Anonymous wrote:For me the big problem (aside from my pride and my desire to “win” in the counseling session) would be the level of detail. There are limits, especially when you’re all friends.
It’s also unfortunate that it doesn’t seem like he confided in the friend in good faith (seems like he was looking for validation instead of genuine feedback). But it is good for men to talk about stuff like this. They usually don’t. And it makes sense that he would be more willing to confide privately to a friend than to a counselor.
Also keep in mind that your husband and friend might be right. I have no idea but it’s important to have some humility in counseling.
So I don’t think this was cool of him, but not the worst thing either. Hopefully the awkwardness with the friend will blow over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think everyone should have at least one outsideperson they can confide in about their relationship. I can see why it would be hurtful to read. If you found these messages while snooping, you hurt yourself and further damaged your relationship. If you found them completely by accident, it's clear that you and your spouse are in a very adversarial place. I'd think seriously about whether you want to do the work to try and save the relationship. If you believe your spouse is lying to and manipulating the therapist, there may not be anything to save.
I totally agree it's ok to tell a friend what his problems are. To me it's overstepping to forward several email where I expressed my problems with the relationship and then not tell me about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:a female friend?
No a male friend. But our issue is actually that he has had homosexual tendencies, so the male friend doesn't provide the same comfort that it would in another situation.
Anonymous wrote:I think everyone should have at least one outsideperson they can confide in about their relationship. I can see why it would be hurtful to read. If you found these messages while snooping, you hurt yourself and further damaged your relationship. If you found them completely by accident, it's clear that you and your spouse are in a very adversarial place. I'd think seriously about whether you want to do the work to try and save the relationship. If you believe your spouse is lying to and manipulating the therapist, there may not be anything to save.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't you confide in friends about various problems? He's doing the same.
Yes, but I don't forward personal emails from my spouse to another. And I don't disclose very personal information. I also don't use my friends in the same way. I sometimes use them as a listening board, but more often than not, they are just there to say "I'm sorry this is what you're going through" and just let me get something off my chest.
Maybe I am overreacting. It's the secrecy that bothers me the most. He never even disclosed he was talking to this friend about us.
Anonymous wrote:Don't you confide in friends about various problems? He's doing the same.
Anonymous wrote:a female friend?
Anonymous wrote:Don't you confide in friends about various problems? He's doing the same.