Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bad idea to get together just the two of you. If you want to reconnect, you and your spouse get together with him and his spouse. Anything else is asking for trouble.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I would absolutely do it, regardless of whether DW liked it or not. I'd be up front and honest about it. But frankly, there's no place for petty jealousy in our marriage, and if those feelings come up, it's her job to deal with them as an adult, just like it would be my job to do so if the roles were reversed.
I'm trying to see your point, but quite honestly, that is just disrespectful to your wife. You don't get to unilaterally determine what is "petty" and what isn't in a marriage. Your wife gets a say as well and if she felt uncomfortable with it, calling her "petty" and doing it anyways is pretty obnoxious. Clearly she doesn't think it falls into "petty jealousy
. You are essentially telling her that your needs (to have coffee with an ex) are more important than her feelings.
Anonymous wrote:I'd do it, but only if I was comfortable telling my husband about it. And only if there was absolutely no risk that it would turn into more than just coffee. I'm friends with a few of my exes - and I'm single, so the potential to say "what if" would theoretically be there. (let's face it, i'd rather be "taken" than "single.") But in reality, my exes are nice people whose company I enjoyed, but we wouldn't have worked out, and i don't do the "what if" thing about them.
if there's any degree of "what if things had been different", I'd leave it alone. But if this is rekindling a friendship that only ended up because you stopped dating... maybe.
Anonymous wrote:
I would absolutely do it, regardless of whether DW liked it or not. I'd be up front and honest about it. But frankly, there's no place for petty jealousy in our marriage, and if those feelings come up, it's her job to deal with them as an adult, just like it would be my job to do so if the roles were reversed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you know it would upset your DH, then why would you even be considering it? Is it really worth upsetting your spouse over?
I agree that if you continue this friendship, spouses should most definitely be on board. If you're uncomfortable with that, then you should run, not walk, away from this friendship.
A telling question to ask yourself is how you would feel if your DH wanted to get together with a serious ex-flame of his, just the two of them.
This. Exactly.
I don't see necessarily anything wrong with catching up with an ex-boyfriend over coffee, but if I knew my husband wouldn't like it, or if I even considered not telling him about it, then I absolutely wouldn't do it.
I'm all for the dinner with spouses or just nothing at all. Even though you make it sound like you are totally over him, blah blah blah, you seem to acknowledge that there is something there. And that "something" is probably what would upset your husband and makes this a bad idea.
Anonymous wrote:I would do coffee with him and if it was fine, then dinner with the spouses. Trust yourself. Life is short.
Anonymous wrote:If you know it would upset your DH, then why would you even be considering it? Is it really worth upsetting your spouse over?
I agree that if you continue this friendship, spouses should most definitely be on board. If you're uncomfortable with that, then you should run, not walk, away from this friendship.
A telling question to ask yourself is how you would feel if your DH wanted to get together with a serious ex-flame of his, just the two of them.