Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neighbors ex husband went to her funeral together with his new wife, also AP before he married her, and the new kid he had with affair partner. Of course to support the kids he had with the neighbor. In their 70s
I don’t think anyone cried.
So tacky to bring the AP, unless he needed a nursemaid.
That was not clear. Sorry
He left the neighbor because he had an AP, which became his wife, then he had an additional kid with wife 2 (former AP).
He went to the funeral of wife 1 together with wife 2 (former AP).
Anonymous wrote:I did not cry at the funeral. However, it was very traumatic because he died by suicide. I will never forget seeing so many of his family members sobbing.
+1Anonymous wrote:Oh gosh I’d never go as it would be wildly inappropriate to dance a jig on his coffin- and that’s what the demise would require of me. Mine is abusive and awful and I wouldn’t even pretend to honor him. I
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neighbors ex husband went to her funeral together with his new wife, also AP before he married her, and the new kid he had with affair partner. Of course to support the kids he had with the neighbor. In their 70s
I don’t think anyone cried.
So tacky to bring the AP, unless he needed a nursemaid.
Anonymous wrote:Neighbors ex husband went to her funeral together with his new wife, also AP before he married her, and the new kid he had with affair partner. Of course to support the kids he had with the neighbor. In their 70s
I don’t think anyone cried.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure I would have any tears..but I expect people who do not know my situation would judge me for not shedding tears.
I cried for DC. Losing a parent —even an extremely dysfunctional one— is life altering.