From the moment they met in university, a bond formed between two women that would shape their lives forever. Best friends and flatmates, they shared laughter, secrets, and dreams, with Mary introducing her sister-in-law to the man who would become her husband and the father of her children. Their lives seemed intertwined by love and trust, a perfect harmony that promised a lifetime of happiness.
But beneath the surface of this joyful family lay a silent battle. John, brilliant yet tormented, wrestled with demons that no amount of therapy or promises could fully tame. His struggle with alcoholism cast a shadow over their once bright future, turning hope into heartbreak as the cycle of recovery and relapse tore at the fabric of their lives. The fight for stability became a daily test of love, resilience, and faith.

AITA for telling my best friend / SIL the true reason for my divorce?


















A relevant expert perspective can be drawn from the field of addiction and codependency. Dr. Stephanie Sarkis, a licensed clinical social worker specializing in the impact of addiction, often discusses the concept of ‘enabling’ and the importance of setting firm boundaries for the well-being of family members involved with an alcoholic.
The narrator’s primary motivation was self-preservation and protecting her children from the instability caused by John’s cyclical relapses. John’s pattern—seek therapy, stop drinking temporarily, quit therapy, then relapse—is a common characteristic in chronic addiction management, often indicative of a lack of deep, sustained commitment to recovery. The narrator’s ultimatum and subsequent divorce were necessary boundary enforcement, even if painful. Her initial agreement to keep the drinking secret was a form of enabling that served John’s image rather than the family’s health. Once John broke the fundamental agreement (sobriety), the narrator was ethically released from the secondary agreement (secrecy), especially when explaining her drastic actions (divorce) to a primary stakeholder like Mary.
John’s current distress focuses on the damage to ‘Mary’s image of him,’ which highlights a pattern of prioritizing external perception over internal accountability. The narrator acted appropriately by prioritizing her family’s reality over maintaining a façade for others. For future situations, the constructive recommendation is to communicate necessary truths (like the reason for separation) clearly and immediately to all affected parties at the time the boundary is enforced, rather than waiting until the issue forces a major life change.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.
![[deleted] NTA your image shouldnt be rubbish because he's embarra*sed...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/6df5a73863a53545faedaf16ebb66593.png)
![[deleted] NTA - he's doing exactly what addicts do, which...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/3836fbae08ae28aa36a9268797d07bc7.png)




![[deleted] NTA. What did your ex-husband expect, that you would...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/64d37261e5c394c7998d6c508febe51d.png)




The narrator reached a breaking point, prioritizing her children’s stability and her own future over maintaining a marriage built on broken sobriety promises. Her central conflict involved upholding a promise of secrecy to her husband against her need to be honest with her best friend and sister-in-law about the serious reasons behind her decision to leave.
Was the narrator justified in breaking her vow of silence to her best friend once her husband repeatedly violated their core agreement on sobriety, or did this disclosure violate the trust necessary to maintain family relationships, even under difficult circumstances?







