Your wife trust you....?
By noorasie
@noorasie (686)
Pakistan
5 responses
@imhzgrlnotu (59)
• United States
25 Sep 06
i trust my boyfriend for the most part...but i dont trust females.
1 person likes this
@achilles7 (1276)
• India
19 Nov 06
I think that my wife trusts me.I love her and trust.She is my dearest person.We are made for each other.
@flowerchilde (12529)
• United States
17 Dec 06
I'm thinking sometimes a man has a tendency to not pay much attention to their girlfirend or wife.. I guess she's old news or something, then yes, of course the gal or wife will be jelous and insecure because he has given her no reason to feeL that he is crazy about her to the point no other woman is of interest, romantically, to him.
@mridig (202)
• India
8 Jan 07
Jealousy typically refers to the thoughts, feelings, and behaviors that occur when a person believes a valued relationship is being threatened by a rival. The word jealousy stems from the French jalousie, formed from jaloux (jealous), and further from Low Latin zelosus (full of zeal), and from the Greek word for "ardour, zeal" (with a root connoting "to boil, ferment"; or "yeast").
Jealousy is a familiar experience in human relationships. It has been reported in every culture and in many forms where researchers have looked. [1] [2] [3] It has been observed in infants as young as 5-6 months old and in adults over 65 years old. [4] [5] [6] [7]
It has been an enduring topic of interest for scientists, artists, and theologians. Psychologists have proposed several models of the processes underlying jealousy and have identified individual differences that influence the expression of jealousy. Sociologists have demonstrated that cultural beliefs and values play an important role in determining what triggers jealousy and what constitutes socially acceptable expressions of jealousy. Biologists have identified factors that may unconsciously influence the expression of jealousy. Artists have explored the theme of jealousy in photographs, paintings, movies, songs, plays, poems, and books. Theologians have offered religious views of jealousy based on the scriptures of their respective faiths. Despite its familiarity, however, people define jealousy in different ways. Some even mislabel it as being protective of something or someone, when the fact is, it's really simply possessive jealousy itself; and many feel they don't possess effective strategies for coping with this form of jealousy. [8]