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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

Can I get the friendship back after a transgression?

77 replies

OnMakingMistakes · 13/01/2022 21:01

Ok so there’s some context which I am going to describe. I really want some advice, I know bits of this are wrong but as many recent threads have said, life’s not black and white so please be kind.

I’m married. Not a great relationship, there is a lot of work stress and other stress due to extended family complications. We’ve been together 20 years, talked about splitting but both not quite brave enough, I think. So, the usual. Lacking connection. We have friends where we live but mainly me who makes the effort to see them (by myself or as couples), plan holidays away etc.

‘New’ guy started at work. Married. We get on well, have lots in common. Definitely a connection between us on a personal level but we have never socialised beyond work events. I think our friendship grew during lockdown when we’d have long chats on the phone but I’d also have similar chats with female colleagues when everyone was isolated, and other male colleagues too. All ‘above board’ but friendly.

Recent work night out, and we decided to leave the group and kissed. Went home separately. Absolutely not proud of what we did, but it happened. Fast forward to a few days later and we met up to talk through what had happened. Agreed it was a mistake and that we have a connection but that marriages/kids are more important. But, that we mean a lot to each other in terms of friendship.

Fast forward a bit more and now it’s weird. I just want my friend back but don’t know how to do that whilst respecting the boundaries that we agreed to post-kiss. It’s awkward and I don’t want that, I don’t want to wave goodbye to what is an important friendship. I feel a sense of loss at the idea that we won’t be able to be friends, in the same way that I’d feel if one of my other friends moved away or similar. This isn’t about wanting an affair, it’s about reclaiming my friendship. But I don’t want to make him feel uncomfortable, or put myself in a position where he draws a firmer line than I am expecting. On the other hand, if I hang back too much I risk losing the friendship altogether.

I am considering suggesting another coffee so we can talk it though again. I think I just want to be honest and see how he sees friendship working, if at all.

What I’m finding really hard at the moment is being in no man’s land and a bit lost.

Has anyone been able to reclaim a friendship in this situation? I know lots of people will say I’ve no right to expect that, and I don’t.

But I also know that my friends are really important and I’d really like him to be one of them. You’re a long time dead and I don’t want to turn my back on a solid connection if I don’t have to.

[awaits flaming, hopes for some balance]

OP posts:
MrsBaublesDylan · 15/01/2022 08:55

The connection isn't the same as you have with your other friends op. You feel an attraction to this man and it is reciprocated.

What I think you want is a chance to be near to him and reaffirm the closeness and the attraction, without letting it get physical again.

That is similar to an alcoholic wanting to spend time with a bottle of whisky but not drink any of it.

Please refocus your thoughts on what you want to do about your marriage. You are sleep walking through your life when you should be living it.

Keladrythesaviour · 15/01/2022 09:05

You can't get the friendship back because it wasn't ever a friendship. It was an emotional affair. You missed, making it a real affair, and now it's cut off you're trying to seek the emotional affair again, becaus you're infatuated. Your brain is telling you it is just a friendship, but it isn't and will never be even if nothing physical ever happens again.
On these boards there are tons of women who can't understand why their DH, who has had an affair (emotional or physical) keep in touch with the OW, delsite all the heartbreak and promises, and they claim "it's just an innocent friendship now" - it's not. The draw of an emotional affair is, in many ways, stronger than that of a physical one.
If you don't want to deceive or cheat on your DH you need to draw a thick black line between you and your colleague and reduce all interaction to that of colleagues with nothing to say to each other. Alternatively you leave your DH. Those are the only fair and right options.

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