Anonymous wrote:She is such a huge threat to your happy marriage that you should move. Tomorrow if today isn't possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP here - yes, she spent a lot of time with us because of ME. I invited her to do things, I chatted with her at the playground when we were there, I had her over for movies and wine (husband wasn't involved in any evening activities we planned together). She was MY friend. Up until the weekend when I was really sick in bed, their actual contact was pretty minimal. My husband is incredibly kind and probably the nicest, most honest person I've ever known. He's the guy who always does the honorable thing, regardless of whether anyone is looking. He's also wonderful with our children, and by extension other children that are playing with our children. So he was of course kind to her DD. She is familiar with our family and knows how much I valued my marriage, husband and family because we talked about it. She knows both our children and had to have been aware of the impact an affair could have on both of them, and she just didn't care.
It seems so off base to me that you think that she did nothing wrong. Why do you think she revealed her feelings for him? I can't imagine any other reason than that she was letting him know that she was interested in starting a romantic relationship with him. It was only after he rejected her that she said anything about not being able to spend time around him. If she was just trying to explain her departure from a friendship, her discussion should have been with me - Primarily I was her friend, not my husband. So how is that not so wrong? It is such a massive betrayal. Further, when I confronted her she spouted some bs about not believing in marriage and how it was a unnatural societal construct. She also stated that she would be interested in any man that was decent and nice to her - and she used the word "interested" which makes it pretty clear that she wanted more than just getting this off her chest.
Our girls that are friends aren't even 2 years old yet, so I'm pretty sure they'll be just fine. And maybe she feels better being unburdened by sharing this, but she selfishly has just managed to burden and hurt other people with it. You cannot help it if you get a crush on someone, but you can help how you behave. She should have behaved like an adult and kept this to herself.
You know, I just want to say OP - congrats on being sane in a difficult situation and not reacting like some of these looneybins around here.
Thank you so much for your kind words of encouragement - I'm doing my best to handle this is a way I won't regret later.
That being said, since this is an anonymous forum, I can say that I'm really feeling so awful on the inside. All day I've been fighting down that painful lump in my throat and just feel terrible. I really wish I could just let it roll off my back and be thankful for all the great things I have in my life, but I'm really struggling for some reason.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think looks have very much to do with anything if a man is itching for strange. If you saw the women my ex pursued on the side you'd be appalled.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does it make you hotter for your husband? Not only is he a stand up guy and father, he's attractive to other women!
Blah blah blah...had this woman been attractive this would be a totally different thread.
That's not true - she's actually very attractive. She thinner than I am, younger than I am, and very pretty. But luckily my husband really loves me and is very devoted to our family. Once again I'll say that this is not a matter of her having the feelings she did/does, but it was that she tried to act on those feelings with my husband.
BS!
If all of that younger prettier thinner BS was true, you would've NEVER had her around your family in that way! And you would 've NEVER thrown her and DH together while you were sick .
I was being silly with my comment. I don't think DH did anything wrong (though he should've told you ASAP ) but if you're gonna make up lies to try to 'defend' him , you'll lose credibility .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does it make you hotter for your husband? Not only is he a stand up guy and father, he's attractive to other women!
Blah blah blah...had this woman been attractive this would be a totally different thread.
That's not true - she's actually very attractive. She thinner than I am, younger than I am, and very pretty. But luckily my husband really loves me and is very devoted to our family. Once again I'll say that this is not a matter of her having the feelings she did/does, but it was that she tried to act on those feelings with my husband.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The "wrong" behavior is burdening someone else with information that could be harmful to them, just to unburden yourself.
And that's the BEST case scenario, ignoring the possibility that she wanted to sleep with a married man.
But maybe there are more sociopaths on DCUM than I even thought. Just tell people whatever you want, regardless of how it affects them.
By this standard, the husband should have kept what he knew to himself.
I mean, are you kidding? How are you burdening your spouse by telling them something like this? I'm sure the wife would MUCH prefer to have this information and not have a husband-stealing interloper hanging around her family.
I guess it might make sense that these are the same thing in your bizarro world where the most important things are the wife and toddler keeping their friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh. I am single and please don't isolate your single friends from your lives because you see them as a threat. I've only had a crush on the husband of ONE friend and my response is to treat him in a manner that is cordial but somewhat distant. No way would I ever want to get involved with a married man, much less the husband of a friend. That is just a waste of time and a disaster. No matter what, the single friend doesn't win. Chances are the man doesn't want to leave his wife, but even if it does, do I want to marry a cheater? No.
I've been in the same boat. It took months and a LOT of prayer to extinguish the inappropriate romantic feelings I developed for a friend's husband. She and he never guessed. The whole time I was distancing myself, they were calling to invite me to hang with them. I felt so bad hurting their feelings, but it was what was best for everyone involved. Meanwhile, women with the least appealing husbands cut me out of their social circle after my divorce only to learn later that their DH was screwing a still-married friend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh. I am single and please don't isolate your single friends from your lives because you see them as a threat. I've only had a crush on the husband of ONE friend and my response is to treat him in a manner that is cordial but somewhat distant. No way would I ever want to get involved with a married man, much less the husband of a friend. That is just a waste of time and a disaster. No matter what, the single friend doesn't win. Chances are the man doesn't want to leave his wife, but even if it does, do I want to marry a cheater? No.
See...I would not isolate you at all. You could be at the house or out to dinner with us, as long as I was there. My point is that my hope would be that all of the time you spend with my DH would involve me.
What some of us are saying is that you developing the crush was a natural thing. You did not act on it - but others will.