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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:
TheDandyLion · 03/07/2026 17:05

So if you have children with him, would his kids be siblings or cousins?

ClaresWhathappens · 03/07/2026 17:05

Wait a few months and do a big reveal at Xmas lunch

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.

Plumzingy · 03/07/2026 17:05

zoemum2006 · 03/07/2026 17:04

Something to consider: if you are avoidant, this relationship has a built in buffer. Do you think you'd still be into him if there situation were out in the open? Or would your cold feet kick in?

I want it to be out in the open I guess I’m just scared. It’s not a great situation at all but I know I love him and want a future with him I’ve never been this happy with anyone

OP posts:
SeasideDaisy · 03/07/2026 17:05

Some of these responses are so judgmental and crazy! How do you think your family will react op, would your sister be able deal with it or would it ruin your relationship forever.
From what you’ve put I think it’s a shame if you can’t make this work, you can tell from your post that you really want it to.

SALaw · 03/07/2026 17:06

TheDandyLion · 03/07/2026 17:05

So if you have children with him, would his kids be siblings or cousins?

He doesn’t have kids with the sister.

concertinacornflake · 03/07/2026 17:06

she wasn’t able to communicate the way he wanted her to what does this mean?

This could be a red flag, depending on what he was objecting to.

You seem very certain your sister was at fault. That's what all toxic exes say.

KTheGrey · 03/07/2026 17:06

Plumzingy · 03/07/2026 17:01

Yes for advice when she moved out ie packed two suitcases and left, silent treatment, blocked his number, wouldn’t tell him where she was ? Then came back and just started speaking to him again. I think it’s okay to go speak to the parents. She would not even answer their calls. I don’t want to get into the details of this but please stop making assumptions.

Sounds like your sister left that relationship before he did. When men do that we have no difficulty in identifying it as at best destructive and at worst abuse.

ShanghaiDiva · 03/07/2026 17:06

TheDandyLion · 03/07/2026 17:05

So if you have children with him, would his kids be siblings or cousins?

There are no children from the marriage with the sister.

DidntLikeTheEnding · 03/07/2026 17:06

PenelopeJoanSterling · 03/07/2026 16:56

what happened to blood thicker than water etc

Ask the OP!

marblechair · 03/07/2026 17:06

Plumzingy · 03/07/2026 16:59

Let’s also be real I am 36, very career focused, all my relationships seem to fail or I get cold feet, I ended an engagement a week before the wedding, I clearly have issues and I’m not the target audience for a lot of men, they want younger women who can give them children. I probably won’t be able to have my own biological children.

So, what are you saying? this is all you deserve in life and you'd better not let him go because you're apparently ancient at age 36 and noone else will ever date you?

Good grief, OP this is all so unhealthy.

Family events are going to be excruciating and all I would imagine during sex was- is he thinking "your sister didnt do it that way". This is going to drop a bomb in your family relationships - are you sure this man is even worth all this potential destruction? If I was your sister I would be so upset about this because it means I'd have to see him at every bloody family event thereafter.

I also feel you are romanticising this man quite a lot when you dont actually even know him super well- a year isnt really very long.

ThisTimeWillBeDifferent · 03/07/2026 17:06

To her, he will always be her ex. Never her brother in law, not really. To him, she will always be his ex even if she’s also his wife’s sister. He’s not going to marry you and suddenly they both forget the times they shared, the intimate secrets, the old arguments, and the hurt of divorce.

By all means, crack on if you think this is your chance to be with “the one” and have children but you only have yourself to blame for the family fall out. It isn’t a healthy relationship at all if it’s been secret for a year, and it’s like you’ve let it go on this long to tie your hands so you can present it as a fait accompli rather than stopping it before it began. You knew if you’d mentioned it earlier your family would have been furious but you’ve kept it secret so you can play the “but we love each other” card. You’ve lied to your family for a year. They aren’t likely to take that well.

Do you honestly envisage a future in which every family occasion involves you, your sister and her husband, your sister’s ex husband / your new husband, and your children all playing happily together? You’re happy to make your sister share family occasions with the man that divorced her?!

Userengage · 03/07/2026 17:07

PenelopeJoanSterling · 03/07/2026 16:50

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

Nope, I’d rather take my chances with someone else.

HelpHedgehogsByFeedingThemCatBiscuits · 03/07/2026 17:08

Why not?
But you won't get any sympathy with the tricoteuses on here, I'm afraid OP>

Unexpectedlysinglemum · 03/07/2026 17:08

catslovehairties · 03/07/2026 16:44

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

There are very very very few decent blokes out there, this is a once in a lifetime type relationship by the way op describes it

Megifer · 03/07/2026 17:08

Plumzingy · 03/07/2026 17:01

Yes for advice when she moved out ie packed two suitcases and left, silent treatment, blocked his number, wouldn’t tell him where she was ? Then came back and just started speaking to him again. I think it’s okay to go speak to the parents. She would not even answer their calls. I don’t want to get into the details of this but please stop making assumptions.

Im making assumptions as its just all so weird and tbf you didnt say it was because she actually left 🙄

But, then you need to ask yourself why she did that. If generally shes level headed, dependable, isnt one to make odd decisions then her acting the way she did was caused by something pretty damning (assuming it is true and not just what this man is telling you happened).

Rizzz · 03/07/2026 17:08

I don't think it's right.

But if you do decide to tell your sister you've been dating her ex husband for a whole year, at least try to take some responsibility.

None of this.... "At the end of the evening we carried on talking over another drink and, before I knew it, we ended up sleeping together".

It didn't happen 'before you knew it'. You made a conscious decision to have sex with him so own it.

"It almost feels cruel that this is the situation I've found myself in"

You haven't 'found' yourself in any situation. You're in a situation that you've consciously chosen to put yourself in, which again you need to own.

I hope the conversation goes well with your sister but I've a feeling it'll go a lot better if you stop making yourself out to be helpless.

Boreded · 03/07/2026 17:08

Chocolatecrispsdrink · 03/07/2026 16:52

I don't think it's just DSis's opinion that matters here though. It will be awkward all round for everyone.

DNiece / DNephews: wait what do you mean Uncle John was married to Mum?! Is he our dad?!

They’d never need to know. They’re tiny

MissFancyDay · 03/07/2026 17:08

You obviously need to talk to your sister to gauge her reaction but, going against the grain here, I don't think that it could be out of the question. The over reaction on this thread is off the scale.

If her relationship with her ex is difficult then you may have problems, but if they have genuinely both moved on then I don't see why it couldn't work. Ignore absolute nonsense about it having repercussions for generations.

The only concern I would have is that he secretly misses her and you are his best option to replace her. But if that is absolutely not the case then I think you should speak to your sister before throwing it all away.

InterIgnis · 03/07/2026 17:09

Consider whether it will be worth the potential fall out, not just for yourself but for any future children you have. What happens if this breaks your relationship with your sister, and your parents follow her lead? Is estrangement from your family something you could accept?

Victorius19 · 03/07/2026 17:10

I think you have to go to your sister with this. Let her think about it, but if she says she's not comfortable then you have to end it.

But FWIW I don't think you've done anything awful. Sometimes someone falls into your life for all the right reasons. Neither of you are breaking any marriage vows. But she really has to be OK with him coming back into the extended family, and if she's not, I think you have to put her feelings above your own.

Parky04 · 03/07/2026 17:10

MrsKeats · 03/07/2026 16:42

You know the answer to this.

Yep. Go for it! If sister doesn't like it, then tough luck.

marblechair · 03/07/2026 17:12

Rizzz · 03/07/2026 17:08

I don't think it's right.

But if you do decide to tell your sister you've been dating her ex husband for a whole year, at least try to take some responsibility.

None of this.... "At the end of the evening we carried on talking over another drink and, before I knew it, we ended up sleeping together".

It didn't happen 'before you knew it'. You made a conscious decision to have sex with him so own it.

"It almost feels cruel that this is the situation I've found myself in"

You haven't 'found' yourself in any situation. You're in a situation that you've consciously chosen to put yourself in, which again you need to own.

I hope the conversation goes well with your sister but I've a feeling it'll go a lot better if you stop making yourself out to be helpless.

I also agree with this. You didnt wake up one day to find you'd been magically transported into his bed, this was a choice you made. At least have the decency to take responsibility for it rather than act like it just happened to you beyond your control. It didnt, and thats the kind of thing narcissists come out with.

HelpMeGetThrough · 03/07/2026 17:12

Well I guess you could “compare notes” with your sister.

What a bloody mess.

happysinglemama · 03/07/2026 17:13

Not great at all