Husband cheated with high school sweetheart

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I'm so sorry OP.

First, just put on your oxygen mask. Make sure you are eating, sleeping, and staying hydrated. Foist childcare onto your DH or a babysitter. Take care of you.

Yeah, you don't want to tell EVERYONE, but as a betrayed wife myself, let me just say that it's BS that we're supposed to keep this a secret. Tell your best friend; tell your sister. You will need them. They will love and forgive your DH if you decide to. IF.

If OW has a husband, tell him. But I'm guessing she doesn't if she thinks this Hail Mary will score her your cheating husband. Maybe she left hers at the beginning of the affair? And now she's got a cost sunk thing going on? IDK, just guesses. We need more info to give better advice.

As for your DH, a lot depends on how he is acting now. Is he remorseful? Did he end it with her and now she's gone bunny boiler? Or is he blame-y and whiney and trying to shut down your questions and pain? Or have you not confronted him yet?

You don't need to make any decisions right now. You can separate, or not. You can ask him to stay with his mom or a friend, or not. See a lawyer. Get an STI panel. Take care of yourself (I signed myself up for monthly massages right after DDay, and I still go today, 7 years later . . . take care of you). Prioritize individual counseling for you both before marital counseling . . . too often you get a therapist trying to make everything 50/50 rather than treating an affair like the abusive trauma that it is.

You WILL get through this. You will be happy again. Deep breaths, and one step at a time. . . .


This is excellent advice. I went through this 18 months ago and the best advice I got was to relieve myself of the pressure of making an immediate decision. My advice would be similar: take care of yourself first! I went to my doctor and did a full STD panel, got pills for sleeping and anxiety even though I had never needed them before in my life. This really helped me just make it through the day. I lost 15 pounds but once I started taking Ensure and drinking smoothies, I felt a little better. I confided in a few close friends and they were an AMAZING support system. They did not judge at all but just helped take care of me. Making a lifelong decision when you are in the throes of trauma is not beneficial to anyone. I asked my husband to move out briefly a few months after I found out bc it took me time to decide what I wanted and what I could live with. We ended up reconciling but I'm really happy that I gave myself time to make a decision when I was not in the middle of extreme devastation. I think cheaters really underestimate what the f--ck they are putting their spouse through with their selfish actions.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This might be an unpopular opinion, but I think concerns about something bad happening if the betrayed spouse ratted out the OW to her own spouse are overblown. I know it happens, but I think for most people its highly unlikely Most people who have affairs are just regular people who made bad decisions, not sociopaths.

So that (coupled with my belief that people have a right to know who they are sleeping with) is why if I found out my husband was sleeping with a married woman, I'd tell her husband.

It is just abominably selfish and psychotic to do this. Can you imagine breaking up another family and destroying children's lives because of some misplaced moralism? Half of people cheat. We need to do better at understanding our own relationships, problems, failings, and societal constructs before we go nuclear.

I personally would not want to know if DH cheated because I would never get over it. If it's over and done with, and we can find a way to move on, I would rather fly blind. It doesn't mean my life is a lie. I have a rich inner life and outer life without DH and I don't need to share everything with him. Sure, sleeping around is a betrayal, but disclosing only leads to pain and destruction. Think before you act.


I'm a DW that has neither cheated nor been cheated on in any of my relationships, as far as I know, and I agree with this. Life is more complicated than DCUM makes it seem.


You are both naive because it hasn't happened to you. And btw, it's not as easy as people think to keep this stuff secret. For instance, the only person in Robert Hanssen's case who found for the first and second time something happened was his wife.

You don’t know what’s happened in my relationships. Most sane people stand by the decision to not disclose if it’s over. Get your own self into therapy, don’t sink the entire ship and especially don’t sink another family.


Yes. Cheating with someone married, sinks ANOTHER family. Don't enter someone else's marriage. Period. If you have to be a slut, at least bang someone single and ruin only your OWN family.



That's a feature, not a bug. A lot of cheaters want to cheat with other married people, they think it's more likely to be kept secret. Mutually assured destruction and all. Feels safer than a single with nothing to lose.


That's just some dumb*ss thing created by Ashley Madison. Instead it blows up two families and two betrayed spouses are traumatized. The amount of destruction is soooooo much greater.

You underestimate that you now have double the chances of getting caught. You never know how careful the AP is and if their spouse finds out you can't know what they will do.

Cheating is for losers with no integrity. Cheating with famililes/spouses=complete scumbag.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I'm so sorry OP.

First, just put on your oxygen mask. Make sure you are eating, sleeping, and staying hydrated. Foist childcare onto your DH or a babysitter. Take care of you.

Yeah, you don't want to tell EVERYONE, but as a betrayed wife myself, let me just say that it's BS that we're supposed to keep this a secret. Tell your best friend; tell your sister. You will need them. They will love and forgive your DH if you decide to. IF.

If OW has a husband, tell him. But I'm guessing she doesn't if she thinks this Hail Mary will score her your cheating husband. Maybe she left hers at the beginning of the affair? And now she's got a cost sunk thing going on? IDK, just guesses. We need more info to give better advice.

As for your DH, a lot depends on how he is acting now. Is he remorseful? Did he end it with her and now she's gone bunny boiler? Or is he blame-y and whiney and trying to shut down your questions and pain? Or have you not confronted him yet?

You don't need to make any decisions right now. You can separate, or not. You can ask him to stay with his mom or a friend, or not. See a lawyer. Get an STI panel. Take care of yourself (I signed myself up for monthly massages right after DDay, and I still go today, 7 years later . . . take care of you). Prioritize individual counseling for you both before marital counseling . . . too often you get a therapist trying to make everything 50/50 rather than treating an affair like the abusive trauma that it is.

You WILL get through this. You will be happy again. Deep breaths, and one step at a time. . . .


This is excellent advice. I went through this 18 months ago and the best advice I got was to relieve myself of the pressure of making an immediate decision. My advice would be similar: take care of yourself first! I went to my doctor and did a full STD panel, got pills for sleeping and anxiety even though I had never needed them before in my life. This really helped me just make it through the day. I lost 15 pounds but once I started taking Ensure and drinking smoothies, I felt a little better. I confided in a few close friends and they were an AMAZING support system. They did not judge at all but just helped take care of me. Making a lifelong decision when you are in the throes of trauma is not beneficial to anyone. I asked my husband to move out briefly a few months after I found out bc it took me time to decide what I wanted and what I could live with. We ended up reconciling but I'm really happy that I gave myself time to make a decision when I was not in the middle of extreme devastation. I think cheaters really underestimate what the f--ck they are putting their spouse through with their selfish actions.


+1,000,000

They have no idea until they look and see exactly what their actions did to others. And only if they are self-aware and decent do they feel like a big piece of remorseful sh*t and spend the rest of their days making up for it and actively fixing what is defective inside themselves.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I'm so sorry OP.

First, just put on your oxygen mask. Make sure you are eating, sleeping, and staying hydrated. Foist childcare onto your DH or a babysitter. Take care of you.

Yeah, you don't want to tell EVERYONE, but as a betrayed wife myself, let me just say that it's BS that we're supposed to keep this a secret. Tell your best friend; tell your sister. You will need them. They will love and forgive your DH if you decide to. IF.

If OW has a husband, tell him. But I'm guessing she doesn't if she thinks this Hail Mary will score her your cheating husband. Maybe she left hers at the beginning of the affair? And now she's got a cost sunk thing going on? IDK, just guesses. We need more info to give better advice.

As for your DH, a lot depends on how he is acting now. Is he remorseful? Did he end it with her and now she's gone bunny boiler? Or is he blame-y and whiney and trying to shut down your questions and pain? Or have you not confronted him yet?

You don't need to make any decisions right now. You can separate, or not. You can ask him to stay with his mom or a friend, or not. See a lawyer. Get an STI panel. Take care of yourself (I signed myself up for monthly massages right after DDay, and I still go today, 7 years later . . . take care of you). Prioritize individual counseling for you both before marital counseling . . . too often you get a therapist trying to make everything 50/50 rather than treating an affair like the abusive trauma that it is.

You WILL get through this. You will be happy again. Deep breaths, and one step at a time. . . .


This is excellent advice. I went through this 18 months ago and the best advice I got was to relieve myself of the pressure of making an immediate decision. My advice would be similar: take care of yourself first! I went to my doctor and did a full STD panel, got pills for sleeping and anxiety even though I had never needed them before in my life. This really helped me just make it through the day. I lost 15 pounds but once I started taking Ensure and drinking smoothies, I felt a little better. I confided in a few close friends and they were an AMAZING support system. They did not judge at all but just helped take care of me. Making a lifelong decision when you are in the throes of trauma is not beneficial to anyone. I asked my husband to move out briefly a few months after I found out bc it took me time to decide what I wanted and what I could live with. We ended up reconciling but I'm really happy that I gave myself time to make a decision when I was not in the middle of extreme devastation. I think cheaters really underestimate what the f--ck they are putting their spouse through with their selfish actions.


+1,000,000

They have no idea until they look and see exactly what their actions did to others. And only if they are self-aware and decent do they feel like a big piece of remorseful sh*t and spend the rest of their days making up for it and actively fixing what is defective inside themselves.




Exactly this. DH was shocked how profoundly his affair affected me. Things weren't terribly great between us at the time of the affair, and he thought I wouldn't care that much. When he realized how wrong he was, he clearly felt like the scumbag he was and has been trying to get his life together ever since. Worst mistake of his life and one he will now how to spend the rest of life atoning for. What an idiot.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Wait,is the other woman married? If so, call her husband, neighbors and co-workers.


This is the worst advice in this thread. Please do not do this.


Worst advice. Would make OP look crazy. Don't do that.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The only people advising not telling the AP’s husband are cheaters.


No. They don't want to get killed by AP's husband.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This might be an unpopular opinion, but I think concerns about something bad happening if the betrayed spouse ratted out the OW to her own spouse are overblown. I know it happens, but I think for most people its highly unlikely Most people who have affairs are just regular people who made bad decisions, not sociopaths.

So that (coupled with my belief that people have a right to know who they are sleeping with) is why if I found out my husband was sleeping with a married woman, I'd tell her husband.

It is just abominably selfish and psychotic to do this. Can you imagine breaking up another family and destroying children's lives because of some misplaced moralism? Half of people cheat. We need to do better at understanding our own relationships, problems, failings, and societal constructs before we go nuclear.

I personally would not want to know if DH cheated because I would never get over it. If it's over and done with, and we can find a way to move on, I would rather fly blind. It doesn't mean my life is a lie. I have a rich inner life and outer life without DH and I don't need to share everything with him. Sure, sleeping around is a betrayal, but disclosing only leads to pain and destruction. Think before you act.


Disagree. It's OK if you don't have the resources to deal with trauma so you'd rather stick your head in the sand. You got to this point based on your nature and nurture, right? But that doesn't mean that it's selfish or, laughably, psychotic to do this. It just means that healthy people who can process trauma and move on to something better don't think like people who can't handle hard stuff.
Anonymous
I skipped right to the end… What drove your H to go outside the marriage?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP, I am writing it as someone whose exH carried over a hidden affair at work for 5 years. He also did it on work trips/abroad. In my case it was a strong emotional connection between the 2 of them, so he would not stop seeing her. And I wanted out, too as I didn't want to live as a family with his AP so involved in my marriage forever.

But if your husband is already broken up with that woman, she's already disposed of and irrelevant. Her texting you shows her weakness. Do not break your marriage over some whore. Particular if your husband wants to reconcile, work on the relationship. You have 3 kids to think of ! If otherwise the marriage felt good (no abuse, alcohol, he is a good earner) try to stick it out. Do not confront him openly, do not talk about a divorce. Give yourself time to line up finances, research lawyers, get all statements. Then keep it locked in your drawer until kids are out for college.



Oh yes the dh took the vows for better or worse and cheated and the woman is the whore!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Shocked at the responses on here! Only blaming the ex girlfriend for this. This is why your husband keep on cheating: because you all allow it, don't hold the men responsible and turn a blind eye to it! Some of you are MAD at the ex for telling the wife?! What? I'd WANT to know my husband is straying I don't want to live in the dark with this.

Good grief ladies. Grow a pair.


You had me agreeing with you until you said "grow a pair" Now can we stop with the idea that to be strong is to have balls? Good grief women can never grow balls so stop using that expression!
Anonymous
OP never came back. I hope it's because she got an attorney and kicked her cheating husband out.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I'm so sorry OP.

First, just put on your oxygen mask. Make sure you are eating, sleeping, and staying hydrated. Foist childcare onto your DH or a babysitter. Take care of you.

Yeah, you don't want to tell EVERYONE, but as a betrayed wife myself, let me just say that it's BS that we're supposed to keep this a secret. Tell your best friend; tell your sister. You will need them. They will love and forgive your DH if you decide to. IF.

If OW has a husband, tell him. But I'm guessing she doesn't if she thinks this Hail Mary will score her your cheating husband. Maybe she left hers at the beginning of the affair? And now she's got a cost sunk thing going on? IDK, just guesses. We need more info to give better advice.

As for your DH, a lot depends on how he is acting now. Is he remorseful? Did he end it with her and now she's gone bunny boiler? Or is he blame-y and whiney and trying to shut down your questions and pain? Or have you not confronted him yet?

You don't need to make any decisions right now. You can separate, or not. You can ask him to stay with his mom or a friend, or not. See a lawyer. Get an STI panel. Take care of yourself (I signed myself up for monthly massages right after DDay, and I still go today, 7 years later . . . take care of you). Prioritize individual counseling for you both before marital counseling . . . too often you get a therapist trying to make everything 50/50 rather than treating an affair like the abusive trauma that it is.

You WILL get through this. You will be happy again. Deep breaths, and one step at a time. . . .


This is excellent advice. I went through this 18 months ago and the best advice I got was to relieve myself of the pressure of making an immediate decision. My advice would be similar: take care of yourself first! I went to my doctor and did a full STD panel, got pills for sleeping and anxiety even though I had never needed them before in my life. This really helped me just make it through the day. I lost 15 pounds but once I started taking Ensure and drinking smoothies, I felt a little better. I confided in a few close friends and they were an AMAZING support system. They did not judge at all but just helped take care of me. Making a lifelong decision when you are in the throes of trauma is not beneficial to anyone. I asked my husband to move out briefly a few months after I found out bc it took me time to decide what I wanted and what I could live with. We ended up reconciling but I'm really happy that I gave myself time to make a decision when I was not in the middle of extreme devastation. I think cheaters really underestimate what the f--ck they are putting their spouse through with their selfish actions.


+1,000,000

They have no idea until they look and see exactly what their actions did to others. And only if they are self-aware and decent do they feel like a big piece of remorseful sh*t and spend the rest of their days making up for it and actively fixing what is defective inside themselves.




Exactly this. DH was shocked how profoundly his affair affected me. Things weren't terribly great between us at the time of the affair, and he thought I wouldn't care that much. When he realized how wrong he was, he clearly felt like the scumbag he was and has been trying to get his life together ever since. Worst mistake of his life and one he will now how to spend the rest of life atoning for. What an idiot.


+3,000,000

DP. I will add, he didn’t realize how badly it affected himself as well when it all came to light. He hit a major rock bottom and he went through a lot of mental health issues and therapy when what he was doing was not the person he ever wanted to be (hello FIL). He also went dry for a year. Complete identity crisis.
Anonymous
I often wonder why these threads have so much talk about the husband needing therapy to address cheating. The guy did what he did because he wasn’t happy or wanted variety and gave into temptation that was appealing because in some cases the woman gave his attention and the experience felt fresh. I’d call him weak for giving in but I wouldn’t insist it’s always due to his traumatic childhood or that he must be psychologically broken because he slept with someone else. No diagnosis needed. People do this deliberately. They want to cheat snd get away with it. The opportunity was there.

When women cheat they usually don’t go running to therapy. Could you just imagine a man telling another man oh my Larla cheated, I’ve a great therapist to help you two stay together. Hell no. It’s chalked up to an exit affair. How many women who have cheated even declare they need therapy? I doubt most husbands would even consider that as a remedy. The husband files for divorce and that’s the end of it. Or she runs off with the AP and lives the life she wants (usually never ends that way). And the world sees her as a whore. Most husbands get off easy because their wives sweep it up with a therapist.
Anonymous
This OP is clearly a troll. I asked Jeff on Website Feedback to confirm.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I'm so sorry OP.

First, just put on your oxygen mask. Make sure you are eating, sleeping, and staying hydrated. Foist childcare onto your DH or a babysitter. Take care of you.

Yeah, you don't want to tell EVERYONE, but as a betrayed wife myself, let me just say that it's BS that we're supposed to keep this a secret. Tell your best friend; tell your sister. You will need them. They will love and forgive your DH if you decide to. IF.

If OW has a husband, tell him. But I'm guessing she doesn't if she thinks this Hail Mary will score her your cheating husband. Maybe she left hers at the beginning of the affair? And now she's got a cost sunk thing going on? IDK, just guesses. We need more info to give better advice.

As for your DH, a lot depends on how he is acting now. Is he remorseful? Did he end it with her and now she's gone bunny boiler? Or is he blame-y and whiney and trying to shut down your questions and pain? Or have you not confronted him yet?

You don't need to make any decisions right now. You can separate, or not. You can ask him to stay with his mom or a friend, or not. See a lawyer. Get an STI panel. Take care of yourself (I signed myself up for monthly massages right after DDay, and I still go today, 7 years later . . . take care of you). Prioritize individual counseling for you both before marital counseling . . . too often you get a therapist trying to make everything 50/50 rather than treating an affair like the abusive trauma that it is.

You WILL get through this. You will be happy again. Deep breaths, and one step at a time. . . .


This is excellent advice. I went through this 18 months ago and the best advice I got was to relieve myself of the pressure of making an immediate decision. My advice would be similar: take care of yourself first! I went to my doctor and did a full STD panel, got pills for sleeping and anxiety even though I had never needed them before in my life. This really helped me just make it through the day. I lost 15 pounds but once I started taking Ensure and drinking smoothies, I felt a little better. I confided in a few close friends and they were an AMAZING support system. They did not judge at all but just helped take care of me. Making a lifelong decision when you are in the throes of trauma is not beneficial to anyone. I asked my husband to move out briefly a few months after I found out bc it took me time to decide what I wanted and what I could live with. We ended up reconciling but I'm really happy that I gave myself time to make a decision when I was not in the middle of extreme devastation. I think cheaters really underestimate what the f--ck they are putting their spouse through with their selfish actions.


+1,000,000

They have no idea until they look and see exactly what their actions did to others. And only if they are self-aware and decent do they feel like a big piece of remorseful sh*t and spend the rest of their days making up for it and actively fixing what is defective inside themselves.




Exactly this. DH was shocked how profoundly his affair affected me. Things weren't terribly great between us at the time of the affair, and he thought I wouldn't care that much. When he realized how wrong he was, he clearly felt like the scumbag he was and has been trying to get his life together ever since. Worst mistake of his life and one he will now how to spend the rest of life atoning for. What an idiot.


+3,000,000

DP. I will add, he didn’t realize how badly it affected himself as well when it all came to light. He hit a major rock bottom and he went through a lot of mental health issues and therapy when what he was doing was not the person he ever wanted to be (hello FIL). He also went dry for a year. Complete identity crisis.



Were you able to to work it out in the end ? Or get it to the point you were willing to?
post reply Forum Index » Relationship Discussion (non-explicit)
Message Quick Reply
Go to: