Anonymous wrote:Op here. I have been tracking his phone quietly over the past few weeks. I saw tonight that he made multiple calls to a contact called “telemarketer” I also saw a text where he said. “Got home. Missing you”
I called this number and a female voice picked up.
I’ve been awake all night.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. I have been tracking his phone quietly over the past few weeks. I saw tonight that he made multiple calls to a contact called “telemarketer” I also saw a text where he said. “Got home. Missing you”
I called this number and a female voice picked up.
I’ve been awake all night.
You don't need to torture yourself like this, the pics told you everything you need to know. Figure out what you are going to do. If you choose to stay stop snooping and forget about it. That road is just misery. If you are leaving, stop snooping and start marshalling resources for an exit.
You have three options :
1. Divorce. He showed his colors
2. Stay and teach that him you won’t tolerate this behavior. Not sure how you’d do that.
3. Stay and put up with more cheating
Without kids i would choose #1. I am married to someone similar and regret not leaving.
With kids I would choose number 1 (and did). Why does being married mean I have to accept emotional abuse? Why would anyone think growing up in a house where the primary adult relationship is based on tolerance of serious lies is a healthy family environment?
It was better for me and my kids to get away from the crazy.
Because it could be a phase for him. There is more to marriage than fidelity. Your kids are going to be shuttled between houses for years. You’ll lose assets. You won’t have someone to grow old with. There are many reasons women and men stay with a cheater.
I 100% agree with the poster who picked #1, for the same reasons they did. To the person who says it's a "phase", no it's not. Someone who lives a double life, lies to the people he claims to love most in the world, puts their health at risk (STDs), takes time and money away from his family, rationalizes all of it as being the spouses fault.....that's not a phase. That's his true character coming through loud and clear. That's emotional abuse at the very least. No one should have to put up with that. I'd much rather lose assets and be alone than be with an immoral person with no honor or integrity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have three options :
1. Divorce. He showed his colors
2. Stay and teach that him you won’t tolerate this behavior. Not sure how you’d do that.
3. Stay and put up with more cheating
Without kids i would choose #1. I am married to someone similar and regret not leaving.
With kids I would choose number 1 (and did). Why does being married mean I have to accept emotional abuse? Why would anyone think growing up in a house where the primary adult relationship is based on tolerance of serious lies is a healthy family environment?
It was better for me and my kids to get away from the crazy.
Because it could be a phase for him. There is more to marriage than fidelity. Your kids are going to be shuttled between houses for years. You’ll lose assets. You won’t have someone to grow old with. There are many reasons women and men stay with a cheater.
I 100% agree with the poster who picked #1, for the same reasons they did. To the person who says it's a "phase", no it's not. Someone who lives a double life, lies to the people he claims to love most in the world, puts their health at risk (STDs), takes time and money away from his family, rationalizes all of it as being the spouses fault.....that's not a phase. That's his true character coming through loud and clear. That's emotional abuse at the very least. No one should have to put up with that. I'd much rather lose assets and be alone than be with an immoral person with no honor or integrity.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. I have been tracking his phone quietly over the past few weeks. I saw tonight that he made multiple calls to a contact called “telemarketer” I also saw a text where he said. “Got home. Missing you”
I called this number and a female voice picked up.
I’ve been awake all night.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. I have been tracking his phone quietly over the past few weeks. I saw tonight that he made multiple calls to a contact called “telemarketer” I also saw a text where he said. “Got home. Missing you”
I called this number and a female voice picked up.
I’ve been awake all night.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:![]()
Stop jumping at the bit to convict the guy when you're not even sure a crime has been committed.
Don't get your legal advice from TV.
First, this is irrelevant to OP's situation. Second, and unrelated to OP's marital situation, you can convict with circumstantial evidence. If there were direct evidence (the proverbial smoking gun), you wouldn't bother having a trial, there'd be a plea unless the defendant was dumb or stubborn or hoping for a miracle.
Anonymous wrote:![]()
Stop jumping at the bit to convict the guy when you're not even sure a crime has been committed.