Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is her husband employed at the university where this 19 year old is a FRESHMAN? If so, help her ruin his career
No, he does not work there. She says she’s in love with him.
Anonymous wrote:Is her husband employed at the university where this 19 year old is a FRESHMAN? If so, help her ruin his career
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Help her realize this does not have to destroy her life. We've been culturally condition in the U.S. to think of this as some kind of ultimate betrayal.
But in many cultures--France, Japan, etc., this kind of things is not uncommon or even so taboo. Help her to not overreact. Keep it in perspective.
Are you the cheating husband?
No. I just understand the fact that some kind of crazy overreaction only dissipates wealth and stability for the children. I married into a French family, and they think American divorce culture is basically like cutting off your nose to spite your face. Or, more like cutting off your kid's nose to spite your cheating husband. Who has the energy or the reservoir of spite like that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Keep your heads everybody. I do hate to see these older men taken advantage of, though.
Imagine the power that these young women have to be able to coerce and exploit these wealthy men. Gives me pause.
Oh nooooo won’t someone think of the poor older men????
F them and F you
Kind of a prudish Victorian premise that a young woman's sexuality must be so preciously guarded that no 40 year old man may touch it.
She's 19! Let her decide! Her body her choice, no shame.
Anonymous wrote:Leave him alone. He didn’t break any law. If you are not ok with a 48yo having sex with a 19yo, enact a laa against it.
He is free to enjoy some young women.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Help her realize this does not have to destroy her life. We've been culturally condition in the U.S. to think of this as some kind of ultimate betrayal.
But in many cultures--France, Japan, etc., this kind of things is not uncommon or even so taboo. Help her to not overreact. Keep it in perspective.
There are ways to make a cheater suffer without divorcing them. But yes, this is grounds for divorce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Help her realize this does not have to destroy her life. We've been culturally condition in the U.S. to think of this as some kind of ultimate betrayal.
But in many cultures--France, Japan, etc., this kind of things is not uncommon or even so taboo. Help her to not overreact. Keep it in perspective.
This is absurd adive.
Ignore this MAGA stupid.
Anonymous wrote:A colleague recently confided that she discovered her husband has been having an affair for three months with a 19-year-old. She and her husband are both 48, have been married 24 years, and have two young adult kids, a son in college and an older daughter.
She didn’t suspect anything — everything seemed fine — so she’s completely blindsided and struggling to manage work, family, and daily responsibilities while processing this betrayal.
I want to be there for her in a thoughtful, respectful way — to offer support, listen if she needs to talk, and be a steady presence.
For those who have been through something similar, what other ways could I support her during this time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did she find out?
He actually found her on TikTok and started messaging her there. My colleague eventually saw the messages when she picked up his phone one day — she didn’t even know he used TikTok. He’d rarely be home because of his job and spent a lot of time meeting up with her on weekends, including at her dorm.
Yeah, divorce is the only sane option here. Lock up trust funds for the kids before the sugar babies get everything.