Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Shall I tell his wife about your affair?

390 replies

IWillHaveAnotherOneThankYou · 02/04/2020 22:04

Hello all,

I am fairly new here, I actually just registered because I'd really like to know people's opinions on my situation.

In autumn last year I became close to my then colleague. He was newly separated from his wife, but not divorced. They have three kids (a 4 year old and 1 year old twins). He'd moved to a small rented flat and left his wife and the kids in their home. The plan was, as he told me straight from the start, to start the divorce in summer 2020 because apparently that's when his wife's widowed mother would officially retire and move in with his wife to help with the kids (they're apparently a bit of a handful).

He said that his wife doesn't know about us because it's better this way apparently. He indicated that it may be easier for everyone to tell her after the divorce to keep 'things in check', whatever that means.

The thing is that we didn't hide our affair very well at work and as a result I lost my job because of that (it wasn't so straightforward but essentially it came down to the fact that one of us had to go and as he was senior, but not my manager, he was more 'valuable' for the company and so I had to go). That was in January. I have got over it more less by now, however, as he's an experienced IT expert, he was head hunted for and was offered a better job elsewhere and left the company a month after me to start in his new, better paid job. So the sum total of this is that I've lost my job but cannot find a new one easily, at least not in my line of work, because most companies have temporarily frozen recruitment, whilst he's enjoying a great step up in his career. Unfair much?

To top it off, just before the lockdown he moved back home (apparently for the sake of the kids so that they don't suffer without seeing him for the duration of the lockdown) but his wife's mother is apparently there as well, supposedly helping with the kids and he confirmed that she's taken the guest bedroom which would mean that he's back in the marital bed with his wife. So there is he with his wife and her mother and of course the three kids in their home, for the duration of the isolation.

Here is the thing - our relationship has become rather sour, I'd even say non-existent during this lockdown period. Previously he would message me a 100 times a day, but now I haven't heard from him for a couple of days. Previously he would be super affectionate, lovey dovey, planning our future and generally being swept of his feet by me etc etc etc. Now, at my age (36) I approach this love bombing with caution but I think he really was genuine when things were great. I don't understand what's happened but I feel very hurt by the sudden lack of his attention. When I asked him about it, he didn't really say anything.

I went from feeling sad, to confused, to super angry. When I consider that I lost my job because of our affair (I know, I know, I took part in it voluntarily) but he smoothly transitioned from one job to another, it makes me fume inside. He used to be all lovey dovey treating me almost like the love of his life - this went on consistently for months and now nothing. I don't hear anything from him at all. Not a beep. I've tried to initiate some contact this week but he came across as distant and all his affection/love/ enthusiasm for me was gone.

I am super angry. I am also feeling lonely (I live alone). I am jobless and generally things are not easy. I probably came off as a bit of clingy when trying to talk to him this week, that's not my usual self. He always admired how strong and independent I am. And now I was almost begging for attention. It's not a situation I've experienced before and my ego is taking over my rationale. The last straw was when tonight I saw him bragging to someone about his new job on LinkedIn. I really, really feel very close to letting his wife know about us....They were separated anyways and according to him, the divorce proceedings were to start in summer. It just seems so very unfair that he seems to be getting away with everything and coming across as the good guy (a responsible father who didn't want to be separated from the kids too long and a reliable breadwinner who quickly moved to a better paid job). Nobody knows about our affair - well, apart from people at our old office, but deep down I wish he suffered a bit too. I know it's awful to admit this, I should probably be the better person here but it's very, very hard. Normally the right thing to do in this situation would be to move on and find someone else, with better circumstances but I can't even date anyone else because of this lockdown! Part of me deep down wants to let his wife know which would, potentially, make their isolation situation rather unpleasant, hopefully for him mainly!

Thoughts please? I think I know what you all will probably tell me - that I should raise above it and let it be and move on. But that's that one thing that it's hard for me to do and I dont' even want to do that if I am perfectly honest. It feels like I am the one who is paying for everything but he's is breezily running through it all with flying effing colours...

OP posts:
Eckhart · 03/04/2020 12:58

You've got a very set idea of what will happen when you tell her. Bear in mind (I'd have thought you'd have realised by now) that life doesn't always go as you plan it.

IWillHaveAnotherOneThankYou · 03/04/2020 12:58

*I'm waiting until after lockdown to tell his wife all about him. My theory is that a lot of couples are staying together for lockdown, but if people's marriages are shit they're not going to have a good time, and by the end they'll be sick of each other. So if I tell her after lockdown, she'll be more likely to leave him.

But- could it be said that when it comes to his marriage, he didn't do anything wrong in dating you? He was separated and most separated people start dating etc before they get a divorce, as they are living as a single person and are no longer in a couple with their spouse? Churches or something might see it as wrong for someone to date for those (usually several years) before their divorce comes through, but most people don't.

Don't get me wrong, I really can see why you are angry. Xxx I'm waiting till after lockdown to make my move and I suggest you do the same*

Thank you for your kind words:-)

OP posts:
Lllot5 · 03/04/2020 12:59

If he left his wife in September and you got together in October/ November those twins must have been very young indeed. You should be ashamed of yourself. Separated means still married.
Yes you’ve got the shitty end of the stick but you could have said no.
Yes he’s responsible too, more so than you he is married after all.
But 🤷‍♀️ I’m still struggling to be sympathetic

Eckhart · 03/04/2020 13:02

You should be ashamed of yourself. Separated means still married

So anybody dating a separated person should be ashamed?

Olawisk · 03/04/2020 13:02

Why should she be ashamed for sleeping with a separated man?!

OP tell the wife, she deserves to know. Just make sure all the info she needs is in the one message and there’s no way he could Deny.

Make sure you block him before you send the message. Then get on with your life

Hotpinkangel19 · 03/04/2020 13:04

I'd want to know if it was my husband.

ElspethFlashman · 03/04/2020 13:04

I think you should tell her.

As you have said, if they're playing happy families and sleeping in the same bed she's getting her hopes up.

It's only a matter of time before he fucks her over again, being stuck in a house with 3 small kids, a mother in law and a wife he clearly doesn't give a shiny shit about.

I'd tell her just so she can get her ducks in a row.

But I'd be very careful about the tone. It has to be understanding and kind. It has to be apologetic, explaining that you had no idea they were going to get back together and since he was living at X, he seemed very committed and led you to believe he loved you. That you were understandably very taken aback to realise about his change in circumstances and he has still not actually broken up with you but you are naturally considering the relationship to have come to a permanent end.

And finish by wishing them both well in the future, with the hope you can move on.

Iateallthecookies000 · 03/04/2020 13:06

Sorry, but he clearly wasn't doing the best parenting job in the world when he was balls deep inside me.

Classy lady aren’t you. I believe in karma and I’m sure you will get yours.

KittyKattyKate · 03/04/2020 13:07

Sorry, but you are being angry at the wrong person. You knew relationships were frowned upon at work yet the two of you did nothing to hide yours. By now you hopefully know that you were stupid to swallow the whole ‘divorce in summer’ line, and now that is also making you cross.

You’ve been had, girl. Stop blaming him for your current predicament because you walked into it willingly and with your eyes open. And yes, he has now walked away scot free but let that be a super important lesson to you so you’ll never allow another man to work you through the ears. Ruining his wife’s life is not going to make yours better, and if anyone is innocent in this it her.

You sound extremely selfish and I think you need to grow the fuck up.

IWillHaveAnotherOneThankYou · 03/04/2020 13:07
  • She's not the one who cheated. The hurt has already been caused, the damage already done. By telling the wife you just enable her not to sleep-walk into years of further deceit.

The logic on here!*

Exactly that. Thank you. I am starting to think that the majority of people would prefer to be lied to (if they were the wife) and spend their life in a total lie than facing the facts and having to deal with them. I personally would want to know if my husband/boyfriend was cheating on me because spending my life in a complete lie would make me feel like an idiot who was being led on. Plus, I would want to be given a chance to decide whether I'd like to carry on being with a cheater. I am sure that when she was marrying him, she didn't knowingly and voluntarily signed up for a lifetime spent next to a cheater. I am actually shocked how many people here say I shouldn't tell the wife, presumably because this reflects their own fears.

OP posts:
Lllot5 · 03/04/2020 13:08

Because he had been separated a matter of weeks with two tiny babies and a four year old. There are 3.5 billion men in the world surely the op could have said no.
And yes he’s a shit bag. And when he posts on here I’ll tell him that.

pusspuss9 · 03/04/2020 13:09

If he left his wife in September and you got together in October/ November those twins must have been very young indeed.

This makes me wonder if there wasn't something going on before he left his wife.

81Byerley · 03/04/2020 13:10

In my view you should put this down to experience and forget him. If you wanted to do something, I'd just hint to him that you might do it! Then don't.

bittersweet2 · 03/04/2020 13:10

@IWillHaveAnotherOneThankYou
I didnt tell his wife but I made damn sure the rest of his family knew via Facebook. He told me he was separated and used me long distance as somewhere to escape to. Planned a future, relocation, I was pregnant and miscarried and saw he was onto someone else in a matter of months. I was heartbroken but I absolutely do not regret the revenge. He deserved it

Iateallthecookies000 · 03/04/2020 13:12

Separated doesn’t mean it’s over - you thought you had a chance with a successful guy not caring that his twins had probably only just finished being breast fed.

You can tell his wife but something tells me she won’t leave him anyway because the children are so young. Then where’s your trump card?

ginghamstarfish · 03/04/2020 13:13

How do you know about my affair?

springydaff · 03/04/2020 13:13

You've been treated very very badly by this man.

In normal circumstances id say you need to walk away. But you have lost your job and your livelihood. He knew he was going in to another job when you were getting the sack. He knew you'd end up in the shit, financially and career-wise.

It certainly is a salutory tale Sad

Your best recourse is to get legal with your dismissal. All the info will come out then anyway.

Shineyconkersfallfromsky · 03/04/2020 13:18

Yes I would tell her. Maybe that's because I believe he shouldn't get away with such crappy behaviour towards you. I know that's spiteful but the OP has been shabbily treated by him and think of it as a way of you doing his wife a favour exposing him and preventing another innocent woman in the future being harmed by this man who can obviously switch between relationships on a whim and give false promises.

He should be compensating you at the least for you losing your job, no wonder you were upset when he was showing off on Linkdin. He sounds like a cruel sleaze who deserves to be outed. His wife has the right to know too.

TigerKingisMental · 03/04/2020 13:24

Okay so imagine the situation. No doubt mum and dad will be shouting, angry and upset and the kids will be forced to listen to that because there is no where else to go. They will be caught in the crossfire, they will have to live every minute of that. And no doubt dad will have no where to go so they will live that over and over. Seriously does nobody else think these kids don't deserve that no matter how much of a scumbag their dad is.

I'm not saying don't tell when the time is right. She has a right to know who she is married to so she can make her own choices but bloody hell there are more important consequences right now than you getting petty revenge because he was 'balls deep' in you Hmm

Postspecific · 03/04/2020 13:31

No one’s saying that she shouldn’t know but this comes from a place of anger and you need to think about your deteriorating mental health.

pusspuss9 · 03/04/2020 13:35

It's interesting - I'm wondering if the 'tell her now crowd '.( It's more important that she knows now and sod the upset and the fact of rocking the whole little world of vulnerable children' ) are people with no children of their own, and just can't empathise with how world shattering it is for little ones, and the other crowd who do have children of their own and recognise immediately the possible outcomes and advise waiting a bit before dropping this bomb on them all.

Onceateacher · 03/04/2020 13:41

OP why are you now talking about him "cheating", since you have said he was separated? Which is it?

Kit19 · 03/04/2020 13:46

well i dont have children and i don't think she should tell her pusspuss

i think telling a woman stuck in lockdown with small children would be an awful thing to do. its all very well saying "he should have thought of that" well yes he should but the reality is he didnt, and 3 children would be caught in the crossfire. It would be unimgainably horrible for them and her

if she must tell at least do it after lockdown is over

also having now seen the time difference btewen him leaving and the twins birth, I'd be very surprised if soemthing wasnt going on before he 'left'

pusspuss9 · 03/04/2020 13:51

@Kit19

thank for replying. I know that after I had children I saw many things differently.

BrooHaHa · 03/04/2020 13:52

It's interesting - I'm wondering if the 'tell her now crowd '.( It's more important that she knows now and sod the upset and the fact of rocking the whole little world of vulnerable children' ) are people with no children of their own, and just can't empathise with how world shattering it is for little ones, and the other crowd who do have children of their own and recognise immediately the possible outcomes and advise waiting a bit before dropping this bomb on them all.

Nope. I have DC. But, as I've said up-thread, if they break up further down the line when their kids are older, the kids will be more impacted by the change and remember it more. It will cause greater upset in a couple of years than it would now- the twins will not remember a time when their parents were together and the four year old won't remember with anywhere near as much detail. If they're going to split over it, better sooner than later, for all involved.

Also, and I'll say it again, it's not the OP that's done the world rocking. It's the father of these kids.