Anonymous wrote:The day my husband chooses to flt to another state to see an old childhood girl friend is the day he can pack his rags and stay at her house forever.
I'm on your side OP. Your husband is a dick.
Anonymous wrote:I'm with OP. My DH doesn't have any female friends he grew up, but I have a lot of boy friends I grew up with. I would NEVER hang out with them now, and they would not hang out with me either. We are all married with kids. It's just a different phase of life. I do the occasional email and am friends on facebook, but I would never be invited to their house, nor would I invite them to mine. Seriously. I think you all are the same person responding because I can't be one of only a few who feel this way, and I know of no one's husband who has old female friends they hang out with.
Anonymous wrote:He may want to see his old friend by himself, so he can complain about being unhappy with his suspicious, downer, controlling DW.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one said this was a an ex-girlfriend. OP said it wad a friend who is a girl who grew up with him. Different
Agreed. I'm a very happily married DW. My best friend is a male that I grew up with. Our parents were friends from college and he and I were born a month apart and grew up on the same street our whole lives. There has NEVER been an inkling of other feelings for him. He's a brother. Thankfully DH understand this and respects this and they are actually really good friends.
But if your male friend was a cold jackass to your husband from the first time they met, would you feel the same? Would you tell your husband tough, the friend was there first so your feelings don't matter? I doubt you would.
Betcha that is really why OP is upset. Husband is telling her by his words and actions that her feelings are second place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one said this was a an ex-girlfriend. OP said it wad a friend who is a girl who grew up with him. Different
Agreed. I'm a very happily married DW. My best friend is a male that I grew up with. Our parents were friends from college and he and I were born a month apart and grew up on the same street our whole lives. There has NEVER been an inkling of other feelings for him. He's a brother. Thankfully DH understand this and respects this and they are actually really good friends.
But if your male friend was a cold jackass to your husband from the first time they met, would you feel the same? Would you tell your husband tough, the friend was there first so your feelings don't matter? I doubt you would.
Betcha that is really why OP is upset. Husband is telling her by his words and actions that her feelings are second place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one said this was a an ex-girlfriend. OP said it wad a friend who is a girl who grew up with him. Different
Agreed. I'm a very happily married DW. My best friend is a male that I grew up with. Our parents were friends from college and he and I were born a month apart and grew up on the same street our whole lives. There has NEVER been an inkling of other feelings for him. He's a brother. Thankfully DH understand this and respects this and they are actually really good friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My guess is that he said no to visiting her with you when he was down there because he knows you don't like her and he didn't want you to then complain about taking the time to see her. He probably wants to talk openly with her about your problem with their friendship - and not in front of you. You don't have to like that, but people often talk to friends about spouses - that's life. OP,would you have the same problem given all the same facts if the friend were a guy? If not, then this really is about trust / jealousy. You can't win this one. I have deferred far too much to my wife over the years om visiting even local male friends, and that too has huge negativevconsequences over time. You give space or he will resent you. And if it's all a sham and he is trying to have a fling with her, your focus should be on why. Fighting over the trip won't help.
Would you pick a female friend who has been obviously cold amd bitchy to your wife and current relationships over your wife's feelings?
Anonymous wrote:No one said this was a an ex-girlfriend. OP said it wad a friend who is a girl who grew up with him. Different
Anonymous wrote:My guess is that he said no to visiting her with you when he was down there because he knows you don't like her and he didn't want you to then complain about taking the time to see her. He probably wants to talk openly with her about your problem with their friendship - and not in front of you. You don't have to like that, but people often talk to friends about spouses - that's life. OP,would you have the same problem given all the same facts if the friend were a guy? If not, then this really is about trust / jealousy. You can't win this one. I have deferred far too much to my wife over the years om visiting even local male friends, and that too has huge negativevconsequences over time. You give space or he will resent you. And if it's all a sham and he is trying to have a fling with her, your focus should be on why. Fighting over the trip won't help.
Anonymous wrote:The day my husband chooses to flt to another state to see an old childhood girl friend is the day he can pack his rags and stay at her house forever.
I'm on your side OP. Your husband is a dick.
It doesn't have to be either/or unless one party marries someone profoundly insecure.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh! This is why I have lost 1/2 of my male friends, because their wives are insecure.
No it is because they have moved on and have wives and families and other priorities now.
+2Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, your husband gets to have friends of his own, even if you don't like all of them.
+1 Sorry OP. You are in the wrong on this one.