My daughter’s best friend at day care shares your name, which means it’s a name I hear a lot. I used to cringe when I heard it. She’s such a sweet little girl though. Whenever my daughter talks about how much fun she has been having with her, I must admit I feel grateful that she’s talking about her little friend and not about you.
A year ago today you hit send on an email that had a monumental effect on several people’s lives. Mine, my husband’s, my daughter’s, both our parents and families, our friends. I often wonder what was going through your mind at that moment, how much of it was revenge against a man who broke your heart and how much of it was you trying to do the right thing for his wife. The level of detail that you went into, felt like it had been curated to inflict pain. You knew what a wife would need to hear to get her to the point of no return in her marriage and you delivered it, blow by blow.
I wonder how much you knew about me. I know that you looked me up online, read my blog, saw my pictures. I wonder whether you knew that I’d be at work that day when I received your email, cryptically entitled ‘Your husband’. Yes, that’s what he was, and technically still is at this point, my husband. I wonder whether you refer to him as your ex-boyfriend now. It’s so bizarre for me to think that this man I know so intimately had this significant other person in his life that I didn’t know about.
And I can honestly say that, I didn’t know. I probably should have. I certainly asked him, but deep down I truly didn’t think that it could happen to us. We were rock solid, him and I. I really thought that. We had a six month old baby and he was away a lot with work. Of course things were tough and we weren’t as connected as before but I needed him to hang in there for me, until things got easier. He would have I think, if you had not come along at that moment.
I am not interested in blame and I don’t seem to be capable of hatred. I don’t care whose ‘fault’ it is. I truly believe that everything happens for a reason and there are lessons in this for all of us. I can imagine what it must have been like for you, living in that small town. One night a good looking guy comes into your bar for a drink. He can be funny and charming, my husband. I can imagine how you would have fallen for him. As he came in each night he would have told you about how hard it is with a baby at home, how he wasn’t getting much attention. All you had to do was listen to him, give him what he said I wasn’t, and soon enough he was yours. I get it, I fell in love with him from the other side of a bar too.
Sometimes I wonder how much of it was him trying to find what he had lost in me. I was once a cute blonde in a short skirt behind the bar at his favourite pub. Ten years later I was the mum in the yoga pants with the silver regrowth and bags under her eyes from being up all night with a sick baby. He was supposed to love that version of me too. And he did, but he missed the girl who had nothing but time to dote on him. That’s what you gave him.
In some ways I’m actually glad. I felt bad for him spending all those nights alone in a hotel, away from his family. But he wasn’t alone. He was with you. He spent his birthday with you. You comforted him when we put our beloved dog down. I love this man enough to feel glad that he was able to find love at those times, though it wasn’t from where I wish it had been.
Just like the old cliché, you believed he would leave me for you. But he didn’t. He let you down. Our daughter got older, stopped nursing and started sleeping. He began to see the woman he had fallen in love with all those years ago. He wanted to make it work with his wife, with his family. I bet that hurt for you. You had a choice. You could let him move on and try to make his marriage work, or you could take it all from him. You chose option two.
We tried hard to put the pieces back together but it just didn’t work. I was different. It was the little details that did it. Those words and images etched into my mind. I think you knew that they would. We are both ok now though, me and him. In fact, in a way we are closer than ever. We have learned so much about each other through this process. Though we have each moved on, we still have love and respect for each other, which has a positive effect on our little girl. No one will ever break that.
Watch the Mamamia team confess when they knew it was over with their partner. Post continues after video.
I hope you have moved on with your life too. I hope that you have learned from this situation and that you can find some peace within yourself, as I have.
Carlie.
Carlie Maree is a writer + coach + student + mum. With a raw and honest style, she writes about all things life and love over at morethanmum.com.au
Top Comments
"I needed him to hang in there for me, until things got easier. He would have I think, if you had not come along at that moment."
If this woman had not come along, your estranged husband would have found someone else. His energy was open and available. I sounds like you are blaming the mistress.
"He wanted to make it work with his wife, with his family."
How do you know? Is that what he told you afterwards? A man who was living a double life? Again, sounds like you are blaming the mistress.
"I am not interested in blame"
I am saddened to hear of what happened to you and your family. It does appear to me, reading through that you are putting the majority of the blame onto the mistress.
She most certainly is culpable, and her choice to be his mistress shows low self esteem, and her emailing also shows vindictiveness masked as 'doing it for your own good'.
However he was the one who was meant to be in a committed relationship with you. Not her. He did not raise with you that he wanted an open marriage to meet his 'needs'. Or that he felt like he was not getting enough attention from you.
I would say that he is the one who showed up as a weak, emotionally immature adult, and whilst it was a brick with a bow tied around it, it opened your eyes to the real man you married and how he handles times when he feels challenged.
I have no doubt he can learn and grow from his poor choice to consciously not make it again, if he takes full responsibility that he chose the weak band aid path (affair) vs the harder, facing and working through it path (talking to you about how he felt). And I also appreciate how you would feel like the trust is irrevocably broken.
I am glad you are all able to lovingly co-parent your daughter, as her needs at her tender age surpass any anger, resentment or hurt you may be feeling towards the other (which you would have every right to feel).
I wish you well.
Ouch, this woman really streches the fact that her husband cheated on
her. That man must be some kind of magician/genius to be able to
manipulate her so much, that she actually puts the blame in the mistress
instead of her husband. Damn. Haven't seen ignorance like that in a
while now...