Still in love with AP

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Choosing to be with an AP is not the sunshine and rainbows you think it will be. All the children involved will have strong emotional feelings about the affair, and this will be a major source of tension on your relationship. As the female, you will always be viewed as the home wrecking wh@@e, no matter how unfair that stigma actually is. 20 years from now, people will still be whispering about you, and you can pretend not to care but you will always, always be the villain in the story. Every family event, every gathering of relatives, people will be whispering about it and it is exhausting.

The life you imagine with him is not the life you will actually have. I don’t know why anyone would willingly choose this.


NP. This can be true but not always. I know 3 couples 20 years later and nothing you describe is true. Their lives are much better and there was not ongoing tension.


+1
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Just imagine him having sex with his wife. Legs over her head, doggy style snd the two of them falling asleep cradled in each other’s arms while he tells her how much he loves her and she’s the best thing that ever happened to him, stroking her cheek gently..

Imagine them at dinner earlier tonight, dressed to the nines, both turning heads as they walked in, feeding each other bites of their Michelin star plates. They look like movie stars together. You were so far below his level.

He gets up the next morning make her a latte and brings it to her in bed as he crawls back under the covers and puts his mouth between her legs.

Yeah you were a midlife bang that he hates himself for, almost losing everything he truly cared about. She never betrayed him and is too classy to ever be somebody’s side piece, a dirty nasty liar he could never trust. He has too much respect for her and never felt he was good enough.

You are delusional and aren’t close to the woman she is. You don’t know his mother’s name, his first love or what he is truly afraid of. Do you know the name of his best friend and how he died at 29? His deepest fears? The name of his childhood pet or the failure he felt when he couldn’t help his dad get off the bottle?

He didn’t confess any truths to you. You were somebody he needed to escape himself when he felt like sh@t and thought he wasn’t worthy. Thankfully he woke up, ended it and is making up for it every single day.

You are still delusional, living a lie and insecure.



You don't have sex much, I see. 1) legs over her head is NOT doggy style. 2) stroking the cheek gently? Where did you see this, on Lifetime?


You don’t know that you can be in many different positions in one session. Sounds like some of you are the ones with shitty sex lives. It’s called flipping over after.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:So now you are going to ruin his new relationship after helping him blow up his marriage? You suck, OP.


+100
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Just imagine him having sex with his wife. Legs over her head, doggy style snd the two of them falling asleep cradled in each other’s arms while he tells her how much he loves her and she’s the best thing that ever happened to him, stroking her cheek gently..

Imagine them at dinner earlier tonight, dressed to the nines, both turning heads as they walked in, feeding each other bites of their Michelin star plates. They look like movie stars together. You were so far below his level.

He gets up the next morning make her a latte and brings it to her in bed as he crawls back under the covers and puts his mouth between her legs.

Yeah you were a midlife bang that he hates himself for, almost losing everything he truly cared about. She never betrayed him and is too classy to ever be somebody’s side piece, a dirty nasty liar he could never trust. He has too much respect for her and never felt he was good enough.

You are delusional and aren’t close to the woman she is. You don’t know his mother’s name, his first love or what he is truly afraid of. Do you know the name of his best friend and how he died at 29? His deepest fears? The name of his childhood pet or the failure he felt when he couldn’t help his dad get off the bottle?

He didn’t confess any truths to you. You were somebody he needed to escape himself when he felt like sh@t and thought he wasn’t worthy. Thankfully he woke up, ended it and is making up for it every single day.

You are still delusional, living a lie and insecure.



Your husband made love to, screwed, did, whatevered, another woman and you held on because you know single life for you would be miserable. You post a lot and it’s really sad. Your husband made a total fool of because he knew you’d never have the courage to leave. You live in a weird Hallmark fantasy and spew a lot of crap here because you hope his ex-affair will see it but she probably won’t. Just like you probably won’t ever find peace because you know he humiliated you and you chose to take it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Just imagine him having sex with his wife. Legs over her head, doggy style snd the two of them falling asleep cradled in each other’s arms while he tells her how much he loves her and she’s the best thing that ever happened to him, stroking her cheek gently..

Imagine them at dinner earlier tonight, dressed to the nines, both turning heads as they walked in, feeding each other bites of their Michelin star plates. They look like movie stars together. You were so far below his level.

He gets up the next morning make her a latte and brings it to her in bed as he crawls back under the covers and puts his mouth between her legs.

Yeah you were a midlife bang that he hates himself for, almost losing everything he truly cared about. She never betrayed him and is too classy to ever be somebody’s side piece, a dirty nasty liar he could never trust. He has too much respect for her and never felt he was good enough.

You are delusional and aren’t close to the woman she is. You don’t know his mother’s name, his first love or what he is truly afraid of. Do you know the name of his best friend and how he died at 29? His deepest fears? The name of his childhood pet or the failure he felt when he couldn’t help his dad get off the bottle?

He didn’t confess any truths to you. You were somebody he needed to escape himself when he felt like sh@t and thought he wasn’t worthy. Thankfully he woke up, ended it and is making up for it every single day.

You are still delusional, living a lie and insecure.



You don't have sex much, I see. 1) legs over her head is NOT doggy style. 2) stroking the cheek gently? Where did you see this, on Lifetime?


You don’t know that you can be in many different positions in one session. Sounds like some of you are the ones with shitty sex lives. It’s called flipping over after.


You forgot to include the parts where you ransack his bag to search for condoms and stay up til 2:45 am to try and find new online posts by your husband for a New “anyone else” playmate to sleep with for another 2.5 years. It’s after you get flipped over but while he makes the latte that he starts aimlessly drafting his profile for the next lucky not you.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP get therapy. You are a narcissist or have borderline personality disorder. The fact you have not learned empathy for your actions and what it could do to your husband/kids, the immense harm/trauma to another woman, children, family shows what a cold and calculated person who has had zero self-reflection over three years.

A supremely selfish person ugly on the inside.


I have no need to explain myself to you, but I will leave you with the thought that jumping to so many assumptions with so little information, or thinking that these are black and white issues is a somewhat limited way to interact with the world. There’s two or more sides of every story. Most people are doing their very best, even if their best sucks.


Sorry, but no. Cheating on your spouse without getting divorced is not "your very best."

Get a new therapist.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:We need to know if they're still in contact and whether she has good reason to think he still loves her or whether she's a nut.

But as someone who left my marriage to be with my AP after a 6-year affair, I will say it is possible to love a spouse but more as family rather than a lover. You can have a very good, calm, happy, but platonic relationship, which in a lot of ways can seem healthy and loving -- but you will always yearn for that romantic component. I think that's human nature. Those of you with husbands who actually desire you take that for granted while patting yourselves on the back for your high morals (and some of you probably deny your husbands the desire they'd like to feel). If OP and her AP are still in love, I think they should divorce and plan a life together.


Thanks for writing, I know they are because they told me several times recently. Even my therapist thinks it is a very special love, I swear!


This is absolutely 100% a troll.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why does everyone think the OP is a female?


So, OP, come back and tell us: Man or woman?
Still in contact with the ex-AP?
What did improving your marriage look like--couples counseling etc. or just giving up AP? Asking seriously, OP, not with snark.


I haven’t read this whole thread yet but I’m grateful for everyone’s thoughts and feedback. Still in contact, AP is in a new serious relationship. AP’s new partner is fully aware we talk occasionally.

I’ve just discovered it came from an extreme desire to keep my family intact - like I went on a deluded mission to make my marriage better and that would be enough. I really desperately want it to be but I am having severe physical and mental health issues that are directly related to this breakup/what it requires to be functional in my marriage. I just figured this out in therapy. I thought I was handling it well but I was in a weird denial that therapy broke. I ended things. I am 100% sure they still love me.


I'm sorry to say this but if you are having "severe physical and mental health issues that are directly related to this breakup" then you have severe physical and mental health issues ANYWAY. There is no such thing as a mentally healthy person who has a permanent breakdown over a lost relationship. There is something deeply wrong with you if you can't be normal and happy without one very specific romantic relationship. People go through lives dealing with breakups all the time - including breakups with people they were madly in love with. It doesn't permanently break them.


I didn’t have a permanent breakdown. I definitely have mental health issues - always a work in progress!

I went into deep denial, and thought My mental health issues were related to a particularly challenging pandemic situation. I thought I was handling the breakup well and wasn’t thinking much of them at all. Then I had a therapy breakthrough and realized that most of my health issues were from this relationship, which I thought I was totally over. It’s like part of me woke up and I’m not sure what to do with it.


Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:We need to know if they're still in contact and whether she has good reason to think he still loves her or whether she's a nut.

But as someone who left my marriage to be with my AP after a 6-year affair, I will say it is possible to love a spouse but more as family rather than a lover. You can have a very good, calm, happy, but platonic relationship, which in a lot of ways can seem healthy and loving -- but you will always yearn for that romantic component. I think that's human nature. Those of you with husbands who actually desire you take that for granted while patting yourselves on the back for your high morals (and some of you probably deny your husbands the desire they'd like to feel). If OP and her AP are still in love, I think they should divorce and plan a life together.


Thanks for writing, I know they are because they told me several times recently. Even my therapist thinks it is a very special love, I swear!


This is absolutely 100% a troll.


What could I say to make you believe me? It’s impossible. But it is very very true.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
And before you say "then you should've divorced if you didn't feel loved and respected", I didn't see why I should upend either of our lives when everyone was getting what they wanted. During my affair was probably the happiest time in my marriage for both of us because I wasn't harassing him to love me and he was free to immerse himself in golf and computer games. Until several years passed and I realized my initial lust for my AP hadn't subsided...


You get that this is the definition of selfish, right? The fact that you can look back on this event after having had time and space to process and still defend yourself without any ownership of how this could have played differently, with acknowledgment of the pain you caused your husband (and maybe kids and your AP’s spouse and kids), shows you are very broken. You admittedly didn’t decide to “upend” things until you knew you had a soft place to land. Nowhere in any of your posts do you ever address your ex’s feelings and the pain you caused him (I doubt he agrees that you loved him like a brother - families don’t usually crap on each other like that). Your complete focus is on you, your feelings, and what you are entitled to. Your current DH should be on the alert because if/when things are not all unicorns and rainbows, you are primed to cheat again.


You aren't going to convince me to feel guilty over hurting someone who hurt me for decades first and was given countless opportunities to stop. Nope.



And yet you are still married to him.


I think this poster is with the AP now and ended the marriage


Thank you. I'm glad at least one person is following.
Anonymous
OP, some of us get it. Hope you figure it out.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP, some of us get it. Hope you figure it out.


The losers.
Anonymous
What is a “bad therapy breakthrough”?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Just imagine him having sex with his wife. Legs over her head, doggy style snd the two of them falling asleep cradled in each other’s arms while he tells her how much he loves her and she’s the best thing that ever happened to him, stroking her cheek gently..

Imagine them at dinner earlier tonight, dressed to the nines, both turning heads as they walked in, feeding each other bites of their Michelin star plates. They look like movie stars together. You were so far below his level.

He gets up the next morning make her a latte and brings it to her in bed as he crawls back under the covers and puts his mouth between her legs.

Yeah you were a midlife bang that he hates himself for, almost losing everything he truly cared about. She never betrayed him and is too classy to ever be somebody’s side piece, a dirty nasty liar he could never trust. He has too much respect for her and never felt he was good enough.

You are delusional and aren’t close to the woman she is. You don’t know his mother’s name, his first love or what he is truly afraid of. Do you know the name of his best friend and how he died at 29? His deepest fears? The name of his childhood pet or the failure he felt when he couldn’t help his dad get off the bottle?

He didn’t confess any truths to you. You were somebody he needed to escape himself when he felt like sh@t and thought he wasn’t worthy. Thankfully he woke up, ended it and is making up for it every single day.

You are still delusional, living a lie and insecure.



Happy 2nd anniversary of your tale of woe! Do you and Prince A. Madison feed each other from your plates like hot movie stars in commemoration of this?

https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/255/874650.page
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP, some of us get it. Hope you figure it out.


Thank you. I really appreciate that understanding.
post reply Forum Index » Relationship Discussion (non-explicit)
Message Quick Reply
Go to: