Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
If one is at a funeral and needing to be less than fully honest . . . perhaps that is a strong signal one should not be there?
Have you ever...been to a funeral?
+1. "Sorry for your loss but complete honest compels me to reveal that your loved one was a real jerk to me a couple of times. There was also this time where you could see a booger on his nose."
Anonymous wrote: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.
“Causing a scene”? Wow, dramatic, much? “Hello, I’m Tim. I know Claire from UVA. I’m very sorry for your loss,” then walk over to your friend group. WOW, what a SCENE.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
If one is at a funeral and needing to be less than fully honest . . . perhaps that is a strong signal one should not be there?
Have you ever...been to a funeral?
Anonymous wrote:I only read the OP but I assume we’re all here to chastise the OP for being jealous of a dead woman.
Anonymous wrote: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.
If one is at a funeral and needing to be less than fully honest . . . perhaps that is a strong signal one should not be there?
Anonymous wrote:In a car accident at 47. He hadn't spoken with her since she cheated on him, and thus ended their relationship, at 23. She was in Chicago we are in DC. He has kept up with all of his college friends and many of them are going to her funeral. He wants to attend.
Is that weird? She was married with kids.
This feels a.) a bit like he's using her funeral as a reunion, b.) a bit like he cares more than I want him too, and c.) really inappropriate to her husband and kids.
I said all this and was told "I didn't understand".
What's going on here?
Anonymous wrote: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.
+1. The posters who think this will end up being some kind of dramatic encounter between an ex and the family of the deceased don't seem to have a firm grasp on how social situations generally play out.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Exactly! This is how you would handle it.
“Causing a scene”? Wow, dramatic, much? “Hello, I’m Tim. I know Claire from UVA. I’m very sorry for your loss,” then walk over to your friend group. WOW, what a SCENE.
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.