Gransnet forums

Relationships

Have you ever been the other woman?

(104 Posts)
mrsgreenfingers56 Mon 28-Mar-22 13:10:10

I have often thought how the other woman in the marriage really does feel. Does she feel guilt over her affair with another woman's husband? Have you ever been the OW? Were you in love with this man?
A dear friend of mine died recently and to my surprise she had been the OW for many years and know would never have told me as my own marriage broke up due to the OW. At the time I literally hated this woman but it does take two to tango as they say.
Take Camilla for instance and the dreadful distress she caused to Diana, I wonder does she ever reflect on that?
Your feelings please.

JaneJudge Thu 31-Mar-22 19:22:12

If people behave poorly they need own it, not blame it on their poor lickle flaws. Oh dear I couldn't help hitting your mother and sleeping with someone else as i have my flaws, oh dear i accidentally shagged someone else when i was supposed to be at your 10th birthday party, oops i created another drama all about me, threatened you all and accidentally shagged someone else again and didn't come home for 2 days 'whoops' just my flaws - silly me, it must be my wife and children that cause my awful behaviour, sorry i mean flaws.

<massive sigh>

some people are just abusive and narcissistic

timetogo2016 Thu 31-Mar-22 19:35:13

If he will do it with you,he will do it to you.
And vice versa.
IMO.

3nanny6 Thu 31-Mar-22 19:58:33

I know of a woman I used to meet when I took my dog for a walk and she often stopped for a chat. A few times I met her and she was with her husband he would say hello and seemed a nice enough man. After knowing her for several months sometimes I would see her with a different man but I never gave it much thought. One particular day she stopped for a chat and began telling me about her boyfriend how she loved him but both of them would not leave their partners.
To be honest it would not be my cup of tea particularly doing it where you both live in fact if you want someone else then go off and be with them. I still see her about with the boyfriend and other times I see her shopping with the husband. It takes all sorts I suppose.

diygran Thu 31-Mar-22 20:26:45

Daughter's husband has been having affair with work colleague. This OW should know better. She has three kids and has separated from her husband to make a deliberate play for son-in-law. He has a very good job and she is seeing £££s with big house, lots of holidays and wants that life.
Daughter is spitting mad. She met husband when they were both trainees and lived a simple life for many years.
They now have a gorgeous young son, but are living separately while he 'decides'
what future he wants. All the family are devastated, and you can imagine our feelings towards this conniving OW.

diygran Thu 31-Mar-22 20:29:39

I should have added, he is vulnerable by being clinically depressed and the OW has taken advantage.

kittylester Fri 01-Apr-22 17:56:11

Posts about priests blaming the wife for a straying husband remind me of a friends husband who went on a retreat while he decided between his wife and the OW.

On the day he was leaving the priest asked his what he had decided. He said that he intended to leave his wife. The priest told him to go back to his room until he came to a better decision. grin

Freda65 Thu 07-Apr-22 14:04:36

Of course the husband is responsible for his betrayal however any woman who pursues a married man really stoops to the lowest of levels. The pain and destruction is frankly irreparable, the impact to the wife’s ( or husband if the other way around) mental and physical health shouldn’t be underestimated. Often it’s a life sentence...
So for anyone out there playing with fire and knowingly having an affair with a married man or woman ... think again eh

Elizabeth27 Thu 07-Apr-22 14:13:30

I think the blame should be on the husband, he is the one that made the vows, the one that is lying and cheating. The other woman owes the wife no allegiance. Who knows what lies the husband told the other woman.

diygranwhy is your daughter waiting for him to decide, surely she will not have him back?

Bridgeit Thu 07-Apr-22 14:16:52

Are you saying that a pursed person will eventually ‘ succumb to an affair purely because they have been pursued? (Genuine question & no wish to offend anyone)

Audi10 Thu 07-Apr-22 14:33:21

Yes I was the OW I always thought it would never happen to me! We were both married to other people! And while we weren’t proud of the fact we had fell in love, we both left our marriages and have now been together and very very happy for 40 years! So until it happens to you, you cannot possibly say! We have actually lasted a lot longer together than some marriages! You don’t know what goes on behind closed doors!

Audi10 Thu 07-Apr-22 14:36:08

Timetogo 2016 just because it happens once it doesn’t mean it will happen again, that is just silly not every relationship works like that!

Shandy57 Thu 07-Apr-22 14:38:31

When I was 20 I had a brief fling with a married man - but he bought his child along with him once and I realised how wrong it was. Broke it off there and then.

sodapop Thu 07-Apr-22 17:27:10

The other woman is getting a lot of stick from you diygran surely your son in law is equally to blame for this situation. Not quite sure what you mean by stating she is taking advantage of a man who is depressed.
It does seem there are an awful lot of wicked women about seducing poor innocent men.

Juno56 Thu 07-Apr-22 18:58:35

Yes I have, but I didn't know. When I was in my early twenties I had a relationship with a work colleague. I really liked him. Then one evening as I was leaving work I was confronted by a strange woman who told me that my 'boyfriend' was married to her sister. They had a child with another on the way! I can still remember how sick and humiliated I felt. Needless to say I ended things with him and got a new job as soon as I could.

diygran Fri 08-Apr-22 11:04:53

Agreed Freda65, a woman who sets out to pursue a married man with young family is the lowest of the low.
Elizabeth 27 he is very stressed in job and depressed, and will not seek treatment. He says he isn't seeing OW and she has left firm. Scared whole company would know she had affair with boss. Daughter still loves him but can't live with him until he gets treatment.
It's up to him if he wants to save marriage.
sodapop of course he is to blame as well as OW but she saw him as an easy target when they worked together every day. The fact she left her husband to deliberately make a play for him says everything about her. This was about money not love. He has always been a loving loyal husband but changed when depression hit.

MissAdventure Fri 08-Apr-22 11:33:19

He is entirely responsible for his own actions.
Obviously not too depressed to start up and maintain a sexual relationship with someone else.

JaneJudge Fri 08-Apr-22 11:57:36

It sounds like depression is being used as an excuse for his own behaviour. I understand you are angry diygran but your SIL is to blame for what he does or does not do. If I was your daughter I would be seeking legal advice to ring fence assets/money.

kircubbin2000 Fri 08-Apr-22 13:01:20

Out walking with hubby a few years ago we met our doctor. Surprised to see him as the walk was not near his home. He told us quite openly that he was on his way to visit a lady friend whose husband always went to golf on Sundays.

diygran Fri 08-Apr-22 16:02:54

Thanks JaneJudge, daughter knows her rights and is working towards making her and son's future more secure.
Just hoping any separation doesn't end up a long bitter battle.

M0ira Fri 08-Apr-22 17:15:24

I often think about “ Hand on cock” the fact that for two peoples pleasure there are now eight peoples pain.

Pepper59 Fri 08-Apr-22 17:18:21

No, so could not comment on this thread.

MayBee70 Fri 08-Apr-22 18:03:20

M0ira

I often think about “ Hand on cock” the fact that for two peoples pleasure there are now eight peoples pain.

My husbands attitude was ‘this is nothing to do with our children’. The woman’s children went to my children school.

eazybee Fri 08-Apr-22 19:06:14

I taught two boys in the same class; the father of one was living with the mother of the other; both boys were passionate about football, but the mistress's son was the better player so her lover devoted all his energy to supporting his football, at the expense of his own son.

MayBee70 Fri 08-Apr-22 20:54:49

eazybee

I taught two boys in the same class; the father of one was living with the mother of the other; both boys were passionate about football, but the mistress's son was the better player so her lover devoted all his energy to supporting his football, at the expense of his own son.

sad

grannygranby Thu 21-Apr-22 06:12:10

Yes it’s true the men are often portrayed as innocent. I have never been attracted to married men but have had quite a few advances from them. Pretty much lose lose I’d say. They’d have to be separated and living alone for at least six months before I would be at all interested and that’s never happened.
Emotional betrayal is very damaging. But some people love power over others more than anything and both sexes enjoy that it seems. In the end they will all justify themselves.
My last partner, though we were not married had lived together for years and he was my children’s step dad. He wandered a bit, being a musician and very attractive to women which was hurtful sometimes. If ever I went away women would be round, but not seriously I thought. Then an old flame (single) got in touch with me and I met him and was a bit entranced, and...that was it, my partner flew, girlfriends flocked round him, one of them got him, I was seriously dumped. My old flame flickered again. Everyone has their excuses. Mine is that I was always attracted to dangerously attractive men so how stupid was that?