Anonymous wrote:If you ever start to send a text and wonder, 'could this send the wrong message?' then don't send it.
I text a few married men occasionally who I'm friends with (and single guys) but there is not a single text that I would be uncomfortable with DH seeing/reading. That doesn't mean DH is reading my texts, but I wouldn't have anything to hide if he did.
The moment either side feels like something clandestine is happening, you've crossed the line.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why it's okay for married women to maintain friendships with men after marriage, but not create new friendships with men while married...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree with PP but would also add that these texts shouldn't be frequent and replacing social time with your spouse. For example, my DH would come home from work, text pics of our kids to his coworker saying "they missed me!" And then continue texting her on and off throughout the evening with random crap. All the while ignoring me. Content of texts was innocent, but DH was making a lot of effort to make another woman laugh and engage with her, and treating me like the household help. Not okay.
Wow ! This is exactly what happened to me when my husband got a blackberry and started a new project at work with younger people. All of a sudden I was non existent as were our pets. All he did was text the young woman constantly, ignoring me, while starting an emotional affair. It has taken 4 years to wind down and get back to normal.
Anonymous wrote:Agree with PP but would also add that these texts shouldn't be frequent and replacing social time with your spouse. For example, my DH would come home from work, text pics of our kids to his coworker saying "they missed me!" And then continue texting her on and off throughout the evening with random crap. All the while ignoring me. Content of texts was innocent, but DH was making a lot of effort to make another woman laugh and engage with her, and treating me like the household help. Not okay.
Anonymous wrote:
Just be aware that perfectly innocent jokes or sarcasm or witticisms could be interpreted differently by someone else. That is the danger of the condensed word! Gone are the days when you could write pages and pages in a letter to get your meaning across. A text can be easily misinterpreted.