Betrayal cut deep when she uncovered the secret her husband had hidden for three long years—a mistress who brazenly revealed their affair on social media, shattering her world in an instant. Trust shattered, she cast him out, only to be pulled back into a fragile reconciliation amid the raw grief of losing a beloved family member, clinging to hope in the midst of her despair.
But hope was a cruel illusion. The same woman reached out again, unveiling a fresh wound: the affair never ceased. The man she tried to forgive was living a double life, weaving lies between stolen moments. The pain of this second betrayal was a devastating blow, leaving her heart broken and her faith in love shattered beyond repair.

Husband had a 3 year affair behind my back.












Dr. John Gottman, a renowned relationship expert, emphasizes that the foundation of a successful marriage rests on trust, mutual respect, and managing conflict without resorting to contempt or defensiveness. In this scenario, the husband has repeatedly violated the primary covenant of trust through sustained infidelity, compounded by deception even during the OP’s period of extreme vulnerability and grief. The attempt to weaponize the OP’s innocent coffee meetings against her is a classic example of DARVO (Deny, Attack, and Reverse Victim and Offender).
The husband’s motivation for going through the OP’s phone and subsequently refusing to communicate is likely rooted in a need to regain control and deflect accountability for his own egregious actions. His accusation that the OP ‘cheated’ by seeking advice from an old coworker demonstrates a severe imbalance in perceived fairness and a failure to accept responsibility. Emotional support sought outside a marriage is only damaging when the primary relationship is already severely compromised by a partner’s sustained betrayal; here, the betrayal occurred first and repeatedly.
The OP’s actions—seeking counsel while grieving a family loss and dealing with infidelity—are understandable coping mechanisms, not evidence of romantic betrayal. The husband’s reaction is inappropriate and manipulative. For future situations, the OP should prioritize formal, legally sound separation processes, minimize contact until legal matters are settled, and seek individual therapy to process the trauma of betrayal, rather than attempting reconciliation with a partner demonstrating such severe character flaws.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.

















The initial poster (OP) finds herself in an intensely painful situation, betrayed twice by her husband after discovering a long-term affair while she was simultaneously navigating personal grief. Her decision to end the marriage twice reflects a struggle between a desire for stability and the need to protect herself from repeated harm. The conflict sharpens when the husband, despite his own documented infidelity, attempts to shift blame onto the OP for seeking emotional support outside the marriage.
Given the husband’s proven pattern of deception and the OP’s clear, non-romantic attempts to seek counsel during a crisis, is the husband justified in claiming the OP’s interactions with a divorced male coworker constitute cheating and a betrayal worthy of his silence? Conversely, does the OP’s history of fidelity and the context of her emotional distress render her husband’s accusation manipulative and baseless?







