Anonymous wrote:She's going to pretend to go to work tomorrow but really go see a lawyer. After she retains one she's going to confront my dad. She said she was really glad I told her. She was completely shocked and blindsided. She didn't want to see the emails so I'm glad I didn't send them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think you should tell. It's not your place. Maybe everyone is happy with the situation.
+1. Not your relationship, not your business, not your problem. You don't need to do anything; just do whatever you would about any other piece of misaddressed mail you happened to see -- forget about it and move on because it's not yours to deal with.
Did either of you read all OP's replies? The father is planning behind his wife's back to sell their house and leave with the mistress. OP saw messages about specific plans between the dad and the mistress. So you think OP should just forget that and let dad financially cripple mom on top of devastating her with a surprise demand for divorce?
This is exactly why I told her. If it was an EA or side chick I probably wouldn't have done anything, but when I saw the plans I knew I had to tell her. To a PP: I know all this because I mustered up the courage to go through the emails and screenshot them as proof. Which is good, most of them are already deleted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm going in a different direction. It's not your marriage. Your mom either knows, suspects, or doesn't care. MYOB, or at best tell your dad to be more careful with his email. It's never your place to blow up someone else's marriage.
Op would not be the one blowing up her parents' marriage. If Op's mom wants to be in denial or if she wants to ignore what it is going on she totally still has that option even after getting the forwarded email. For all Op knows, her mom already knows about this affair and doesn't care.
But expecting Op to walk around with the burden of this secret is not fair and it is not a reasonable expectation.
Ignore the PP it's a cheater that hopes one day their daughter will MYOB and blame the faithful spouse. Whatever... Damaged people are so predictable.
Wrong. I'm not the damaged one. I'm a grownup who was cheated upon. My kids should not be in the middle. I'm sorry you were cheated upon and are so bitter that you think putting your kids in the middle is a good idea. Hope your ex is paying the therapy bills.
Anonymous wrote:I'm going in a different direction. It's not your marriage. Your mom either knows, suspects, or doesn't care. MYOB, or at best tell your dad to be more careful with his email. It's never your place to blow up someone else's marriage.
Anonymous wrote:She's going to pretend to go to work tomorrow but really go see a lawyer. After she retains one she's going to confront my dad. She said she was really glad I told her. She was completely shocked and blindsided. She didn't want to see the emails so I'm glad I didn't send them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think you should tell. It's not your place. Maybe everyone is happy with the situation.
+1. Not your relationship, not your business, not your problem. You don't need to do anything; just do whatever you would about any other piece of misaddressed mail you happened to see -- forget about it and move on because it's not yours to deal with.
Did either of you read all OP's replies? The father is planning behind his wife's back to sell their house and leave with the mistress. OP saw messages about specific plans between the dad and the mistress. So you think OP should just forget that and let dad financially cripple mom on top of devastating her with a surprise demand for divorce?