractive, which is why they feel compelled to flirt. Their insecurity is a bottomless pit. This is destructive when it affects partners and spouses. I'm glad you finally realized that the problem wasn't you and found the strength to leave. You deserve your happy ending, and I know you make your current husband as happy as he makes you."
"As a baby boomer and an amateur genealogist, I am continually frustrated by the lack of interest my grandchildren's generation seems to have in learning about their family history particularly mine. Rather than ask about what life was like when I grew up in the 1950s and '60s, they seem fixated on their own lives and show little interest in anyone or anything else."
One writer left a 25-year marriage after a husband's persistent flirting made her feel inadequate; after divorce she remarried a man who deeply values her. The writer urges others hurt by partners' flirting to leave immediately. A response explains that chronic flirting often stems from deep insecurity and damages partners' self-worth, commending the woman's decision to leave and affirming she deserves happiness. Another writer, a baby boomer and amateur genealogist, expresses frustration that grandchildren show little interest in family history, asking for suggestions to encourage their engagement and preserve ancestral stories.
Read at www.mercurynews.com
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