Topic is Sleeping.
Rebuilding1218 (original poster new member #77365) posted at 3:13 PM on Monday, September 13th, 2021
I am WH and we are 9 months in from DDAy. I was unfaithful to my wife for many years. They were always discreet casual encounters with no relationship. We have come a long way and are finally on a path to reconciliation. I love her so much. My wife has always had a lot of guy friends that she texts and talks with. Shortly after DDay she had an online affair with an old boyfriend, sexting sending pics etc. She shared a lot of our marital problems with at least 5 of her guy friends early in the process. I 100% percent don’t fault her for any of this and understand she was doing what she could to cope. She broke communications with Joe (the online affair guy). I have recently told her that I struggle with all the guys she texts with, and she said I can look at the messages anytime I want. So yesterday we were not connecting, and I asked to read the texts with one of her friends, Jeff. There was nothing scandalous, but a lot of what I read made me sad. They are close friends, and he does seem to care about her. They share a ton of memes with each other. Some of them are sexual in nature, but like funny. They have said they love each other to each other via text. He has told her that he loves her and she has told him that she loves him at least once that I saw. That was within the first couple months since Dday. I guess my question is how should I approach this dilemma? She has said if the shoe was on the other foot, she would be jealous about the texting relationships she has. She has always had guy friends and bonds with guys easier than other women. She does have 3 super close girl friends that are like family to her. I don’t want to change who she is and I want her to have her freedom. When we are not connecting, I get very jealous that she has these fun playful relationships with other guys. I don’t know any of them, but she assures me she has no interest in any of them. We are working to strengthen are bond, and this is another road bump. Just looking for advice on how I should approach this. Thanks!
sisoon ( Moderator #31240) posted at 5:05 PM on Monday, September 13th, 2021
No STOP sign....
I've had women friends and felt a friendship-type of love, but I'd never say so, because it's too easy to misinterpret. Normal friend behavior shows the friend-love; words aren't necessary.
Your W doesn't see any problem with what she's written and received, and that bothers me. I don't know her words, and I don't know what she meant, but I wonder if she's in one or more EAs. I'm not saying she is ... I'm saying I wonder.
Do you have an IC or MC? If so, my reco is to ask your C to moderate a discussion in which you get the truth from your W.
I make that reco on 2 grounds:
1) You need to learn how to raise issues so they can get resolve, and this is an issue.
2) I don't understand how a person can say ILY and also say they have no interest in the person they said it to.
fBH (me) - on d-day: 66, Married 43, together 45, same sex ap
DDay - 12/22/2010
Recover'd and R'ed
You don't have to like your boundaries. You just have to set and enforce them.
landclark ( member #70659) posted at 6:26 PM on Monday, September 13th, 2021
That’s definitely a tough one. I do believe that men and women can be platonic friends and have a friendship type of love and nothing more. That’s only though if they have really good boundaries.
Is Joe now out of the picture completely? If not, he needs to be, immediately.
Also, you need to get to the point where you’re comfortable establishing and sharing your boundaries and thoughts as well. That doesn’t mean you make her get rid of all her friends, but regardless of the fact that she did it after your cheating, she still cheated and is still a wayward. So she has to also be willing to accept some boundaries and put in work to change. "He cheated first" is not an acceptable reason to cheat really.
Agree with Sisoon. If you’re not yet comfortable with these conversations, is MC an option?
Me: BW Him: WH (GuiltAndShame) Dday 05/19/19 TT through August
One child together, 3 stepchildrenTogether 13.5 years, married 12.5
First EA 4 months into marriage. Last ended 05/19/19. *ETA, contd an ea after dday for 2 yrs.
emergent8 ( member #58189) posted at 7:36 PM on Monday, September 13th, 2021
No stop sign.
You, my friend, in addition to being a WS, are a betrayed spouse. That means your wife is a WS in addition to being a BS.
As a BS it is totally normal to feel uncomfortable and unsafe when your wife acts in ways that mimic her A. Texting falls squarely into that category. In my relationship I would absolutely not be okay with my H doing this sort of thing (and his affair was totally different). As a WS her job is to make you feel safe and she is clearly not doing that. Think about it, you likely wouldn’t dream about meeting up with women for one-on-one dinners as it would make her feel unsafe. This is no different.
In my view, your hesitation to call her on this more clearly stems from your belief that her behaviour in having an RA was justified due to your behaviour. It wasn’t. It just muddied the waters.
Me: BS. Him: WS.
D-Day: Feb 2017 (8 m PA with married COW).
Happily reconciled.
emergent8 ( member #58189) posted at 7:56 PM on Monday, September 13th, 2021
No stop sign.
You, my friend, in addition to being a WS, are a betrayed spouse. That means your wife is a WS in addition to being a BS.
As a BS it is totally normal to feel uncomfortable and unsafe when your wife acts in ways that mimic her A. Texting falls squarely into that category. In my relationship I would absolutely not be okay with my H doing this sort of thing (and his affair was totally different). As a WS her job is to make you feel safe and she is clearly not doing that. Think about it, you likely wouldn’t dream about meeting up with women for one-on-one dinners as it would make her feel unsafe. This is no different.
In my view, your hesitation to call her on this more clearly stems from your belief that her behaviour in having an RA was justified due to your behaviour. It wasn’t. It just muddied the waters.
Me: BS. Him: WS.
D-Day: Feb 2017 (8 m PA with married COW).
Happily reconciled.
Bigger ( Attaché #8354) posted at 1:33 AM on Tuesday, September 14th, 2021
It does sound like she’s having an emotional affair.
Have you two discussed reconciliation BEYOND your infidelity?
Part of that is talking about what sort of marriage you both want and setting a joint goal on that.
"If, therefore, any be unhappy, let him remember that he is unhappy by reason of himself alone." Epictetus
Rebuilding1218 (original poster new member #77365) posted at 5:10 PM on Friday, September 17th, 2021
We met with our marriage counselor last week and addressed this. She has not been in communication with Joe, the online affair guy that lives in another county. Her friend Jeff who she said "I love you" to was after he organized a group of friends to take her out for her Bday. It was a month post dday and it was the first day she felt like a normal person. If im being honest with myself it was pretty innocent and the dialogue that followed was more supportive than romantic. I did just realize she is still connected to Joe on social media, he blocked me after I told him to never contact my wife again. She swears that they have had zero communication since I contacted him directly. This was also about a month post dday. I did bring up finalizing some form closure between Joe and her, and I would like to be involved to some capacity. She is not happy about that request at this time. Our MC did not see anything wrong with her having guy friends and messaging them. She recommended that I not snoop through my wifes phone, but have the right to ask for it at anytime and look through it without her getting mad to temper my anxiety. Any thoughts are always appreciated.
src9043 ( member #75367) posted at 7:58 PM on Friday, September 17th, 2021
It sounds like Joe is within driving distance to your wife. She seems resistant to doing a final disengagement with him from what you stated in your last post. Did you bring this point up with the MC? She has to do that. Her reticence is not good.
Regarding access to both of your electronic devices. You cheated for years and she recently had or is still having an EA with an ex-boyfriend. You both have trust issues, especially your wife. Consequently, neither of you should have any right of privacy. Should you snoop? Both of you should do what is necessary to satisfy your concerns. Why not both agree that snooping is allowed? It should be. I certainly would not trust you and your wife seems to be in the latter stages of an EA so your concerns are valid. Asking to look at electronic devices is not enough. Messages will be erased. Effort will be taken to hide any funny business. When sufficient trust is built between the two of you, and that will take years, both of you, I suspect will stop monitoring eachother's behavior.
You both have to be as transparent as possible. Hell, I don't care at all if my girlfriend wants to snoop, look at my electronic devices or do whatever if she feels insecure. I am an open book when it comes to her and really don't care what she does to satisfy her anxiety, unless it is something really whacky. BTW, she does not have these anxieties.
ChamomileTea ( Moderator #53574) posted at 6:20 PM on Saturday, September 18th, 2021
Walls and Windows. That's Shirley Glass's technique for building good boundaries from her book Not Just Friends, which I think both you and your wife would do well to read and discuss. In a nutshell, you open a big, wide, window to your mate and you build tall, imposing walls against interlopers. All those guys she's been texting are interlopers. All the APs you cheated with are likewise interlopers.
Your spouse is your PRIMARY relationship and you are hers. So yeah, it's okay to have friends. But no friend should have a more intimate relationship with your spouse than you, and vice versa. No friend should know a secret you don't know and no friend should be put before you... and vice versa. The primary relationship isn't just about sex. It's about security, both emotional and financial. It's about companionship as much as it is about romantic love. It's about the ONE person you count on and the ONE person who can always count on you. When someone else supplants you in ANY capacity, it's taking away from the strength of that relationship.
Now, we've heard quite a bit about what your wife is doing, but not so much about what YOU are doing to repair what you have broken. Cheating is about the cheater. It's about your relationship to your own core values (or lack thereof) and your true belief about the traits you claim to espouse. Fidelity didn't mean much to you when it was YOUR fidelity in question. But now it does? What's changed for you?... and how are you going to convince your wife that your changes are meaningful and lasting? You're asking her to reinvest, but how have you improved your product?
BW: 2004(online EAs), 2014 (multiple PAs); Married 40 years; in R with fWH for 10
PSTI ( member #53103) posted at 5:22 PM on Friday, October 8th, 2021
There's love and then there's love. Personally, I'm a fan of telling friends I love them, because I do. I don't see anything wrong with that kind of playful relationship as long as everyone knows where the boundaries are.
After the discussions I've had here on this board and elsewhere, I've come to the conclusion that most of the time, it's not the actions that are the problem; it's the people that are the problem.
Someone with good boundaries can have those kind of connections and intimate friendships and never once have an issue because they know where the line is, while someone with poor boundaries will fall down the slippery slope and take things way past the point where the should.
The question is, if both of you are having issues with appropriate boundaries, why are you not focusing more on yourselves in IC so you learn where to draw those lines?
Me: BW, my xH left me & DS after a 14 year marriage for the AP in 2014.
Happily remarried and in an open/polyamorous relationship. DH (married 5 years) & DBF (dating 4 years). Cohabitating happily all together!! <3
Tanner ( Guide #72235) posted at 5:07 PM on Sunday, October 10th, 2021
We have a couple we are friends with. Me and the other W have a similar sense of humor. I like to send her funny, inappropriate memes. I set up a group text with her, her H and my W. All communication is done in the group, we have a good time with it.
A local musician reached out to my W to play a private set for our boys. She immediately set up a group with me included as to not be communicating with him alone. It’s all about respecting boundaries.
Dday Sept 7 2019 doing well in R BH M 32 years
RealityBlows ( member #41108) posted at 11:02 PM on Sunday, October 10th, 2021
I believe that men and women can be platonic friends but,
Not you two.
You're both are now, post affairs, part of a struggling relationship barely held together with bailing wire and, BOUNDARIES. Trust is seriously damaged and needs more time before loosening those boundaries. You'll know when it's the proper time to loosen those boundaries when you no longer stress about opposite sex texts to a very uncomfortable degree.
Seeing you get jealous over opposite sex comms might be reaffirming to her that you're emotionally invested but, it's not a healthy way to validate-if that's what she's doing, probably not.
My new wife and I maintain strict boundaries regarding opposite sex comms because we've both been badly stung by infidelity and we truly mutually prefer it this way. We've seen that slippery slope play out way too many times to ever be so wonderfully naïve again.
"If nothing in life matters, then all that matters is what we do."
Topic is Sleeping.