Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:maybe she is now happy and that is ok.
Typical... a woman can abandon her family and cheat on her husband as long as it makes her happy....
Anonymous wrote:OP again. Yes the kids are under 13. They are older than 8. I’m really not judging the marriage. I’m not religious. I don’t believe in staying in a marriage when you are miserable.
I do care about the kids. There are better ways to approach separation and divorce in terms of helping your kids get through it in a healthy way. But even if I care about them, maybe there is nothing I can do for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All happened over the summer. Nobody ever knows what’s going on in someone else’s marriage, but she’s posting this stuff all over Facebook. Where her two kids can see everything. Is there any tactful way for me to approach her about not sucking her kids into this drama just yet? It’s bad enough for them that she up and moved out, leaving them with their father. It’s as if she completely lost her mind...
Do you actually spend time with her in person, or are you just seeing stuff on Facebook?
If she is actually an in-person friend and you are legitimately concerned about her mental health, you could reach out to her with support. Like, "Jane, I've seen on Facebook that there's been a lot going on in your life lately. Are you okay? This all seems very unlike you. I'm here to talk if you need an ear."
If she is just someone you see on FB and don't actually interact with and your concern is that her children will see a side of her that you don't think is appropriate, let her be.
I’m a real life friend but not a super close friend. I see her about once a month. One of her kids is friends with mine. I do not care about the marriagefailing. That is between two adults. I do care about the kids who can see Facebook pics that are not very appropriate. Like the two of them in bed but nothing showing. The kids may not understand what’s going on. But what if they do? I was more interested in somehow just getting her to change her privacy settings on Facebook so her kids don’t see.
Of course, I don’t know what she’s saying or showing her kids in real life. Maybe it mirrors her Facebook posts. Her one child has mentioned none of this to my child...
Anonymous wrote:you should support your friend. you don't know what abuse she suffered in the marriage. She most likely now feels empowered and is using social media posts to help promote that as an example to other women in her community. As for the kids, if she has a daughter she is showing her daughter how a strong woman takes control of her light. If she has sons then she is illustrating to her sons that they should take better care of their wives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you should support your friend. you don't know what abuse she suffered in the marriage. She most likely now feels empowered and is using social media posts to help promote that as an example to other women in her community. As for the kids, if she has a daughter she is showing her daughter how a strong woman takes control of her light. If she has sons then she is illustrating to her sons that they should take better care of their wives.
If she has sons then she is illustrating to them that your wife will leave you at the drop of a hat, that she will suffer no social consequences for doing so, and that other women will rally to defend her behavior and attack the husband as an abusive pig. But hey, no worries son, someday you should get married too!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All happened over the summer. Nobody ever knows what’s going on in someone else’s marriage, but she’s posting this stuff all over Facebook. Where her two kids can see everything. Is there any tactful way for me to approach her about not sucking her kids into this drama just yet? It’s bad enough for them that she up and moved out, leaving them with their father. It’s as if she completely lost her mind...
Do you actually spend time with her in person, or are you just seeing stuff on Facebook?
If she is actually an in-person friend and you are legitimately concerned about her mental health, you could reach out to her with support. Like, "Jane, I've seen on Facebook that there's been a lot going on in your life lately. Are you okay? This all seems very unlike you. I'm here to talk if you need an ear."
If she is just someone you see on FB and don't actually interact with and your concern is that her children will see a side of her that you don't think is appropriate, let her be.
I’m a real life friend but not a super close friend. I see her about once a month. One of her kids is friends with mine. I do not care about the marriagefailing. That is between two adults. I do care about the kids who can see Facebook pics that are not very appropriate. Like the two of them in bed but nothing showing. The kids may not understand what’s going on. But what if they do? I was more interested in somehow just getting her to change her privacy settings on Facebook so her kids don’t see.
Of course, I don’t know what she’s saying or showing her kids in real life. Maybe it mirrors her Facebook posts. Her one child has mentioned none of this to my child...
Anonymous wrote:you should support your friend. you don't know what abuse she suffered in the marriage. She most likely now feels empowered and is using social media posts to help promote that as an example to other women in her community. As for the kids, if she has a daughter she is showing her daughter how a strong woman takes control of her light. If she has sons then she is illustrating to her sons that they should take better care of their wives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All happened over the summer. Nobody ever knows what’s going on in someone else’s marriage, but she’s posting this stuff all over Facebook. Where her two kids can see everything. Is there any tactful way for me to approach her about not sucking her kids into this drama just yet? It’s bad enough for them that she up and moved out, leaving them with their father. It’s as if she completely lost her mind...
Do you actually spend time with her in person, or are you just seeing stuff on Facebook?
If she is actually an in-person friend and you are legitimately concerned about her mental health, you could reach out to her with support. Like, "Jane, I've seen on Facebook that there's been a lot going on in your life lately. Are you okay? This all seems very unlike you. I'm here to talk if you need an ear."
If she is just someone you see on FB and don't actually interact with and your concern is that her children will see a side of her that you don't think is appropriate, let her be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:maybe she is now happy and that is ok.
And all the psychological wreckage she leaves behind her be damned. Sorry, husband and kids, but the importance of her happiness totally supersedes yours!
You know nothing of her marriage or relationship.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All happened over the summer. Nobody ever knows what’s going on in someone else’s marriage, but she’s posting this stuff all over Facebook. Where her two kids can see everything. Is there any tactful way for me to approach her about not sucking her kids into this drama just yet? It’s bad enough for them that she up and moved out, leaving them with their father. It’s as if she completely lost her mind...
Y'all trip me out with this obsession with tactfulness.
If you see a baby left in a hot car do you find a way to "tactfully" tell the parents to get little Johnny out?
Geezus if you're so concerned about the kids then F**K being tactful - say what needs to be said for the sake of the kids.
How is this situation (in which an internet "friend" thinks that the children are going to see pictures of their mom and her boyfriend and be harmed by that) the same as a child being left in a hot car?
It does not need to be said "for the sake of the kids." It just doesn't. Tactfulness in this case would be to mind her own business.