Know Your Man

I am very interested in hearing from women of all ages in reaction to the story I have to tell at the ripe old age of seventy-two. Tell me how you think you’d react and deal with this issue if it happened to anyone in your family; you, your mother, your sister, your daughter, your grandmother etc.

I have been married nearly fifty years to the same man. I was twenty-four and he was twenty-nine when we married in the 1960s. About five months after we met, I got pregnant. We were both delighted, or so I thought. 

Several months ago I accidentally discovered that my husband had been calling a woman (Her name is Ow) he knew before meeting me. Their child, I’ll call her number one, was born about three months before he met me. He knew she was pregnant and told her he would not marry her because she had lied to him about her marital status when they were involved. Her husband adopted number one. My husband met her just once when she was eight. He never told me anything about this until last winter.

Now he has told me that he slept with Ow once during our marriage when she had asked him to come and meet number one. Ow was divorced at the time. He swears he never saw her again until 2007 when Ow contacted him regarding personal problems the now forty-eight year old number one was having. My husband flew across the country to meet with both Ow and the child and gave number one a large sum of money even though he says no one asked for it. Number one is single, healthy, and childless.

Since 2007, until last winter when I discovered the phone bills, he has talked with Ow at least once a month. He swears he has no romantic interest in her and has not seen her since 2007. He swears he did not have sex with her in 2007. He says he was calling her to find out about number one who never returned his calls.

When I asked him about the phone calls, he lied to me and denied knowing whose number it was. So I called the number and talked to Ow. Of course then he had to tell me the truth (or so he says) and said he was “protecting” me by not telling.

I am beginning to heal now and two of my three children have met their “new sister” and like her. I have no problem with her existence whatsoever. I would love to know how she really feels about being ignored by her real father for so long, but since she had a strong father figure she seems to be ok with it.

I am sympathetic with the choice my husband had to make all those years ago. But I cannot trust this man or believe anything he tells me now. 

In closing I would like to offer this piece of advice: know your man!




4 readers liked this story.
From Around the Web:
09.02.2011
reallyrenee
I think you are a very strong woman. Thank you for sharing your story. If I was you I would go on a cruise or take a great vacation with some girlfriends or even alone!
08.28.2011
Isabella Neruda
More importantly than "knowing your man" is to "know thyself." Even if you have lived with someone and/or been married for a long period of time, it is impossible to affirm, verify, prove that everything said to you is true, and to live with that assumption is to lie to yourself. I too have suffered betrayal, and when I found out initially, I was devastated. It took me years to figure out that the problem wasn't my partner, the problem was me. I spent the last years of my life focused on him, on what he was doing, where he was going, who he was with, and how I could encourage, seduce, demand fidelity...until I figured out I couldn't. I was upset with his betrayal yet I was betraying myself. I knew something was not right in the relationship, but, I did not want to face it. I finally resigned my investigative role, and stopped asking for his love and attention and began to love myself, because in the end, happiness did not depend on me 'Knowing My Man" but on me knowing, loving myself.
08.27.2011
tina
i can relate to this story.. I've been betrayed too by my partner. Most men, though I am not generalizing it, are good liars.. you give them your trust wholeheartedly but what do we get in return? betrayal. I am so overwhelmed with the pain I am feeling right now, that I want to tear him into pieces every time I see him. I don't know if I can trust him again, but I don't have the courage to leave him. He promised to be good but I don't know if he's capable of doing that. Please help.
08.27.2011
Gloria Harvey
When I read your story, I felt betrayed as if I were wearing your shoes. It is very hard to trust someone who has lied to you. Friends don't do that to each other, and that is what your husband should be to you, a friend. He could have introduced his daughter to you without bedding his ex-lover. The fact that he had a daughter with someone else does not give him permission to have sex with the mother nor to lie to you. "To protect you" is an excuse, not a reason to lie. He was protecting himself.
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