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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to pursue a future with my sister's ex-husband?

588 replies

Plumzingy · 03/07/2026 16:35

I have gone back and forth about posting this because I know people will have strong opinions, but I genuinely don't know whether I've completely lost perspective.

I am 36 and have been seeing my sister's ex husband, who is 44, for just over a year.

Before anyone asks, there was absolutely no overlap. They divorced several years before anything happened between us. They never had children together and have had very little contact since the divorce. My sister has since remarried has three children with her husband and from everything I can see is very happy.

The reason I'm struggling is because, regardless of all of that, I know how this looks.

It started completely unexpectedly. Around this time last year we both happened to be at the same event through mutual friends. I hadn't seen him properly in years. We'd exchanged the odd polite hello over the years but after the divorce there wasn't really any reason for us to see one another.

We ended up talking for most of the evening. It wasn't flirtatious to begin with. We just clicked. We spoke about work, family, relationships, life after divorce and all sorts of things. It felt incredibly easy, which surprised both of us.

At the end of the evening we carried on talking over another drink and, before I knew it, we ended up sleeping together. I just thought it would be a one night stand.

I woke up the following morning convinced it had been a mistake. I remember thinking I'd probably never hear from him again and perhaps that was for the best.

Instead, he texted me later that day to make sure I'd got home safely. A couple of weeks later we met for coffee intending just to clear the air. That turned into dinner then seeing each other every few weeks, then every weekend we could manage.

Somewhere along the way it stopped feeling like two people casually spending time together and started feeling like a relationship.

We've now been together for over a year.
He's genuinely one of the kindest, calmest people I've ever been with. We have similar values, similar interests and neither of us feels the need for games or drama. It has been one of the healthiest relationships I've ever had, which only makes the situation more complicated.

The problem is that everyone within my immediate family thinks I’m single.
A couple of close friends know, and his friends all know about us now but nobody in my family has any idea. My sister certainly doesn't.

Up until recently we have both been happy to keep things private while we figured out whether this had a future.
Now he says it does.

A few weeks ago he sat me down and said he doesn't want to keep pretending this is casual anymore. He wants us to have a proper future together and has started talking about marriage.He also asked me whether I still wanted children.I laughed and said that yes, ideally I would, but I'm 36 now and very aware that time isn't exactly standing still.
Then I remembered my sister had all three of her children between the ages of 39 and 42, so perhaps I'm worrying more than I need to and if no children then I have always been open to adopting

What has really shaken me is that I can actually picture that future with him.

I've been engaged twice before and on both occasions I ended the relationships as realised I couldn't go through with marriage. I said no because, deep down, something never felt quite right. As difficult as those decisions were, I knew I wasn't marrying the right person.

This time feels completely different.
For the first time in my life I can genuinely imagine marrying someone without hesitation. I can picture us growing old together. I can picture having children with him if we're lucky enough for that to happen.
And that is exactly what makes me feel so dreadful.

The one man I can honestly see myself building that life with is my sister's ex husband.

It almost feels cruel that this is the situation I've found myself in because, if he were anyone else, there wouldn't even be a decision to make.

It made me realise that this relationship is no longer some secret that might quietly fade away. We're talking about real life decisions now.If we're discussing marriage and children, we can't hide forever.

He has said he doesn't want to be anyone's secret. I completely understand that. If I genuinely see a future with him, I don't think it's fair to keep asking him to pretend he isn't part of my life.
The problem is my family.
I genuinely don't think my sister still has feelings for him. She's happily remarried, has a lovely family.
But I also know this isn't really about whether she's over him. It’s selfish of me.

It's about the fact that he's her ex husband.
I'm terrified she'll see it as a betrayal by me rather than by him. I worry she'll question whether I'd always had feelings for him, which simply isn't true.

I'm also worried about the wider family. I can already imagine awkward Christmases, people taking sides.

At the same time, we're two single adults who met again years after a marriage had ended. There were no children involved in their marriage, no ongoing ties beyond the fact they used to be married, and they've both built completely separate lives.

Part of me thinks life is too short to walk away from someone I genuinely love because of what other people might think.The other part of me wonders whether there are just some lines you don't cross, however much time has passed.

I honestly don't know what the right thing to do is anymore.

So, AIBU for thinking that, given they're long divorced, had no children together and she's happily remarried, I should keep pursuing this relationship? Or is this one of those situations where, no matter how much time has passed, your sibling's ex husband should always be off limits?

OP posts:
Overtheatlantic · 03/07/2026 18:05

Do you have form for competing with your sister, wanting what’s hers?

Wishimaywishimight · 03/07/2026 18:06

SALaw · 03/07/2026 17:05

I hate the “I can’t help who I fell in love with” attitude some people have. Yes, you can. You have had ample opportunities to say “not this guy” and walk away. What a terribly selfish sister.

Exactly. Much like married people having affairs; "I couldn't help it, we tried to stop it" etc. Bullshit. You chose to sleep wth him and then kept going. You could, and should, have stopped it long before now.

Coconutter24 · 03/07/2026 18:07

LemonyCurd · 03/07/2026 16:56

You’re misquoting. The quote means the exact opposite.

How is that a misquote? The quote is blood is thicker than water, which is what that poster wrote

NerrSnerr · 03/07/2026 18:07

HotBothered · 03/07/2026 16:47

Oh your poor sister

Incest yuk

You e gone and hurt your own feeling really by getting involved and by spending so much time in him you've missed chances to meet someone you could actually build a good life with

Shouldn't have ever crossed that line but you are kinda screwed eithee way now as would you wanna keep that a secret forever surely it will get out at some point

This really is not incest at all!

StressedAndObsessed · 03/07/2026 18:08

Taking 'sister wives' to a whole new level.

Of all the men in the world ...

Plumzingy · 03/07/2026 18:08

Overtheatlantic · 03/07/2026 18:05

Do you have form for competing with your sister, wanting what’s hers?

Not at all. There’s almost a 10 year age gap between us, she was always the best big sister. I know I’m a shit person for this I’m not here to say what I’m doing is right I know it’s not right. It’s happened and we are happy sad part is I can’t imagine a life without him. I’ve been in lots of other shit relationships this feels different I want to give it a chance.

OP posts:
Plumzingy · 03/07/2026 18:10

PenelopeJoanSterling · 03/07/2026 18:02

not to seem crude, did he tick all the right spots and leave you feeling all warm and cozy etc and butterfly's

Ahaha yes he did

OP posts:
Tinycatclub · 03/07/2026 18:10

Plumzingy · 03/07/2026 18:08

Not at all. There’s almost a 10 year age gap between us, she was always the best big sister. I know I’m a shit person for this I’m not here to say what I’m doing is right I know it’s not right. It’s happened and we are happy sad part is I can’t imagine a life without him. I’ve been in lots of other shit relationships this feels different I want to give it a chance.

As people keep saying, it hasn’t just ‘happened’ now - you chose it repeatedly. I think the conversation is likely to go better with your sister if you are able to take some accountability.

daughterfromhell · 03/07/2026 18:10

The only way this will ever work is if you talk honestly with your sister and she accepts this without pressure from you.

Anything but her absolute and genuine blessing and you should walk away.

If you don’t want a relationship with your sister then crack on but you’d be absolutely in the wrong.

Ilovemychocolate · 03/07/2026 18:10

Plumzingy · 03/07/2026 18:01

Well this was good quality

🤮
And has been INSIDE YOUR SISTER!

PenelopeJoanSterling · 03/07/2026 18:11

Ilovemychocolate · 03/07/2026 18:10

🤮
And has been INSIDE YOUR SISTER!

and he will have the trophy of having both sisters.

Lostinbrum · 03/07/2026 18:12

Just be aware you may end up having to choose between your sister and your bf. This isnt really something strangers on the Internet can advise you on. Only you really know the people involved. It may not go down well but you could be throwing away a lifetime of happiness too if you dump him because your sister is upset.

Megifer · 03/07/2026 18:12

ExtraOnions · 03/07/2026 17:36

I can imagine the chat:

”Hi Sis, just to let you know I’m dating your Ex, we’ll. it just dating we’ve actually been seeing each other for a year.. yes I know I’ve let you all think I’m single, but I’m not. I was just going to Shag him, but it’s developed into something else. I now believe myself to be in Love, and want to stay with him forever, so he’s going to be at all family events from now on. I know Divorce is always painful, and you’ll now be constantly reminded of yours, but hey-ho you’ll get over it”

Don't forget "and I know you were sad, and had communicated to him that you wanted to work on things and he refused but still blamed you for..umm...lack of communicating in the way he wanted. And he also dragged mummy and daddy into it for some reason even though he decided he was ending it anyway. I know it looks like he was manipulative but he did check I was ok the day after we shagged, soooo.....anyway, did he have that weird mole on his ball sack when he was with you? Are we all going to mums for Christmas again? Any ideas what I should buy him?"

throwawayimplantchat · 03/07/2026 18:13

The thing I would be most upset about in your sisters shoes is the lying for a whole year tbh. You must have told so many lies, so often to avoid telling her and the rest of the family about this bloke.

If your sister says she is so uncomfortable about it that she can’t give it her blessing, wouldn’t come to a wedding, it would affect her relationship with you etc then what would you do? You need to know the answer to that before you decide what to do so you can get your head together.

Would you end it with him if she said she couldn’t get past it?

user1497787065 · 03/07/2026 18:13

I cannot see the problem. They are divorced and you are both single. If you make one another happy go for it.

TeaBiscuitsNaptime · 03/07/2026 18:13

TeaBiscuitsNaptime · 03/07/2026 18:04

That's great to know that there was no abuse anyway.

If he left her, there is a chance she still has feelings around that. But if she is happily married now and she has 3 kids of her own, then there is a good chance that she wouldn't care also.

I think you're safe to go ahead and talk to her. You could tell her that you've gotten to know him a bit more and have grown to really like him and see if she would mind ye dating. You could let her take in that information first for now and see where it goes from there!

Edited

If she reacts strongly and tells you not to date him, well then you have your answer. Then it would be time to decide if he is worth risking your relationship with your sister

Carzycat · 03/07/2026 18:13

Yes yabu HTH

PenelopeJoanSterling · 03/07/2026 18:13

throwawayimplantchat · 03/07/2026 18:13

The thing I would be most upset about in your sisters shoes is the lying for a whole year tbh. You must have told so many lies, so often to avoid telling her and the rest of the family about this bloke.

If your sister says she is so uncomfortable about it that she can’t give it her blessing, wouldn’t come to a wedding, it would affect her relationship with you etc then what would you do? You need to know the answer to that before you decide what to do so you can get your head together.

Would you end it with him if she said she couldn’t get past it?

depends if it was lie by omission etc although ive never seen that as lying because strictly speaking your not lying

Tinkalinkalink · 03/07/2026 18:14

If I was your sister I would be so so upset. Most particularly that you had lied for a year to her face! It's not a small ommision. Unfortunately people who lie tend to do so in all areas. It makes them untrustworthy. I think you've got a lot of growing up to do.

Hankunamatata · 03/07/2026 18:14

I think its quite disturbing that you have hidden this for a year.

I have to wonder tbh

Mama1980 · 03/07/2026 18:14

I think it comes down to how much are you willing to risk to be with him? Hopefully your sister will be ok, but if not…..are you prepared to lose your family for him?
I wish you luck

catslovehairties · 03/07/2026 18:14

ShanghaiDiva · 03/07/2026 17:41

If you were the sister:
happily married with three children
divorced for seven years
marriage broke down due to communication issues (as far as we know)
would you have nothing more to do with your sister?
I would find it incredibly awkward, but I wouldn’t end the relationship with the sister or expect my parents to end the relationship with her.

I wouldn't want anything to do with a sibling who had openly lied to me for a year, no.

PinkNailPolish2026 · 03/07/2026 18:15

This happened to one of my friends, her sister is now married to her ex husband, it was a shit show and ripped the family apart. She only sees her parents if the sister isn’t visiting, doesn’t go to family events if her sister is there and doesn’t allow her children with her new husband anywhere near the ex husband nor the sister. I feel very sorry for the parents.

Whorulestheroost1 · 03/07/2026 18:15

LifeBeginsToday · 03/07/2026 16:59

Maybe my Google was wrong. Oops. Blood of the covenant is thicker than water of the womb it seems. Crack on.

Ffs who do you think you are the Virgin Mary?!

Beachtastic · 03/07/2026 18:15

throwawayimplantchat · 03/07/2026 18:13

The thing I would be most upset about in your sisters shoes is the lying for a whole year tbh. You must have told so many lies, so often to avoid telling her and the rest of the family about this bloke.

If your sister says she is so uncomfortable about it that she can’t give it her blessing, wouldn’t come to a wedding, it would affect her relationship with you etc then what would you do? You need to know the answer to that before you decide what to do so you can get your head together.

Would you end it with him if she said she couldn’t get past it?

Well it's not lying, is it? OP has only just realised there's a future in it.

Her siser's 2-year marriage didn't work out.

Life is too short to tiptoe around other people's fucking weird ideas about people being their exclusive property.

OP you may encounter resistance and resentment (I hope not, but if your sister has form for sulking...) but no one has the right to judge you.