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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to feel uncomfortable with what's going on?

525 replies

Girlonatubetrain · 31/03/2017 13:31

Ok, so will try and keep it brief,

So the background
A woman and her family moved into our street a couple of years back and have since then, become very good family friends. Our DHs get on well, kids in same school, help each other with childcare etc.

End of last year, DF had an affair, her DH knows since the new year and they have been trying to save their marriage. She is unsure she wants to stay in her marriage but her DH loves her and they are trying to fix things (she has told me this week she is still unhappy to I’m guessing the marriage will end). The OM is out of the picture now, from what she says.

DF claims that the stress of her unhappy marriage and the resulting affair have caused her to have a nervous breakdown. She is on anti-depressants. I have spent many an hour listening to her being upset with her life in general and do regard her as a good friend, who needs people to lean on.

And my problem –
My DH has his own business very close to our homes. I work from home quite a bit. Over the last couple of weeks, whenever I’ve popped in to see DH when on a lunch break etc, she has been there. I have even offered to drop her home when I leave and she has said, she’ll hang back for a bit. It sounds ridiculous, but my DH even has her preferred brand of beverage there for when she visits, but not mine!

I spoke to DH about it last week as I feel its crossing a line and am very uncomfortable about it. DH reassures me there is nothing to worry about. He then started to tell me about how she’s just going through a mental rough patch and how she’d msgd him the other morning that she was struggling to get out of bed!

Everytime I pop in to visit, which is max twice a week and only for 10mins at a time, he makes out he is really busy and doesn’t really speak to me but just gets on with his work. So how can she always be there if he is ignoring her in the same way? So can only assume, when she’s there, he has time for her?

I get that she is having a hard time at the moment. I also understand she needs support and friends. It may be that she is just using him as an emotional crutch like shes used me the last few months. But . . . . I still feel that they are crossing a line and I am unhappy about it. To know they are spending so much time together (& that’s just the ones I know about) and now to know that they are PMing each other rather than the group chat with the 2 wives and 2 husbands on it, doesn’t sit well with me . . .

I love my DH and do trust him, but still feel very uncomfortable about the whole situation. DH and I have since fallen out since the start of this week because of this and are barely on speaking terms.

Im sure his reason would be I haven’t done anything wrong, I’m just supporting DF and DW is blowing it into something bigger.
But AIBU to feel this way? What do I do?

OP posts:
sobeyondthehills · 01/04/2017 01:53

Hi Op

I haven't read the full thread but have read your updates.

I don't know if it has been said but when I was struggling to get out of bed, I would only leave if I had to pick up my son from school, not to go and visit a friend somewhere.

Am sending you a lot of hugs and courage

LindyHemming · 01/04/2017 02:05

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

HeartsTrumpDiamonds · 01/04/2017 02:42

Lochan and sobeyond make excellent points. Hope you are ok OP.

TheDowagerCuntess · 01/04/2017 04:11

So your DH let her take a selfie of the two of them (from his work place), and send it to you? Confused

Mcchickenbb41 · 01/04/2017 07:39

Regarding the selfie. Just a different view, if dh is having an affair would he really be stupid enough to let her do that ? Maybe he's just being extremely naive ?

KacieB · 01/04/2017 07:40

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

Mrdarcyfanclub · 01/04/2017 07:44

I agree with sobeyond. When you're struggling/depressed, if you're capable of putting anything first, it's your children. Certainly not hanging out with someone else's dh. By her actions this woman has shown you who she is.

My dh has a good job and is generally a nice guy (although grumpy at home!) so attracts a number of these types. They try and 'confide' in him at work about their problems and invite him to lunch etc. He won't go if it's 1-1. Not because he's unfriendly or doesn't like women but because he knows it's a dangerous game to play. One of them ended up in a relationship with his married boss, who left his wife.

Equally if one of my friends' dhs kept popping round to confide in me, I'd knock it on the head very soon. I have several male friends but I keep it very boundaried and certainly wouldn't prioritise them over my dh, as your husband is doing with this woman over you. It's very disrespectful.
Sorry you're going through this op.

xStefx · 01/04/2017 07:45

I'm sorry op but I would say they are having an affair.
He made you feel guilty like you were being paranoid In order to stop you seeing her messages, any husband that cared for his wife's feelins would just have shown you.
He Is being a better friend than husband
She seems to be his priority
You need to be harsh with hubby, tell him your not standing for it anymore and I would tell your friend to stay away: she is a liar am is after your husband

Middleoftheroad · 01/04/2017 07:54

OP hope ypu're OK.

My DP befriended a recently dumped friend of his DS who he claimed was "loud and bradh nightmare etc". How could he fall for somebody he thought was a nightmare right?

My suspicions were right in end and no matter how silly they made me feel for insisting sthg was going on I persevered and was right. Trust your gut. My backstabbers behaved despicably and so are these two.

xStefx · 01/04/2017 08:05

Yes I wanted to add, if he seems to be making a point of saying " she is a nutta, she is not the kind of woman I like , blah blah / I would say some doth protest too much. He should care about your feelings and clearly doesn't . The whole " if I show you her messages that's opening a can of worms" he should have been more than upfront to show those after all she is your mutual friend. He was hiding something . Tell her to back off , she isn't your friend op, she wouldn't be spending so much time with your DH if she was x

Wristy · 01/04/2017 08:26

I've read this thread with my heart pounding in my chest. What a pair of cruel, deceitful scumbags.

I hope you got your answer and weren't gaslighted and lied to again. Flowers

HalfShellHero · 01/04/2017 08:36

Hope your ok OP x

FourToTheFloor · 01/04/2017 08:38

I hope OP you managed to talk with your dh and get it sorted.

FourToTheFloor · 01/04/2017 08:38

I hope OP you managed to talk with your dh and get it sorted.

TakemedowntoPotatoCity · 01/04/2017 09:03

Another one hoping you are ok OP. Agree with others that him calling her a 'nutter' etc. is behaviour designed to throw you off the scent. You deserve better than this.

NinjaPosse · 01/04/2017 09:39

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

ohfourfoxache · 01/04/2017 09:40

Hope you're ok Thanks

SeriousCreativeBlock · 01/04/2017 09:51

I hope you managed to sort this last night. This sounds eerily similar to a friend's situation and it turned out he had been having an affair. So sorry you're going through this Flowers

Hairandbeauty123 · 01/04/2017 09:56

Had the same situtaion with my " ex husband" he told me the same thing and then I found out they had been having an affair for nearly a year! He also told me the same things, " she's just a friend, she's too high maintenance" she's this, she's that, she sleeps around, she wouldn't be someone I would be interested in if I was single! but unfortunately it was all done to keep me off the "scent!" I would tread very carefully and even though you don't want to look mistrusting, you do have to go with your gut instinct, I felt that my husband would never do that to me as we loved each other and had children together ( babies at the time) but I was wrong, because it seems that she needed the life I had ( money, nice home, good looking husband, security and all the things she didn't have and couldn't have unless she managed to bag my husband) when I found out, he wanted to give things another go but I could never trust him again as he had told unbelievable lies to me over that year and made me feel like I was losing my mind! I couldn't believe that somebody I was married ro and had children with would tell me the stories ams lies he told me, I felt like I didn't know him at all! .........Please don't underestimate the situation and make it abundantly clear that you will not tolerate her seeing YOUR husband when you are not there.....sending you big hugs xxxx

aaaaargghhhhelpme · 01/04/2017 10:03

Oh op. Just read it all. I can't believe this is happening to you. I don't have any advice just wanted to say take care.
I can't get my head around your dp and friends reactions though. If someone thought I was a bit too close to their DH or my DH felt uncomfortable with one of my friendships, I would be backing right off.
Take care Flowers

eyespydreams · 01/04/2017 10:23

God OP been thinking of you and popping back - hope it all went okay. FlowersCakeBrew

beachcomber243 · 01/04/2017 10:28

We welcomed someone newly single and unhappy into our homes for meals and evenings. She envied our lifestyle but I was the one who wanted to help her.

She went off with my ex, and vice versa.

I also knew someone who called another woman a pain in the neck, a nightmare, she gets on my nerves etc. etc.

They are now a couple.

OP read between the lines, know what people are capable of and how deceitful and cruel they can be when they see something they want....yet try to deny it.

FurryLittleTwerp · 01/04/2017 10:34

I had a "friend" like this - she very nearly wrecked my marriage - we still have problems years later.

Jux · 01/04/2017 11:51

At the very least, he is leading on a vulnerable woman. I hope he's just being a bit dim.

Hope the talk last night went OK, and you have a better handle on what's afoot.

Jux · 01/04/2017 11:57

Remember, it's always better to know the truth, no matter how bad it seems or feels at the time. Whatever you build from it after will be starting on firm ground and be all the better for it.

I suspect your friend is an accomplished liar, and I wouldn't be comfortable having her in my life, if so. If she's capable of lying to her dh, then she's more than capable of lying to you and to your dh.

She may just be playing with him to make herself feel better, or because she's jealous that your marriage was solid and hers wasn't (and isn't).

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