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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 16:44

In 7 years she remarried and had 3 kids? Anyway, no, I think it’s an awful idea. Just sleeping with someone my sister slept with, gross. 🤢

LifeBeginsToday · 03/07/2026 16:44

SalmonOnFinnCrisp · 03/07/2026 16:39

I know how this looks.

It looks exactly how it looks...

Ultimately if you really want to go for it you need to be prepared for your family to not accept it and for it to cause irreparable damage to your relationship with them...

He had his penis INSIDE your sister repeatedly....

Edited

He probably washed it.

catslovehairties · 03/07/2026 16:44

Surely there are other blokes out there who aren't one of your ex in-laws? Hmm

ComtesseDeSpair · 03/07/2026 16:45

All you can do is speak with your sister about it. Even if their marriage didn’t end in scorched earth and she’s happily remarried, she’s still going to have feelings about her sister being with her ex and having to hear about and see him regularly, and feel all the old feelings around why they divorced, and unless she breezily says it’s all fine then family dynamics are going to be difficult. It may be about choosing between a relationship with this man and your relationships with your family.

ETA: I agree with others, I think it’s also likely that even if it wasn’t the case (though maybe it was, on his side?) she’ll think the two of you had always had the hots for each other all through their marriage and start to question whether that played a part in the dysfunction in their marriage. That one could be incredibly hard to get past.

AnAudacityofinlaws · 03/07/2026 16:46

My friend married her SiL’s brother. Both single, no kids and even that caused absolute ructions.
So no.

Plumzingy · 03/07/2026 16:46

They divorced 7 years ago, he was the one that started the separation process but in the end he felt they were not compatible, arguing a lot, she gave him lots of silent treatments etc he felt that the communication wasn’t really there between them

OP posts:
TheSmallAssassin · 03/07/2026 16:46

I know at least one couple where one brother married his brother's ex, they are still happily married, the brother is in a long term relationship and the couples have all been on holiday together. It can work!

BeardySchnauzer · 03/07/2026 16:46

She’s never told you herself why they divorced

Megifer · 03/07/2026 16:46

I can confirm it is 99.9% certain you have indeed lost perspective

LemonyCurd · 03/07/2026 16:46

The damage has already been done, if that’s how you are perceiving this: you have had sex with him, you’re in a relationship with him, you love him.

I think that’s the curious part for me - if this was about your sister then you would have spoken to her before that happened. So I feel that this is now more a case of: spill the beans.

I don’t actually see anything wrong with it, if I’m honest. As long as it is as you described - multiple years after they split - then I don’t think she has any right to have a say in this.

However, I do think you are unreasonable for NOW considering it - not just unreasonable in the sense you are essentially asking for her to be okay with something that already happened in all the ways that matter, but also unreasonable to your partner who you are, by your own admission, willing to ditch if your sister has an issue with it.

I don’t think you’re a bad person for any of this, but I do think it makes you a coward.

alwayslearning789 · 03/07/2026 16:47

catslovehairties · 03/07/2026 16:44

Surely there are other blokes out there who aren't one of your ex in-laws? Hmm

This.

It's a No - No matter how tempting it seems in the short term will damage relations for GENERATIONS.

Don't do it OP.

Move on.

Larrythecatforpm · 03/07/2026 16:47

Out of all the men in the world, why would you do that? Grim.

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

Megifer · 03/07/2026 16:47

Plumzingy · 03/07/2026 16:46

They divorced 7 years ago, he was the one that started the separation process but in the end he felt they were not compatible, arguing a lot, she gave him lots of silent treatments etc he felt that the communication wasn’t really there between them

Oh then definitely not if he initiated the split.

No, no, no. Nope.

Honeyhonayboo · 03/07/2026 16:48

There are literally so many men in the world, there’s simply no need to chase your sister’s ex husband.
Secretly seeing him for a year is just so unreasonable.

Userengage · 03/07/2026 16:48

So many men in the world…

Boreded · 03/07/2026 16:48

Oh dear 😬 you’ve made a mistake but now it’s too late to undo because you care about it and it is real.

You need to talk to your sister. I wouldn’t encourage lying about things, but equally I almost think she probably doesn’t need to know how long it has been going on.

I think you need to sit down with her, and explain that you’ve been in a very casual but inappropriate relationship, and that you think you have real feelings and don’t want it to be casual. But reassure her that she absolutely can veto it (even if she can’t, and you have no intention of not seeing him. This way it validates her feelings) and then explain.

I suspect she will be hurt or annoyed (depending on the reason for the relationship ending) and may even accuse you of having feelings for him when they were together. But ultimately if your sister loves you, she’ll see that he is good for you (unless he isn’t and she knows things you don’t yet). If she doesn’t then you have a different problem and have to work out which relationship is worth most to you, and whether you think she can get over it.

it might all be fine though.

JacketPotatoFoodOfTheGods · 03/07/2026 16:48

catslovehairties · 03/07/2026 16:44

Surely there are other blokes out there who aren't one of your ex in-laws? Hmm

This.

Chocolatecrispsdrink · 03/07/2026 16:49

Err he's your ex Brother in law!!!
No absolutely not.

WellThatIsABitMad · 03/07/2026 16:49

It’s a huge risk. Why did they split up? On balance I don’t think it’s worth the potential family rift this will cause.

Konstantine8364 · 03/07/2026 16:50

It ultimately comes down to which would make you happier, no relationship with him and a good relationship with your sis and family? Or a relationship with him and potentially no relationship with your sister?

PenelopeJoanSterling · 03/07/2026 16:50

Userengage · 03/07/2026 16:48

So many men in the world…

yet better the one you got to know otherwise why waste x years with a different one etc

Nessiesfoodprovider · 03/07/2026 16:50

In the 1800s it wasn't unheard of for a younger sister to marry her widowed brother-in-law when his wife had died in childbirth. Yours isn't quite the same situation but presumably it is legal for you to cover and marry your former brother-in-law.
It's the relationship with your sister that worries me. Do you currently have a good relationship? Realistically, do you think she would welcome your man back into the family or would she go ballistic? Is part of the attraction that he is forbidden fruit in a way?
Think long and hard before you do anything else!

HRHCurmudgeon · 03/07/2026 16:50

I know someone who had a relationship with her ex’s brother. Everyone judged. Everyone.

Boreded · 03/07/2026 16:50

Plumzingy · 03/07/2026 16:46

They divorced 7 years ago, he was the one that started the separation process but in the end he felt they were not compatible, arguing a lot, she gave him lots of silent treatments etc he felt that the communication wasn’t really there between them

This overlapped with my reply. She might be quite hurt given he was the one who ended things

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