Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a mid-40s H almost married 20 years. I side with OP. I would not attend the funeral (or wedding) of a long term ex.
You really have no idea how the widower will react. Many—perhaps most—wouldn’t care, but a measurable percentage of widowers (including me, if I’m being honest) would not want a funeral to be the occasion where mom’s ex-boyfriend is potentially introduced to the kids. It would be very off putting and I wouldn’t chance that at the ceremony where a husband and children are saying goodbye to the family matriarch.
Seems almost selfish to me. Yes, OP’s DH is probably grieving something and wishes to support his friends, but why in the world would you risk causing a scene for a widower and his children after their world has been totally shattered.
Alllll of this.
OP's husband has no idea what, if anything, his ex ever said about him to her husband. You just don't show up out of the blue in this situation and make it about you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m on OPs side. If it were my husband it would be a no for me. Husband is using funeral as an excuse to ditch her with the kids while he goes to party with his college buddies. No where did it say she was welcomed to come. This woman is dead they have been separated for 23 years there is honestly no need for him to go to this funeral. This woman nor his college buddies are active people in their current lives who they see or speak with regularly. He needs to stay home
I'm really glad my husband and I support each other by taking turns with weekends away so we get to spend time with our friends. I've gone on several girls' weekends, he's gone on ski trips and camping trips, and it's been great. We've also left our kids with family and gone on vacations together, too. I'm so glad my husband and I not only encourage each other to spend time with friends, but we see weekends alone with the kids as a fun chance to focus on the kids, not as a chore. I can't imagine thinking that spending a weekend solo parenting was some big chore and that I was "stuck" with them. I enjoy being with my kids! Probably because DH sometimes supports me in having weekends away!
Some of you sound so sad, honestly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a mid-40s H almost married 20 years. I side with OP. I would not attend the funeral (or wedding) of a long term ex.
You really have no idea how the widower will react. Many—perhaps most—wouldn’t care, but a measurable percentage of widowers (including me, if I’m being honest) would not want a funeral to be the occasion where mom’s ex-boyfriend is potentially introduced to the kids. It would be very off putting and I wouldn’t chance that at the ceremony where a husband and children are saying goodbye to the family matriarch.
Seems almost selfish to me. Yes, OP’s DH is probably grieving something and wishes to support his friends, but why in the world would you risk causing a scene for a widower and his children after their world has been totally shattered.
+1. The people in this thread that are DH sound like tragedy/grief vultures (my mom is one, so I know). He's a random guy she used to have sex with; why would you want to see him at the funeral? I say this as someone who has lost a lot of peers early and unfortunately have experience with this.
Make a massive donation to the most meaningful charity to the deceased or their family. Now that would be about them.
Anonymous wrote:What's the worst that can happen?
Ahhh, you trash some poor women's funeral for her kids and husband just so you can slam beers with some frat bros for a weekend?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If my high school or college boyfriends died, I would absolutely go and give my respect to their families.
HS is different. You were kids. A partner at 23 is real. A gf at 14 isn't.
Anonymous wrote:Presumably your husband won’t announce he used to bang the dead woman.
If he’s asked the connection, hopefully he’s a normal human and will say “we were friends in college”. It’s not that complicated.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a mid-40s H almost married 20 years. I side with OP. I would not attend the funeral (or wedding) of a long term ex.
You really have no idea how the widower will react. Many—perhaps most—wouldn’t care, but a measurable percentage of widowers (including me, if I’m being honest) would not want a funeral to be the occasion where mom’s ex-boyfriend is potentially introduced to the kids. It would be very off putting and I wouldn’t chance that at the ceremony where a husband and children are saying goodbye to the family matriarch.
Seems almost selfish to me. Yes, OP’s DH is probably grieving something and wishes to support his friends, but why in the world would you risk causing a scene for a widower and his children after their world has been totally shattered.
Anonymous wrote:You are cold. Let him visit and show his respect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, your reaction to this is appalling.
Take a deep breath and course-correct because what you have shown about yourself in this post is not a thing I would want in a spouse and yours might feel the same.
Settle down. I'm one of the people who think it's understandable that DH might want to go to the funeral, but OP's reaction isn't "appalling." You are overreacting to the post.
+1
A lot of knee-jerk overreactions on this thread and a lot of harsh vilifying of OP. I really doubt that most of the PPs insisting she's crazy or jealous would actually go to their college BF's/GF's funeral after so long of zero contact. They just want to ream the OP for daring to think this isn't dreamy and romantic.