Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Misplaced anger. You are mad at your husband for making rhe comments and are taking your anger at your friend. If you were truly okay with the comments,you wouöd roll your eyes at your friend and laugh about it with your husband.
OP here. I don’t disagree with you. This is who he is and I’m used to it after all these years, but she had no right to judge and I’m just worried she’s going to amplify what he said and make it worse for both him and me.
This.
From what you describe, she didn’t say anything. She had a facial reaction and kept her thoughts unsaid. What are you going to say? “You opened your eyes wide and yiu don’t have the right to have your own thoughts about what my husband said”? That’s bonkers. She has the right to react. You are not her thought police.
Actually, she has every right to think whatever she wants about what your husband says. The fact you're "used to" this behavior doesn't make it ok. You should be talking to your husband about this, not your friend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ummm no you can’t control other people’s reactions to the way your husband is a creep who blatantly disrespects you. You might be used to it but no one else is.
“a creep who blatantly disrespects you”?
Please. I’m not OP but the first few replies here are clearly from the miserable DCUM divorcees who are bringing all their own baggage to the party.
It’s not inherently “disrespectful” for one spouse to refer to some other human as attractive. It’s utterly mundane. If you think this kind of comment is beyond the pale, that is a good hint about why you are bitter and alone.
Happily married but I would find it offensive if my husband said what he said in front of my friends. Sorry you are getting walked all over in your personal life.
Anonymous wrote:Ummm no you can’t control other people’s reactions to the way your husband is a creep who blatantly disrespects you. You might be used to it but no one else is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Misplaced anger. You are mad at your husband for making rhe comments and are taking your anger at your friend. If you were truly okay with the comments,you wouöd roll your eyes at your friend and laugh about it with your husband.
OP here. I don’t disagree with you. This is who he is and I’m used to it after all these years, but she had no right to judge and I’m just worried she’s going to amplify what he said and make it worse for both him and me.
Anonymous wrote:I was recently out at dinner with my DH and several couple friends. We were talking about a trip overseas DH and I had made last year and some ex pats we met out one night. When DH mentioned how stunning and sultry one of the women we met was, a woman at the table got kind of big eyes like she was shocked and disgusted he would say that.
I’m not ok with her reaction, I felt like she was really judging my DH unfairly and like this could come back to bite DH and/or me if he’s going to be potentially painted as some creep or womanizer. I am not sure if I should say something to her or just distance myself just in case?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ummm no you can’t control other people’s reactions to the way your husband is a creep who blatantly disrespects you. You might be used to it but no one else is.
“a creep who blatantly disrespects you”?
Please. I’m not OP but the first few replies here are clearly from the miserable DCUM divorcees who are bringing all their own baggage to the party.
It’s not inherently “disrespectful” for one spouse to refer to some other human as attractive. It’s utterly mundane. If you think this kind of comment is beyond the pale, that is a good hint about why you are bitter and alone.
He didn’t say she was attractive.
He said she was sultry.
He sounds creepy and my h and I often comment to each other when we see an attractive person
But we are not creepy about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No need to say anything. Don’t engage with people like that.
I had a friend make a nasty comment about me and my husband based on the fact that I sunbath topless on a beach where it is perfectly acceptable.
Another former friend got mad when I mentioned how beautiful a woman was standing in front of a restaurant we were walking into.
People like what? The friend said NOTHING. She opened her eyes wider. Literally everything else is OP's interpretation and, frankly, projection.