Anonymous wrote:Alright I'll be the outlier here. I'm with you, OP. I would not feel good about my husband wanting to attend the funeral of his ex-girlfriend from 25 years ago - especially not comfortable about him going to the trouble and expense of traveling to another city. Feels wrong to me. I have ex boyfriends from 25 years ago with whom I haven't stayed in touch. Some were intense relationships. Would not travel for their funeral.
Not saying there's anything suspicious about this. I'm just saying I relate to how you feel. I would be put out if my husband told me he wanted to attend his ex-girlfriend's funeral out of town.
Anonymous wrote:In a car accident at 47. He hadn't spoken with her since she cheated on him, and thus ended their relationship, at 23. She was in Chicago we are in DC. He has kept up with all of his college friends and many of them are going to her funeral. He wants to attend.
Is that weird? She was married with kids.
This feels a.) a bit like he's using her funeral as a reunion, b.) a bit like he cares more than I want him too, and c.) really inappropriate to her husband and kids.
I said all this and was told "I didn't understand".
What's going on here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a mid-40s H almost married 20 years. I side with OP. I would not attend the funeral (or wedding) of a long term ex.
You really have no idea how the widower will react. Many—perhaps most—wouldn’t care, but a measurable percentage of widowers (including me, if I’m being honest) would not want a funeral to be the occasion where mom’s ex-boyfriend is potentially introduced to the kids. It would be very off putting and I wouldn’t chance that at the ceremony where a husband and children are saying goodbye to the family matriarch.
Seems almost selfish to me. Yes, OP’s DH is probably grieving something and wishes to support his friends, but why in the world would you risk causing a scene for a widower and his children after their world has been totally shattered.
I mean, this is just ridiculous. It just does not happen at funerals that the children are introduced to the adults who need to announce that they slept with their mother decades ago. Some of you are coming up with these farcical justifications for why you shouldn't go. The children finding out that Mom had an ex-boyfriend is not a reason not to go. This scenario just does not happen or matter
Anonymous wrote:You are cold. Let him visit and show his respect.
This was a person he cared deeply for at one point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's super weird that you think it's weird OP.
+1 Your DH is not weird for wanting to go but your are bordering on weird for thinking this.
Anonymous wrote:I’m on OPs side. If it were my husband it would be a no for me. Husband is using funeral as an excuse to ditch her with the kids while he goes to party with his college buddies. No where did it say she was welcomed to come. This woman is dead they have been separated for 23 years there is honestly no need for him to go to this funeral. This woman nor his college buddies are active people in their current lives who they see or speak with regularly. He needs to stay home
Anonymous wrote:I’m a mid-40s H almost married 20 years. I side with OP. I would not attend the funeral (or wedding) of a long term ex.
You really have no idea how the widower will react. Many—perhaps most—wouldn’t care, but a measurable percentage of widowers (including me, if I’m being honest) would not want a funeral to be the occasion where mom’s ex-boyfriend is potentially introduced to the kids. It would be very off putting and I wouldn’t chance that at the ceremony where a husband and children are saying goodbye to the family matriarch.
Seems almost selfish to me. Yes, OP’s DH is probably grieving something and wishes to support his friends, but why in the world would you risk causing a scene for a widower and his children after their world has been totally shattered.
Anonymous wrote:Op I agree with you it's strange, people grow up and move on with their lives. Sure he should care that she passed in the sense for HER husband and HER kids and a loss of life but it should not affect his life today.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Alright I'll be the outlier here. I'm with you, OP. I would not feel good about my husband wanting to attend the funeral of his ex-girlfriend from 25 years ago - especially not comfortable about him going to the trouble and expense of traveling to another city. Feels wrong to me. I have ex boyfriends from 25 years ago with whom I haven't stayed in touch. Some were intense relationships. Would not travel for their funeral.
Not saying there's anything suspicious about this. I'm just saying I relate to how you feel. I would be put out if my husband told me he wanted to attend his ex-girlfriend's funeral out of town.
Another outlier. While I do think OP is way overthinking things, I also think posts on this thread have been extremely, some very nastily, knee-jerk insulting to OP for owning and voicing her feelings here. There is nothing wrong or bad about her feeling that this sudden desire of DH's to fly to a funeral for someone he had not spoken to in, what, 24 years?, seems off kilter. Just having and admitting her feelings does not somehow make OP "psycho" as some idiot PP insisted, nor does it mean she wants to control her DH or whatever other nonsense people love to post on DCUM.
But if he IS in touch with a mutual friend group from college and they're all going I can see how he might feel he wanted to go as well--for them, for mutual support, as much as, probably more than, for the sake of someone he hasn't spoken to or seen in decades.
Importantly, if her death is the first among anyone he knows from college days, this is not only about her having been a GF, but also about her simply being the first in his own generation he knows who has died. That rocks some people and doesn't affect others.
The suddenness is probably part of it too; if he'd heard she'd died after a protracted illness, surrounded by her family, quietly, etc., would he then have rushed to a funeral in another city? I can't help but think not. But a sudden, surprising death when everyone in your old friend circle is still going along OK, well, that makes some people suddenly rather aware of their own mortality, and wanting to see and be reassured by old friends from that time.
So probably bigger context going on than just "she was his college GF, why does he care?", OP. Worth considering.