Anonymous wrote:OP here. I'm reading all the replies, and I have a couple of responses.
First, I don't see this as a "dead-end" relationship because I don't want to be married. I am astounded by the number of people who don't understand this. I can't possibly be the only middle-aged woman who has never wanted to be married.
Second, why did I post this? My girlfriends have been telling me that I am wrong because, according to them, I've broken some "code of the sisterhood". I wanted to see if people on here agreed. I just don't think I have any responsibility to "the sisterhood" any more than I do for his marriage vows. If I saw a woman hanging from a cliff, I would try to save her. Not because she is a woman, but because she is human.
Third, they have 3 adult children, no grandkids.
You all may be right that I'm a rotten person, karma will get me, someday I'll be lonely, etc., but for now I'm extremely content.
It seems as if I'm hearing from women and I'd be interested to hear from some guys and get their point of view also.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I'm reading all the replies, and I have a couple of responses.
First, I don't see this as a "dead-end" relationship because I don't want to be married. I am astounded by the number of people who don't understand this. I can't possibly be the only middle-aged woman who has never wanted to be married.
Second, why did I post this? My girlfriends have been telling me that I am wrong because, according to them, I've broken some "code of the sisterhood". I wanted to see if people on here agreed. I just don't think I have any responsibility to "the sisterhood" any more than I do for his marriage vows. If I saw a woman hanging from a cliff, I would try to save her. Not because she is a woman, but because she is human.
Third, they have 3 adult children, no grandkids.
You all may be right that I'm a rotten person, karma will get me, someday I'll be lonely, etc., but for now I'm extremely content.
It seems as if I'm hearing from women and I'd be interested to hear from some guys and get their point of view also.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, what you are doing is wrong. You are excusing yourself on a technicality. You know what you are doing is wrong.
How would you feel if your husband was secretly banging someone behind your back?
How would you feel if your sister or daughter's husband did that?
He is stealing from his wife in terms of the time, attention and perhaps financial resources he invests in you. And you are aiding and abetting it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a never-been-married 40 year old woman and I've been in an affair with a 55 year old married man for 3 years. I'm happy. I love him, he loves me, sex is great, non-sex time is great. I don't want anything to change. Several of my closest women friends have told me they think I am wrong for being involved with a married guy. I say, "I'm not the one who took the vows. I'm not deceiving anyone." Should I re-think this?
Have you talked with his wife about it? If not, then you are deceiving someone.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I'm reading all the replies, and I have a couple of responses.
First, I don't see this as a "dead-end" relationship because I don't want to be married. I am astounded by the number of people who don't understand this. I can't possibly be the only middle-aged woman who has never wanted to be married.
Second, why did I post this? My girlfriends have been telling me that I am wrong because, according to them, I've broken some "code of the sisterhood". I wanted to see if people on here agreed. I just don't think I have any responsibility to "the sisterhood" any more than I do for his marriage vows. If I saw a woman hanging from a cliff, I would try to save her. Not because she is a woman, but because she is human.
Third, they have 3 adult children, no grandkids.
You all may be right that I'm a rotten person, karma will get me, someday I'll be lonely, etc., but for now I'm extremely content.
It seems as if I'm hearing from women and I'd be interested to hear from some guys and get their point of view also.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, not wrong. If the husband is straying from the marriage, then there is obviously something the wife isn't doing for him. You didn't wreck the marriage, it was already wrecked.
Of course, your mistake was asking this to a bunch of dependent housewives who would very quickly blame the other woman before confronting their meal ticket.
Way to rationalize. So, if his marriage is "already wrecked" and OP loves him and he loves her, then why doesn't he simply leave the marriage and make a happy life with OP?
I think we all know the answer to that.
Sorry OP. Do what you want but at least own up to it and acknowledge what you are. The backlash here is less about the affair than it is about your stubborn insistence that you're doing nothing wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Hi OP. I am having an affair with a married man too. I am in your age range, with the same age difference and same time frame as your affair. I agree with you that he made the vows to his wife, not you, but I will admit I do have guilt about the affair.
Anonymous wrote:No, not wrong. If the husband is straying from the marriage, then there is obviously something the wife isn't doing for him. You didn't wreck the marriage, it was already wrecked.
Of course, your mistake was asking this to a bunch of dependent housewives who would very quickly blame the other woman before confronting their meal ticket.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also think this sounds like a troll.
You're right.
This is such an obvious troll post, I'm amazed at all the serious responses. Look at the subject line, and then look at OP's "Golly gee, I'm just shocked that everyone thinks I'm doing something wrong!" Come on, people.
OP does sound like a troll, but there are plenty of people who do think this way. The woman my spouse cheated with has been a serial cheater/seducer since the 1980s. But she doesn't think she has a problem. The new relationship is always justified because the new person is "the one" and nothing can keep them apart. The old relationship was always over anyway/with someone who was crazy/mean/etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, not wrong. If the husband is straying from the marriage, then there is obviously something the wife isn't doing for him. You didn't wreck the marriage, it was already wrecked.
Of course, your mistake was asking this to a bunch of dependent housewives who would very quickly blame the other woman before confronting their meal ticket.
Eh, medium troll effort. I give it 4 out of 10.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a never-been-married 40 year old woman and I've been in an affair with a 55 year old married man for 3 years. I'm happy. I love him, he loves me, sex is great, non-sex time is great. I don't want anything to change. Several of my closest women friends have told me they think I am wrong for being involved with a married guy. I say, "I'm not the one who took the vows. I'm not deceiving anyone." Should I re-think this?