Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've also been the unsuspecting OW, OP. It sucks and I get it. Ignore the haters on the thread.
I think you should send a polite but formal and clear-boundaries email in reply. express compassion for what she's going through, but say that it was an awful period for you, you've worked hard to put it behind you, and you don't wish to relive it by talking to her. Maybe add that if she wants to talk because she is seeking a divorce then her lawyer can contact you from now on, but she should already have more than enough information from your last email.
She is asking you to be a friend and that is just a bad idea. She's now where you were, remember--that nasty email years ago was her in denial and lashing out. Now she is actually grappling with it, a betrayal a lot worse than yours. You can have compassion for her all you want but you do not need to take on her pain and reopen your own wounds by being her friend. He hurt you both but your shared pain is no basis for a relationship.
I never did contact the wife and always wondered if I should have. The Ashley Madison hack brought it all back for me because when I looked at the records on Fairfax Underground my lying married ex-BF was on that site like white on rice. In the end it gave me more, not less, peace because the information being so accessible meant I no longer had even a tiny theoretical obligation to inform her. Likewise, your obligation towards her is long over. Keep on with the recovery and good luck finding real love. Decent men are out there.
Op here. Thank you for your advice and your compassion, PP. Do you struggle with trust issues now? I have found myself going through my now boyfriend's cell phone and covertly checking up on him. I am a much more paranoid person now and I hate that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, just curious. What county or state did this happen in. Or what industry was the DH in? This story is so similar to my story it almost sounds the same. And you were two years ago, I just happened.
Op here. The guy I am talking about is 6'2, maybe 220?, with a name starting with T. I doubt you know the same guy because what are the odds. I have since learned that this kind of thing is very common. A lot of dirt bags out there.
Name started with a T, but I can't say he was 220. Maybe 180.
Did he have any hobbies or distinguishing marks or a particular taste in music? I also traveled with the husband.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, just curious. What county or state did this happen in. Or what industry was the DH in? This story is so similar to my story it almost sounds the same. And you were two years ago, I just happened.
Op here. The guy I am talking about is 6'2, maybe 220?, with a name starting with T. I doubt you know the same guy because what are the odds. I have since learned that this kind of thing is very common. A lot of dirt bags out there.
Name started with a T, but I can't say he was 220. Maybe 180.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, just curious. What county or state did this happen in. Or what industry was the DH in? This story is so similar to my story it almost sounds the same. And you were two years ago, I just happened.
Op here. The guy I am talking about is 6'2, maybe 220?, with a name starting with T. I doubt you know the same guy because what are the odds. I have since learned that this kind of thing is very common. A lot of dirt bags out there.
Name started with a T, but I can't say he was 220. Maybe 180.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, just curious. What county or state did this happen in. Or what industry was the DH in? This story is so similar to my story it almost sounds the same. And you were two years ago, I just happened.
Op here. The guy I am talking about is 6'2, maybe 220?, with a name starting with T. I doubt you know the same guy because what are the odds. I have since learned that this kind of thing is very common. A lot of dirt bags out there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I know you are looking for closure on this, OP, and are tempted to contact her.
Before you do, ask yourself what purpose will it serve. You need to protect yourself if this woman is on the warpath and doesn't care who she hurts as long as her husband goes down. I am less concerned with physical vengeance as with public outing. Don't give out your address or full name or place of work. You will be able to see exactly where this is going in the first few minutes of your conversation, if you decide to take her up on the offer.
Op here. You know what, you are right. I think that I had no closure on some level. It was such a disorienting experience and I did not tell anyone because I was just too humiliated. I hate that this is all coming up again and bringing up those feelings. I feel guilty all over again as if I was complicit in her husband betraying her, but I had no idea.
I'm the pp who was in a similar situation. A year relationship and you didn't tell anyone???? wow. I told family, friends, strangers, clergy, I had therapy, and my relationship was shorter than a year.![]()
I would really advise at least a few sessions of therapy about this. You were pretty young still. It's affecting your relationships and the way you see men, I'll bet. It is going to be hard to really move on if your policy is just to not think about it.
Anonymous wrote:I've also been the unsuspecting OW, OP. It sucks and I get it. Ignore the haters on the thread.
I think you should send a polite but formal and clear-boundaries email in reply. express compassion for what she's going through, but say that it was an awful period for you, you've worked hard to put it behind you, and you don't wish to relive it by talking to her. Maybe add that if she wants to talk because she is seeking a divorce then her lawyer can contact you from now on, but she should already have more than enough information from your last email.
She is asking you to be a friend and that is just a bad idea. She's now where you were, remember--that nasty email years ago was her in denial and lashing out. Now she is actually grappling with it, a betrayal a lot worse than yours. You can have compassion for her all you want but you do not need to take on her pain and reopen your own wounds by being her friend. He hurt you both but your shared pain is no basis for a relationship.
I never did contact the wife and always wondered if I should have. The Ashley Madison hack brought it all back for me because when I looked at the records on Fairfax Underground my lying married ex-BF was on that site like white on rice. In the end it gave me more, not less, peace because the information being so accessible meant I no longer had even a tiny theoretical obligation to inform her. Likewise, your obligation towards her is long over. Keep on with the recovery and good luck finding real love. Decent men are out there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I know you are looking for closure on this, OP, and are tempted to contact her.
Before you do, ask yourself what purpose will it serve. You need to protect yourself if this woman is on the warpath and doesn't care who she hurts as long as her husband goes down. I am less concerned with physical vengeance as with public outing. Don't give out your address or full name or place of work. You will be able to see exactly where this is going in the first few minutes of your conversation, if you decide to take her up on the offer.
Op here. You know what, you are right. I think that I had no closure on some level. It was such a disorienting experience and I did not tell anyone because I was just too humiliated. I hate that this is all coming up again and bringing up those feelings. I feel guilty all over again as if I was complicit in her husband betraying her, but I had no idea.
Anonymous wrote:OP, just curious. What county or state did this happen in. Or what industry was the DH in? This story is so similar to my story it almost sounds the same. And you were two years ago, I just happened.
Anonymous wrote:
I know you are looking for closure on this, OP, and are tempted to contact her.
Before you do, ask yourself what purpose will it serve. You need to protect yourself if this woman is on the warpath and doesn't care who she hurts as long as her husband goes down. I am less concerned with physical vengeance as with public outing. Don't give out your address or full name or place of work. You will be able to see exactly where this is going in the first few minutes of your conversation, if you decide to take her up on the offer.