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Relationships

married male friend

63 replies

solanum · 22/07/2009 18:36

How can I develop my friendship without getting his wife worried?I am married too.I do not want to develop a friendship with his wife-I do not even know her-I like him as a friend, but how can I meet him without giving off the wrong signals andpushing him away?Before I was married I used to have male friends, butnowIfeel thatpeople assumeyou mustbe afteran affair if you try to see a member of the opposite sex who is married.

OP posts:
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Doha · 22/07/2009 18:57

Sorry--l tink this is impossible to do on your terms.

You could suggest you any your DP and he and his DW get together for a drink some evening and everyone get to know each other.

I think it's nigh on impossible to cultivate a friendship with him alone without raising any suspicions despite your best intentions.

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mrsboogie · 22/07/2009 18:57

You'll have t make a bit of an effort with the wife too or you will just make things awkward for everyone. Can't you suggest foursome type outings?

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junglist1 · 22/07/2009 20:09

I wouldn't have it, it'll all kick off eventually if you don't get friendly with the wife, sorry. Unless she's super rational, confident, totally non jealous, laid back etc. If you don't know her she don't know you, and therefore will be wary.

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AnyFucker · 22/07/2009 20:16

why are you so keen to develop a relationship with him, whilst excluding his wife ?

dodgy

you will not be popular, love

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ilikeshoes · 22/07/2009 20:19

It will definately, make the wife feel threatened,and that not fair women need to stick together, find a male freind whos single.

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skidoodle · 22/07/2009 20:19

What kind of friendship are you so keen to develop that excludes his wife?

It's like wanting to make a new friend but not get to know any of their friends i.e. weird

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sunburntats · 22/07/2009 20:19

Not good.
Dont invite problems, becuase they WILL come.

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morningpaper · 22/07/2009 20:20

I wouldn't worry about this at all

The issue is, do you have any reason to think his wife is worried?

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BBBee · 22/07/2009 20:25

god i have loads of married male friends and often not much / nothing to do with their wives. None of these have been affairs!

If it is not in your head it won't happen. If other people need reassuring about it they can seek it out themselves and you can oblige.

'tis a friend FFS!

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mrsjammi · 22/07/2009 20:25

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn

AnyFucker · 22/07/2009 20:28

bee, but this poster is deliberately wanting to sideline this blokes wife

I am sure that your own friendships with blokes just developed that way over time, and it wasn't a conscious manipulation on your part

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morningpaper · 22/07/2009 20:29

Do you all live in Saudi Arabia?

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mrsjammi · 22/07/2009 20:30

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morningpaper · 22/07/2009 20:32

lol mrsjammi If my DH came out with that sort of bletheringness I would be worried too

If he said "I had lunch today with Claire" I wouldn't pay the remotest bit of attention

What about those of you who 'have been' bisexual? Do you never leave the house?

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BBBee · 22/07/2009 20:33

mrsjammi - that kind of situation would be fine by me- and pretty much has been.

I have not met their wives/girlfriends because I can't really be bothered with the whole spouse /couple thing - whatever the sex.

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SerendipitousHarlot · 22/07/2009 20:33

So if your OH met a new woman friend, morningpaper - and she showed absolutely no interest in at least pretending to get to know you - you wouldn't be offended? I'm one of the most laid back people in the world about stuff like that, and I wouldn't be happy.

The fact that OP wants the wife well out of it makes me suspicious.

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AnyFucker · 22/07/2009 20:34

mp, I certainly don't believe that men and women cannot have platonic relationships

however, in this particular instance, the Op sounds unusually calculated in her "plans" for this friendship

I don't understand why you would deliberately sideline the wife, seems very underhand to me

some of my friendships wth the opposite sex do not include their other half, but that was how it happened over time, not something that I set out to engineer

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hercules1 · 22/07/2009 20:34

Mrsjammi - do you really believe all that? What about people you meet at work? I have lots of male friends I've met at work and dh has made lots of female friends at work too. Neither of us have much time to go socialising with these people but the thought that there might be something funny going on has never crossed either of our minds. We're married, not chained together to the exclusion of all others.

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morningpaper · 22/07/2009 20:37

serendipity: DH works, he goes out for lunch with women all the time. I've no idea who they are but if they wanted to meet me I would be rather concerned TBH

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AnyFucker · 22/07/2009 20:37

herc, but where the other halves deliberately excluded

OP, you have gone quiet

so, if this blokes wife showed interest in getting to know you, what would you say ?

"err, no love I don't want to know you, its just your husband I am interested in....."

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mrsjammi · 22/07/2009 20:38

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn

hercules1 · 22/07/2009 20:38

I wouldnt particularly want to meet dh's friends and I dont suppose he'd want to meet all mine.

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AnyFucker · 22/07/2009 20:39

mp, but if you suddenly showed inteest in getting to know these ladies who lunch and it was made plain you were not welcome....???

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morningpaper · 22/07/2009 20:40

Why on earth WOULD I be welcome?

It would be mortifying all round

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hercules1 · 22/07/2009 20:40

It depends how it's done. A lot of dh's friends are from his own country and they speak a different language when together. It would be odd if they actively wanted to exclude me but I trust dh so wouldnt be fussed tbh. I am pretty laid back.

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