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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

would you think differently about a friend if you found out they had been having an affair for 5 yrs with their friends dh

134 replies

brimfull · 18/01/2010 16:01

tis very weird feeling

I feel quite cheated as well

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purpleturtle · 18/01/2010 16:03

I think it would have to have an effect. I can understand you feeling cheated, because she must have lied to you at various points over the last few years.

pagwatch · 18/01/2010 16:04

yes.

Poledra · 18/01/2010 16:04

Yes, I would. She wouldn't be the person I thought she was. I'm not saying I wouldn't get over it (it's not really my business) but it would change the way I felt.

countrybump · 18/01/2010 16:05

yes

Bucharest · 18/01/2010 16:05

Yes, because even though she might still be a good friend to you, as Purple says, at some point, you must have been lied to and she obviously didn't think you enough of a friend to tell the truth to.

brimfull · 18/01/2010 16:05

yes , don't know how I feel

think twice about believing what she says now

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brimfull · 18/01/2010 16:06

I am glad I didn't know whilst the affair was going on as I am friendly with her dh as well and her kids..would have been very awkward.

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Poledra · 18/01/2010 16:06

TBH, Bucharest, I'm not sure I would have wanted to know the truth. I suppose it would depend upon whether the friend whose DH is cheating on her was also my friend. Then I'd really struggle with it.

morningpaper · 18/01/2010 16:06

Gosh I would just feel really sorry for her on all sorts of levels and would want to be there to support her

Malificence · 18/01/2010 16:07

She would no longer be my friend.
I can't stand liers.
Has she told you or have you found out via a third party?

ChickensLoveMarmite · 18/01/2010 16:07

Yep, I would certainly look at her with new eyes.

Lulumama · 18/01/2010 16:07

of course, people who can lie, dissemble and deceive for years, are not people i would want as friends, as if they won't be faithful and honest to their own DH,why woul dthey be with you?

brimfull · 18/01/2010 16:08

I am there for her

I think it's the fact that she did it to a very good friend of hers that's shocked me.

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Lulumama · 18/01/2010 16:08

you;d feel sorry for someone hvaing an affair for 5 years, MP? on what basis?

brimfull · 18/01/2010 16:08

She confessed all becasue the other wife has found out.

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Alibabaandthe40nappies · 18/01/2010 16:09

Yes definitely. To find out someone is capable of lies and deception on that scale must change how you feel about them, even if their actions have no direct effect on you.

I would also disapprove and judge hugely.

brimfull · 18/01/2010 16:10

I have not judged , I have supported her becasue she is in bits.
Privately I am so shocked though and weirdly quite hurt.
I cried ffs!

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DecorHate · 18/01/2010 16:11

i understand how you feel - two friends of mine are in the process of divorcing their husbands. Undoubtedly the dhs displayed some challenging behaviours during the marriages but both women were prepared to put up with it - until they met someone else.

Fair enough to want to separate because of certain issues but I feel far less sympathetic knowing they effectively have been unfaithful to their dhs.

ChickensLoveMarmite · 18/01/2010 16:12

I would also put on my biggest, sparkliest judgey pants, Alibaba.

Malificence · 18/01/2010 16:13

It's a little bit late to be "in bits" imho.
Five years?

Serves her right.

MarineIguana · 18/01/2010 16:13

Doesn't affect me myself, but I have a friend whose close friend has been having an affair with a married man, whose wife she knows too, for ages and is now pg. (I don't know the friend of friend IYSWIM)

She (my friend) is supportive of her friend and it's made me think. On the one hand, that's true friendship, not judging her for it all, and still being there for her. But, I don't think I could be quite the same. I really don't have much respect for people who can do this. I'm afraid I would think less of her.

brimfull · 18/01/2010 16:13

Very close friend though- don;t want to lose her friendship becasue of this.

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Alibabaandthe40nappies · 18/01/2010 16:14

MP - really? Why should someone be pitied for making the choice to break their marriage vows and lie to their husband and children, not to mention parents/friends and whoever else?

My aunt had an affair for 10 years, eventually it all came out when she finally left my uncle. The collateral damage was huge - her parents, my uncles parents were devastated, and she has all but lost contact with my cousin and her grandchildren.
Affairs are awful, awful things and anyone who tries then 'I can't help it, poor me' line disgusts me.

sorry, v.close to home.

Lulumama · 18/01/2010 16:14

i would try to understand what would drive someone to do this, but i would judge.

if the home life was so terrible,that she felt 'driven' into th earms of another, then maybe leaving should have been considered, rather than an affair, and such a long one.

it makes a mockery of so much and the wife of th man she was cheating with will feel robbed of the last 5 years

you just can't do that to people

Malificence · 18/01/2010 16:15

I think I have dibs on the biggest Judgey pants of all.
I've cut people off for far less.

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