We know infidelity – lust and love – can all feel intoxicating. It’s called dopamine. And that is what is released and exists in very high levels during new lust. And it’s very addictive. But is it really the case? Does this really cause infidelity? Some say that to make a relationship work, couples need to communicate. When the communication breaks down, and then the passion and the intimacy disappears for whatever reason, then that’s when the trouble starts.
In this video, passersby film 2 girls beating another, while a man tries to stop them. Apparently, the girl sitting on the pavement with her head down was the mistress of the man, and the 2 girls were his wife and daughter. As they slapped and kicked the woman, the man was the only one trying to stop them, all other people at the scene simply looked on.
At one point, the man even carried the mistress and tried to save her from the two enraged women. Netizens are divided about the video. Some say that the two women should have not resorted to violence, and some say that the mistress deserves to be treated that way.
The sad truth is: the mistress is the one that’s sitting at home lonely in emotional trauma. But the husband’s actually going home a happier, brighter man.