
Originally Posted by
WildChild
This is a toughie, I've been there, long before internet and cell phones - it was letters and calls. My first husband was always in love - just never with me. He'd write love poems, write them songs, paint them, adore them and expect me to work and pay the bills. When I confronted him he'd swear it all meant nothing and that he'd kill himself if I left. It was all very high drama but then he'd go right back to ignoring me. I finally gave him an ultimatum, 6 months to get regularly employed, no more girlfriends and stop the dope. He moved into the spare bedroom and 6 months later I moved out. It wasn't like I was unattractive - one male freind at the time described me as the ultimate wet dream of every male under 25 in the county, a bit of hyperbole on his part but I wasn't the old shoe in the closet. The man just couldn't keep his pants zipped.
Funny thing... nearly 30 years later he still has the same job he got in that time period, has never remarried and I'm now the great love that tragically left him - go figure. Not to say your hubby is headed that way but there is nothing new under the sun. The questions are can you re-establish trust? If you can't you'll both be miserable. Is your life better with or without him? What drew him into this interaction? Whatever it was? What can you both do to keep things juicy between you?
This may well have been just a flirtation, an purely mental thing. I've had them, you just connect with a co-worker, it's a bit of flirtation, keeps things interesting at work and it's ok as long as you both know your bounderies. Your response to this reflects your feelings and concerns about your parent's relationship as much or more than your own. Get in and talk with a relationship counselor - a non religious one - you don't need anyone passing judgements on this - you just need to grieve for your parent's relationship and what it did to your family so you can heal. If you don't, you are likely to to unconsciously do things to push your relationship into the same pattern. We all carry around a load of expectations and conditioned responses that can lock us into misery. By over reacting to this you could put your husband into a situation where he can't do anything right or anything to make it right and will come to feel that having been tried and condemmed (and it may have been fairly innocent) he might as well go for it, he's already paying for it.
Here's one more thing to do, get online on your search engine, type in, Mama Gena, read, listen, order one of her books ($5 used on Amazon probably) she teaches the womanly art of having fun in your relationship and life. We all need more if that. In the meantime, take a long walk. lots of deep breaths and smile. It's not the end of the world, it just feels like it right now.
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