Anonymous wrote:I could never trust again if I had been lied to by my spouse for three years.
A three month fling? I might get past it. 3 years is an intense, ongoing and intentional relationship. Lots of calculated decisions and lies
Plus, I'd never get over feeling like I was not his top.choice.
While I commend ops commitment to keeping his family intact, it can't work if she's not 1000% committed.
Anonymous wrote:Hopefully he told the AP’s spouse, the AP’s children, the AP’s parents, the AP’s spouse’s parents, and coworkers. Why should the other family not know what a POS their husband, father, son, SIL, coworker is/has been!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do not connect the OM or his wife, although I can understand the desire to do so. How did you discover the affair, what was your wife’s explanation, and what does she say she wants to do now? Does she still work with the OM?
Phone records and find my phone app. She does still work with him.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know if OP is still reading, but take it from someone who has been there.
You are in a very natural first stage of finding out your partner has been unfaithful - the pleading and the "pick me" dance. You may tell yourself you are just trying to keep the family together, but you are also afraid of what all of this will mean, and trying to find a way for this not to destroy what you have.
Spoiler alert: What you have was spoiled the day your spouse decided to lean into an office flirtation rather than leaning out.
Everything else? That's just the aftermath.
I agree with PPs. Read ChumpLady. Call a lawyer. Get a therapist. Capitalize on this period while your wife still has her "affair brain" on to get everything you can.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I could never trust again if I had been lied to by my spouse for three years.
A three month fling? I might get past it. 3 years is an intense, ongoing and intentional relationship. Lots of calculated decisions and lies
Plus, I'd never get over feeling like I was not his top.choice.
While I commend ops commitment to keeping his family intact, it can't work if she's not 1000% committed.
In three years - maybe even much less - she likely has developed much stronger loyalties to the AP than the husband. How long did it take from meeting her to getting married? These two have a very strong, perhaps stronger, relationship than the technically married couple.
Anonymous wrote:I could never trust again if I had been lied to by my spouse for three years.
A three month fling? I might get past it. 3 years is an intense, ongoing and intentional relationship. Lots of calculated decisions and lies
Plus, I'd never get over feeling like I was not his top.choice.
While I commend ops commitment to keeping his family intact, it can't work if she's not 1000% committed.
Anonymous wrote:Vows. Not cows.