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Shasta Nelson, M.Div.

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Help! Should I Tell My Friend that Her Husband Is Cheating on Her?

Posted: 07/14/2012 3:20 pm

What should you do when you know that your friend's significant other is cheating on her?

You might expect a friendship advocate to champion, "Always tell your girlfriend the truth! Our loyalty is to each other!" And while I agree with that second sentence, I don't think the first sentence always leads to that result.

How we tell that truth is often what matters most.

Principles to Consider Before Confessing News that Could Ruin Her Life

Do you tell a girlfriend when her husband is cheating on her? Most women say they want to know... but how we do it can determine whether the friendship is protected.

Every friendship is different, every marriage is different and every affair is different. There is no one answer to the question that will fit everyone, all the time. Some of us will have added complications if we also feel loyal to the person we know is cheating, if we all hang out together regularly as couples or families, if we know she's had painful history with this subject, if she thinks her relationship is perfectly fine, if she's pregnant or has young kids or any other number of variations.

Here are some things to consider before you tell her what you know about her husband or boyfriend that could devastate her.

First, know that your burden isn't the priority. Yes, it feels like the worst secret ever. And you're sick to your stomach with what you know. Unfortunately, that is not the biggest concern here. What you are feeling is nothing compared to what she will feel. Your feelings are big and scary, but if you're thinking of confessing the truth so that you feel better -- that is the worst reason to do so. Even if it is causing fights in your own marriage or keeping you up at night -- that is not her fault. Vomiting the truth so that she hurts and you feel better is not friendship. Maturity means we learn to find our peace in the midst of painful situations. So if you do tell her, don't breathe a word about how it's impacting you, what you would do in this situation, or how mad at him you are. As much pain as you are in, don't make this about you. This is her nightmare.

Women know when they're ready to know, usually. I've talked to many women after they found out that their husbands were cheating and almost all of them saw warning signs and red flags when they looked back at the relationship. We might act like we don't know, for a while, because we're not ready to face the truth or because we're not ready to have it called into question. So think long and hard about whether you think your friend doesn't already know. In the coaching world we say, "Don't have their ah-ha for them." It's usually more life changing for her to come to her own truth, than for us for force feed it to her. So if you do tell her, I'd start with the least amount of information you need to give. Being loyal to her doesn't mean telling her everything you know, it means telling her enough so that she can try it on and make her best decisions. It's usually best to tell her what you know with a little bit of doubt, allowing her to save face if she chooses denial for a little longer. Don't force a long conversation or intervention now, just move on. You can know she'll undoubtedly keep thinking about it.

You need to know that most women stay. I think it's worth reminding you that most women stay in marriages even after an affair. And unless you've been there, you can't judge it. Sometimes there are higher values at stake, other needs being met and alternative priorities that she chooses. That is not a choice of weakness; to stay is hard and it takes tremendous strength. But you need to know this because it's not a given that she's going to thank you for the information and leave him tomorrow. Supporting her means supporting her relationships, choices, decisions and timing. Supporting her means accepting her no matter whether you approve. So if you do tell her, then be sure you tell her that it's okay if she stays or wants to try to work it out and that you can still understand what she loves about him. You should feel no invested stake in what choice she makes (even if it affects your ability to go out on double-dates -- that is not the highest priority right now!), when she makes it, or how; let her know that you will fully support her and journey with her in any direction. And you'll support her if she changes her mind down the road, too. Life is a journey, let her take hers.

Women don't want to have to defend their family. Even when we know our mom is impossible, we don't want someone else to say it. Even when we know our children are trouble-makers, we don't want everyone else to think less of them. Even when our spouse makes us madder than mad, we don't want our friends to not admire him. In fact it's common that most women will blame the "other woman" more than they will their own spouse -- its how we react to people we love. Like a mama bear with her cubs, chances are high that she will defend him; it's partly how she defends herself. So if you do tell her, be very, very careful to still speak highly of him, to only share the bare minimum and to never speak poorly of him or their marriage. Even if she reacts with anger toward him, tell her you understand the feelings, but don't agree with her or express your own opinion. What he did was a hurtful thing, but he is not a bad man. Even if she leaves him eventually, she will heal better if people around her aren't devaluing him or feeding her anger.

The messenger can become the threat. If she's defending him (or herself, since we all want to believe that we chose the perfect person, are worthy of their love and have a great marriage), you are at risk for being seen as the threat. At her very healthiest, she would be able to separate you from the message, but when we're scared, we don't always react rationally. She may accuse you of lying, see it as evidence that you've never really supported her relationship with him, or simply be so ashamed she can't face you anymore for what you come to represent to her. If the truth comes out later, she may not want to face you and feel the embarrassment of an "I told you so," and if she decides to stay, she may feel like she can never talk about it with you. So if you do tell her, know this distance is normal and a likely consequence of telling the truth. The best way to minimize this is by never placing yourself against him; rather just keep expressing how much you love her and will stick by her no matter what. Express deep regret for having to tell her, but simply tell her you would regret it more if she someday found out you knew and didn't tell her.

Be ready and willing to handle the grief. If you're not close enough to her to be someone who is ready to go through the grief cycle with her, you may not be close enough to her to tell her this news. She will likely need to grieve; whether it ends her relationship or not, there is still some loss. The stages of grief include denial, anger, bargaining, and depression -- all of which she may take out on you. All of which are healthy and normal stages. Pray for the courage and tenacity to not take things personally. So if you tell her, you need to be committed to showing up in all those stages, reminding her how much you love her and support her. That might mean doing all the initiating for a while. That might mean being her place to vent or her person to ignore. No matter what she does, you should just keep saying to her, "You have a right to be mad. I would be to. That's okay. But I'm going to still be here no matter what. You can yell at me, but I still love you." It means being ready to clean up the vomit that was spewed. Because that's real loyalty.

You've been put in a tough place knowing this information. But you can handle this choice.

Loyalty may mean protecting her from this news for now if you feel that's the best option. Loyalty can also mean helping her face her feelings, no matter how reactionary they are.

Either way, you can love her and help her see her best self, so that when she goes through phases when she can't see it herself -- she can see herself through your eyes.

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For more articles that deal with friendship break-ups, drift-aparts and rifts, go to Shasta's Friendship Blog.

 
 
 

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What should you do when you know that your friend's significant other is cheating on her? You might expect a friendship advocate to champion, "Always tell your girlfriend the truth! Our loyalty is t...
What should you do when you know that your friend's significant other is cheating on her? You might expect a friendship advocate to champion, "Always tell your girlfriend the truth! Our loyalty is t...
 
 
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09:35 AM on 07/19/2012
I have had to avoid the girlfriends and wives of my partner's friends. All of these guys cheat, and all of them have excuses for it. I'm not really friends with these ladies but feel very guilty knowing what I know. But I have no real relationship with them so it's not really my place to say. Admittedly though, I have no poker face and I'm pretty sure the guilt of knowing is written all over my face, so we miss out on a lot of social activity because I feel like I'm going to explode holding in these secrets. I feel very bad for them and I feel bad for knowing.
11:11 AM on 07/22/2012
Don't feel guilty sugar, I am here to tell you not all but alot of women know when they are being cheated. Women's Intuition is very powerful! It is those red flags or signs that something is not right.
04:20 PM on 08/27/2012
Thank you baby girl, Women's intuition is powerful!
09:37 AM on 07/18/2012
My ex sister-in-laws husband cheated on her often. I started to bring into our conversations about cheating spouses and how she felt. She was adamant that her husband would never cheat. For years I watched as she lost a few friends who did tell her that her husband had hit on them. She would blame the friend, act as if the misunderstood his "flirting", or just say they were lying to hurt her. In her mind, there was no way her husband would cheat. I stayed out of it all because as her friend I knew it was not something she was ready to hear from anyone. One night when my husband was out of town at 11pm I get a knock on my door and it's her husband wanting to come in. He had been drinking and "just wanted someone to talk to". I did not let him in and told him to go back home and talk to his wife. When I saw him next I told him if he ever did that to me again I would tell his wife and my husband and anyone else who would listen. He steered clear of me after that. Many years later they divorced. I think a good friend knows when her friend is ready to hear the truth or can even handle it being part of thier friendship. I would hope that a good friend would tell me in the ways described in the article.
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bjdjtjbjd
02:23 PM on 07/18/2012
Yes, cin, I hear you. I had tried to explain what you just posted to a few others and they couldn't understand my reasoning. I was trying to tell them it's NOT so much the type of frendship you have with the person, it's what type of person that will eccept the truth and NOT go nutso on you!

F&F for telling it much better than I could...
11:50 PM on 07/17/2012
Marriage may, indeed, be a choice...but many who make that choice may not fully understand the essence of monogamy.
Religion, family/friends/community peer pressure & age dictate some down them isle of matrimony, but thats never a lifelong guarantee to
monogamis satisfaction & happiness!
Same old, same old = "3/5/7 year itch"...just saying.

.
09:01 PM on 07/17/2012
I think I'd first go to him and ream him. See his reaction and find out how he'd like to best handle the situation. Anyone can make a mistake. If, once called on the carpet, he wants to save his marriage, let him initiate the dialogue with his wife. Then you could be there for support if needed. What goes on between husband and wife should be private. If she wants to tell you about it, then and only then you can share with her what you did and his reaction. Don't judge. Usually, there's some indication and the wife knows when something is amiss.
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bjdjtjbjd
02:29 PM on 07/18/2012
You're right on, fscarlson. F&F for your good communication skills.

My communication skills sucked yesterday...I broke up with my boyfrend and I guess it showed in my posts...
08:35 PM on 07/17/2012
I was in a marriage that people commented about perfect it was. I believed it. Ten years in I found out about an affair. He was sorry, full of excuses and promises. I stayed, forgave and went to counseling with him. 4 years later I am finding out that he had been cheating from before we were married. He hit on or propositioned almost every one of our female friends over the course of our marriage. If even one of those "friends" had told me what was going on in the early years, I might not have believed them then, but I would have believed the 2nd one, and I certainly would not have stayed after the affair. Instead, I wasted the last 14 years of my life, risked exposure to STDs, and lost thousands of dollars of my pre-marriage savings (which he spent on his girlfriends). If you are truly a friend, you would tell another woman her husband is cheating on her or hitting on you.
08:03 PM on 07/17/2012
I was married for a short time quite a few years ago. I was young, in love, and had a 2 yr old baby. My husband cheated on me. We lived in a small town and apparantly he was pretty open about it. Many of our friends knew, and even some of my relatives. When I finally discovered what was going on I couldn't believe how many people told me after the fact they knew asll along and wanted to tell me but just couldn't. My own sisters! I was humiliated and could bearly go out of the house after that for awhile because every time I saw someone I knew I wondered if they knew about it too. " That poor girl, she must suck in bed,etc. Thats what I imagained they were thinking. I have trust issues to this day. Now life is good, I've been remarried for many years and my ex? He married that girl and she cheated on him. With multiple people. payback, right? Anyway, I think most people have a feeling something is up and if I knew about someone elses hubby, I wouldn't be cruel and give them a blow by blow of what I knew, but I would definately throw them a bone, a hint etc. And if you do know and don't say anything and she finds out, I wouldn't admit to her you knew. Because she will wonder why you didn't say anything, always.
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K White
Sashays, flips hair, and throws glitter.
08:01 PM on 07/17/2012
I would definitely tell my best friend if I knew her husband was cheating, but I wouldn't care if she decided to stay in her marriage or not. We would just have to deal with the impact it might have on our friendship together. And if she wanted to remain in the marriage, I wouldn't treat her hubby differently at all. That just doesn't seem like my place. Although I'm currently single, I would want to know if it was my husband. My bestie and I have actually gone through this with boyfriends (I know that's a bit different) without any problems. It would be more difficult for me to decide to tell or not tell if the spouse was coming-on to me, not some other woman/women. Under those circumstances, the friend that's in the bad marriage usually ends up having some serious embarrassment and weird, competitive emotions. Oh, well. Interesting article and comments.
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kepowell5
07:57 PM on 07/17/2012
To my girlfriends... Please tell me. Yes I might get mad, mostly because I would be embarrassed that you knew and I didn't, but I could then research, find out you were right and I would apologize because I hold you dear. I would definitely tell you and share your pain. If you are my friend, then how could you keep me in the dark if you knew? That's not a friend. That's an acquaintance.
11:14 AM on 07/22/2012
Thank you! I agree 10000%
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Gangbusters
07:45 PM on 07/17/2012
Why tell her let the good times roll
07:41 PM on 07/17/2012
ANY WHAT HAPPENS WHEN THE OTHER WOMAN IS HIS SISTER, BUSINESS MEETING, OR SIMPLE CO WORKER BECAUSE IN HIS OFFICE HE THE ONLY MALE AND ITS A SIMPLE LUNCH. YOUR GO GOING TO LOOK LIKE A COMPLETE ARSH WHEN YOU TELL HER
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07:37 PM on 07/17/2012
This is a double-edged sword. If you are that GREAT friend- you tell- and when you know. If you aren't a good friend, you keep it to yourself- either way, once known- there's going to be anger, resentment etc. for being the messenger- it makes it easier for the woman to blame you instead of who the real BAD person is- her spouse or bf or whoever. I'd be more angry with anyone I know who knows me, how I am and kept me in the dark. In the end, however it turns out, gotta do what you know is right for yourself and based on what you know of the friend. If they stay together, your friendship may end because you were honest and it's a serious thing that couple would know you always knew. If they end, you can continue to be the GREAT supportive friend. Either way, I'd say be straight from the start- keeping something like that from someone you say is a friend or you care about- is hurtful to all, esp. the clueless friend- get it out and if anything- the bf or spouse is in the wrong so don't lose sight of that so that it makes you feel guilty for doing the RIGHT thing. Keep it to yourself ONLY if you are sure your friend wouldn't want to know- if you know she would- tell her- same as you'd want done.
07:34 PM on 07/17/2012
Two golden rules in this situation: 1) No one knows what is going on between two people,, I mean no one. 2) If you bad mouth the evil one,, the good one will come back and bite you in the ass later.
07:33 PM on 07/17/2012
Of course titles like this only serve to spread the myth that all men cheat. Which is of course the exact opposite.
07:23 PM on 07/17/2012
When? --- ASAP.
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b4pangea
Insert clever micro-bio here
07:15 PM on 07/17/2012
I think it takes a true friend to tell you what she knows, even though it pains her, and then support you regardless of what you decide, hear your feelings without judgment and without overly inserting herself into your situation, and keep it to herself.

But-
A friend who has nothing more than her own suspicions, no facts, is not being a friend. Don’t s#!t-stir in something as important as someone else’s marriage if you have no more compelling evidence than “a feeling”.

A friend who tells you with the assumption that you will immediately decide to end the marriage- particularly if she’s never cared for your husband anyway- has her own agenda and is not being a friend.

A friend who figures now that it’s “out in the open”, it’s fair game for her to discuss and dissect with all your mutual acquaintances, is not being a friend.

A friend who uses your situation to process her anger at her own past partners and betrayals is not being a friend. It’s not about her.

I think it can be a true act of friendship to tell the truth. I think, unfortunately, a lot of women go about it the wrong way and without being very honest with themselves about their motives.