A series of conversations between the various people affected by a cheating spouse, and the fall-out from it.
These are all individual and the events are not connected to any other in the series.
When a conversation is finished, so is that story.
Not an easy conversation for a father to have with his son about the actions of three cheating women, especially when one of them is the boy's mother. Not easy at all.
If a man cheats on his wife, is it always simply that old cliche that a man is just a dog walking on his hind legs? What if it isn't about sex? And how do the ramifications of that affect their closest friends who are in a similar life?
A simple man comes home early to find a strange car in his driveway... An old trope on the cheating wife sydrome, but one with a very strange twist, and a definite sting in the tail.
A simple high-school teacher is cheated on by his wife. A simple story that happens every day somewhere in the world. But what do you tell those around you about what happened and why? And how do you turn the experience into something of value to others?
"All the world's a stage." It's been said so often it's a cliche. But for one actor, his life, on-stage and off, had become eerily similar to a Shakespearean drama of the most melodramatic kind. [Exit stage left to the story...]
Love in the time of the plague - a title which comes from the time of the Black Death. This is not that. But it is about love and separation in the time of the Corona Virus.
Another difficult conversation, although in this case, what turns out to be a different conversation between six people, and which turns out to be pretty one-sided in the end.
Most people have cheated, been cheated on, or both, at some stage in their lives. How they handle the aftermath often has a commonality to it, enough that we can usually recognise the actions and emotions. Sometimes having a conversation or reading a story can help...
Why would a loving wife change during a weekend with her schoolfriends, and what would make her decide her husband was inferior, if another man was not involved in the decision?
Trusting someone you love is an automatic response, isn't it? You don't have to earn that trust first, do you? Love is one of the vital components of every marriage, isn't it? Well, isn't it?