Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to feel foolish for not noticing my husband's affair?

83 replies

Nicoleyi · Today 06:31

Hi all, so my DH well I guess ex-DH and I have been married for 3 years, together for 6 years. We are mid 30s, we have one son who is 2 years old.
Last week he told me he has been having an affair for the best part of the last year. Obviously I’m beyond devastated, but what’s hurt more than anything is the way I really just had no idea. I could never have guessed it.

For context he works in an industry where after work drinks or even lunch time drinks are fairly standard practice. When we had DS we agreed Thursday nights he would go for after work drinks, what he did at lunch time was his business and there would probably be one other night in the month he’d go out, straight from work.

One of his best friends is a woman about 3 years younger. They met through his old flat mates, have known each other about a decade. She was at our wedding, she has met our son and was at his first birthday party. She works in a different industry from DH but their offices are in the same area. I knew he sometimes met her for a drink at lunch time or for drinks after work. I had no reason not to trust her, she’d been nothing but nice to me, is engaged or at least she was to my knowledge. She is one of his many female friends.

Last week DH told me he needed to talk to me, he confessed he’s been sleeping with her for almost a year, sometimes Thursdays after work, sometimes on Mondays or Fridays when he would tell me he was going to work in the office so I didn’t need to worry about keeping DS quiet but would actually work from her flat.
I felt totally blindsided, I drank wine with her not 2 months ago as I stopped to have a drink at the pub DHs friends and colleagues go to before DH and I went out on a date!

At the weekend I asked him to leave and I’ve now found out from his mother he is not staying with her at all but is staying at this woman’s flat!

AIBU to feel so bloody stupid for not noticing this? I can’t believe he either lied to me so well I had truly no idea or I was so bloody naive as to not notice!

OP posts:
Doingtheboxerbeat · Today 11:19

OP, If you have ever read posts on here where someone suspects their DH's friendship with a woman he has known for a long time, you will notice a barrage of posters accusing the OP of being a jealous controlling hag and that they and their husbands all have friends of the opposite sex, and that the OP is the problem.

YANBU.

DearDenimEagle · Today 14:30

unreasonable to feel stupid, edited to change to foolish. sorry

We are supposed to be able to trust our partner, especially so early in the marriage. I’m so sorry you’re going through this and you will grieve for quite some time, but the fact you didn’t notice is because you’re a good person. He used agreed times to do sneaky things. The two faced cheek of both of them.
Once a cheat etc…to marry the mistress creates a vacancy. I hope she gets hers, …the snake

DearDenimEagle · Today 14:35

Doingtheboxerbeat · Today 11:19

OP, If you have ever read posts on here where someone suspects their DH's friendship with a woman he has known for a long time, you will notice a barrage of posters accusing the OP of being a jealous controlling hag and that they and their husbands all have friends of the opposite sex, and that the OP is the problem.

YANBU.

I disagree..I’ve seen posts where women are told to trust their gut and most seem to say, it’s an emotional affair at the very least

Doingtheboxerbeat · Today 14:40

DearDenimEagle · Today 14:35

I disagree..I’ve seen posts where women are told to trust their gut and most seem to say, it’s an emotional affair at the very least

Those posts exist also, but so do these ones - although they may be cool wife-ing.

Silverbirchleaf · Today 14:48

You’re in a state of shock and have been royally betrayed. It’s natural to question everything but you’ve done nothing wrong.

Dishwashersforever · Today 15:00

You’re being unreasonable for blaming yourself for not noticing. You trusted him . You aren’t to blame. Hugs x

GoldMoon · Today 16:37

As you say it was a shock to find out . I assume you were continuing to be intimate with him ?
Sad to say you need to get yourself tested , also due to him showing you the person he is , don't assume she has been the only one .

QuintadosMalvados · Today 16:47

Doingtheboxerbeat · Today 11:19

OP, If you have ever read posts on here where someone suspects their DH's friendship with a woman he has known for a long time, you will notice a barrage of posters accusing the OP of being a jealous controlling hag and that they and their husbands all have friends of the opposite sex, and that the OP is the problem.

YANBU.

Maybe I'm cynical but I see a man who has female friends as a red flag rather than a caring, feminist 'new' man.

I'm not saying he can't have acquaintances and he'd have to be respectful to women and not a misogynist but friend, nah F* that.

I wouldn't be controlling him as I wouldn't get involved in a relationship with him in the first place to control him.

This is not to denigrate OP, we can all make mistakes.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page