T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
888.1 | it's really up to him | DEC25::BERRY | OU EST LE SOLEIL | Sat Oct 28 1989 05:39 | 11 |
| If he suspects already, and what you've said is true, then it's time for
a chat with her. He could start by simply discussing the finances. He
could also just tell her what he knows/suspects and and ask her point blank.
He could also talk to the girls that she is suppose to be going out with.
He could also set her up to provide proof.
Or he can do nothing and worry himself sick.
Dwight
|
888.2 | | AIADM::MALLORY | I am what I am... | Sat Oct 28 1989 09:07 | 9 |
|
I agree with Dwight that it's time for some serious conversation. All
the signs are there but everyone is innocent until proven guilty.
On the other hand, this has to be tearing the guy apart and he should
get it out in the open before he goes crazy.
Wes
|
888.3 | Don't forget DEC has free counselling thru EAP. | SSDEVO::GALLUP | go ahead...make my day! | Sat Oct 28 1989 13:32 | 18 |
|
Not only does it sounds like he's very unhappy, but sounds
like she's a prety unhappy camper too.
They need to talk.....sounds like she doesn't want to
tho...perhaps she's scared of talking to him. Perhaps the
affair isn't with someone, but something (drugs possibly?
That could account for the money loss).
The last thing he should do is try to talk to her with a
condemning attitude. That will get him close to nowhere and
probably put her on the defense.
Compassion, love and understanding go a long way toward
opening a lot of doors.
kath
|
888.4 | Less then a pennys worth | CSC32::D_SMITH | | Sat Oct 28 1989 17:41 | 14 |
|
Having been in a simular situation in the past. If and when he
sits down to talk, he'll be looking for answers to his questions,
but he needs to be prepared to also give answers, and he needs to
be sure that he is being 100% honest, especialy to him self.
What will he do, if indeed she says Yes, I'm having an affair,
and no I don't want to stop, what If she says Yes, I have been
having an affair, but I have stopped and now want to be with you.
In most cases of people in the latter, the trust is the hardest
part to rebuild. What about the possibility of drugs or alcohol.
Whatever the problem, and whatever his or her responce, he needs
to know he has the strenght to follow through before having to
encounter it. Talking to a counselor prior to the confrination
might be a good way to start building that strenght.
|
888.6 | No drugs involved | SA1794::RIVARDB | | Mon Oct 30 1989 05:38 | 8 |
| Re: .3,.4,.5> Drugs and/or gambling
Although it is a mystery where the money is going, he says it isn't
either one of these. Sorry I didn't mention that in the base note.
b.r.
|
888.7 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | time, time, ticking, ticking... | Mon Oct 30 1989 06:56 | 4 |
| Re: -1
How does he know??? It seems funny that he would know 100% about those
two and not what he actually suspecting.
|
888.8 | Hire a Private Investigator | RUTLND::KUPTON | Baby Lou | Mon Oct 30 1989 10:47 | 45 |
|
First, if he suspects that she is cheating because of events,
stories, and his own kids, she probably is. He needs to know for sure
and the only way to do that is to catch her or see her for himself.
1. Hire a private investigator. They can be relatively inexpensive and
will provide surveillence of her action. They'll follow her, document
it, provide photos if requested. They'll also provide information as to
who she was with, any activity, with dates and times. If she's seeing
one person only, then he'll have all the evidence to confront her,
after seeing a lawyer. If she's looking for Mr. Goodbar, he's got an
even bigger problem because she needs as much help as you do/will to
overcome it.
2. Or you can follow her yourself. Gather your own evidence, document
it, and have a locksmith change the locks on your place and put her
things on the doorstep. Change the bank accounts, cancel all of the
plastic cards and set her free.
True Story:
An acquaintance wife was cheating on him. He loved her to depth of his
soul and she knew it. He tried everything to save the marriage. She
sorta went along with it but continued her affairs. Finally he tossed
her out. She went to live with her new found lover in his new house. He
talked her into buying a $28,000 vette, new clothes, etc. He was
arrested not too long ago. He's a con man. She's lost everything. Her
kids, her home, her husband. She signed divorce papers and it was all
finalized a month before her lover's demise. Her ex almost took her
back but a cooler head prevailed......he's just become engaged to a
wonderful person and his life is getting better daily.
It took two years for all of this to transpire. It's a long road to
haul. Your friend has to make cold calculating decisions that will
benefit him and the children. He has to take a step now down that road
a discover what lies for him or his wife could drive him nuts. That
won't help him or the kids.
He also should not berate his wife to the kids, she's their mother
no matter what she does and they shouldn't have their image of her
shattered.
Good Luck..
Ken
|
888.9 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | His steed of fury, eyes of fire and mane ablaze | Mon Oct 30 1989 11:29 | 34 |
| I do not envy this guy one bit- he has a tough road ahead of him.
He has to face the facts that his wife is probably having an affair (or maybe
several). He has to deal with the possibility that he is unable to satisfy
her sexually, a difficult admission for any man. He may have already lost
his wife.
The first thing to do is to attempt to talk to her. He has to ask her where
the money's going. I knew a guy who thought his wife was cheating on him.
She was actually taking the money and saving it for a grand present for him.
Had he flipped out because her stories didn't always jive, it would have been
a tragic mistake. This is obviously the exception, though.
He has to attempt to get to the bottom of this by talking to her first. If she
is real evasive or reacts in a hostile manner- he'll know he has big trouble.
It may be smart for him to begin to take preparatory financial manuevers-
in case this turns out to be a worst case scenario. If all works out, he
can laugh about it later. But now is the time to limit the potential for
financial hardship.
He should also begin to document her comings and goings, where she says she's
going to be, etc. It may become obvious what's happening when you see it on
paper. It will also come in handy should a custody battle ensue.
It sounds very much like she is off running around on him. It is quite likely
that the women she works with won't have anything to do with her because of
this, and the men will have everything to do with her for the same reason.
I don't know what else to say besides "prepare for the worst."
Good luck, and have strength.
The Doctah
|
888.10 | P.I.'s do it under cover!!! | MAMIE::OLSON | Yo mama say you ugly and you are Heh! | Mon Oct 30 1989 11:45 | 11 |
| As a licensed Private Investigator in the state of New Hampshire
I have seen many cases involving this type of scenario. DO NOT
attempt to follow anyone in a case like this unless you are affiliated
w/the law or a P.I.. P.I.'s are trained investigators/observers
and, in court, are sworn in as EXPERT witnesses. DO NOT tell this
person to do it on his own!!! If confronted and emotions arise,
you can't tell what could happen in a situation like that. Domestic
investigations can be the most temperamental and dangerous.
-jeff-
|
888.11 | Her Dissatisfaction Might Be With Herself, Not Him | FDCV01::ROSS | | Mon Oct 30 1989 11:59 | 25 |
|
Re: .9
> He has to face the facts that his wife is probably having an affair (or maybe
>several). He has to deal with the possibility that he is unable to satisfy
>her sexually, a difficult admission for any man. He may have already lost
>his wife.
Mark, I agree that this guy has some tough going ahead.
However, there's something you said which I believe might cause him to
feel even more guilt or pain, when there's no reason for him to.
Most people's (male or female) cheating has little or nothing to do with
the fact that they're not being sexually satisfied by their partner.
People "cheat" for a variety of reasons: they, themselves, have low self-
esteem, it's a way of getting attention or revenge, they're generally
bored with their lives (although not necessarily sexually bored)......
Very few people cheat *only because they're sexually frustrated*, although they
may rationalize that that's the reason.
Alan
|
888.12 | not a fun time | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | His steed of fury, eyes of fire and mane ablaze | Mon Oct 30 1989 13:38 | 16 |
| >However, there's something you said which I believe might cause him to
>feel even more guilt or pain, when there's no reason for him to.
Ok- I didn't mean for that to happen. I just wanted to wave a red flag about
a _possibility_; especially one that most men would really rather not think
about.
re: .10
I don't think he should confront her in the act (though my cousin just did
this to her husband). Emotions being what they are and all...
I see no reason why he couldn't follow her and take note of where she is.
Assuming he has a decent amount of stealth, that is.
The Doctah
|
888.13 | | APEHUB::RON | | Mon Oct 30 1989 15:45 | 11 |
|
RE: 0.
> He says she won't talk to him about anything, is cold towards
> him, sarcastic, doesn't seem to want to kiss him, etc.
Doesn't this tell you everything? Regardless of whether she's
having an affair, they have a real problem.
-- Ron
|
888.14 | Sounds Like an Affair to Me ... | MAMTS7::TTAYLOR | cause that's the way I LIKE it! | Mon Oct 30 1989 16:41 | 17 |
| re: .13
I agree with Ron. Even if she *isn't* having an affair (which it
seems like the writing's on the wall) they have a serious communication
problem.
He should probably take steps doumenting this behavior in order
to protect himself for the future. Hiring a PI is a very good idea.
Documenting an affair may save him a lot of hassle and in a custody
battle may give him leverage depending on what he wants to do with
the kids.
My heart goes out to him, hope this is solved amicably for his sake.
Tammi
|
888.15 | Confront Her Now! | DECSIM::TOTO | Colleen | Tue Oct 31 1989 07:58 | 13 |
| He should confront her. Ask her outright and see the response. She may come
clean or she may lie. If something isn't done soon, it could drag on. I
suspected my ex was having an affair with a (now ex friend) and he kept
telling me I was being over-perinoid and how much nicer I was than her and I
was insecure. After two weeks of me asking what's going on (I could feel
something was happening - I knew deep inside..) he finally admited it and left
me for her. A very real nightmare. In any case, if this is what's happening,
the sooner he finds out the better because he's gotta get over the pain, anger
and feeling of betrayal so he can move on with his life. Right now he's
living doubt...that can only go on for so long. Yes, his life will be
drastically changed and some people don't want to face what's going on because
it's going to hurt but time heals and he has a right to know "NOW" what's
going on. Tell him I said "good luck".
|
888.16 | Take control of the situation | AISVAX::HALVERSON | Laughter IS the best weapon | Tue Oct 31 1989 10:26 | 12 |
| I agree with Colleen, It is imperative that he take control of
the situation and confront her about it ASAP. IT will hurt ALOT
but the sooner he acts the sooner he will be on the road to a happier
life. It sounds like he would be better off without her anyway...
I can sympathize with him...no one deserves this kind of treatment..
If he would like to talk about it in more detail I would be happy
to converse with him via mail. It helps sometime to talk to others
who have experienced what your going thru....
Steve
|
888.17 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Tue Oct 31 1989 10:52 | 51 |
| No one here (except Kath) seems to be concerned about .0's wife.
It sounds to me that she may be a very unhappy person deserving
of a little compassion herself. Remember, there *are* two sides
to every story, and also that nobody *does* know what goes on behind
closed doors. In other words, we are only hearing the husband's
side of this story. No one has stopped to consider what he may
have done to his wife to drive her to this behavior. .0 states
that he seems like a really nice guy. Haven't you ever noticed that
almost everybody seems like a really nice guy?
I do not respect anyone who goes behind someone else's back and
hires private investigators to spy on others. I think it is sneaky
and underhanded.
I think that first the husband has to be, as someone else said,
100% honest with himself, and decide what he really wants. Does
he still love her? Is he happy with her? Was he happy before she
began cheating? Did they get along great before she started cheating,
or did they fight a lot, and have a lot of differences? If what
he really wants is to start over with someone else, does he really
need to punish his ex-wife first, or can he be willing to forgive,
let bygones be bygones and let both of them get on with their lives?
He has to talk to her openly about his feelings. He has to be able
to ask her ( not condemn her) what is wrong and why she is doing
what she's doing? Perhaps they could have an open marriage? Perhaps
they should get a divorce. If they should get a divorce they can
do this without anger, with joint custody settlements, and perhaps
even remaining friends. People are capable of forgiveness. Revenge
is not the most important thing on earth. It is also very important
to remember that just because a person has had sex with someone
other than their legal spouse, does not mean that they are not a
good parent. I have known some very wonderful people who have had
extra-marital sex at certain times in their lives, for various reasons.
We need to remember that this is almost 1990, and be open minded.
There are, afterall, worse things that a wife can do to a husband
than cheat on him. If she were a truly evil person she could lie
to the police that he had hit her, hire a lawyer and lie to him,
and have a restraining order placed on her husband. Then she could
divorce him making sure that at least $200. is deducted directly
from his paycheck for child support. I am *not* advocating this.
I am merely suggesting that for truly evil wives this route is
legally available.
His wife may be a nice person who is going through a time in her
life where she is lonely, bored, sad, and confused. Let's not be
so quick to condemn her.
Lorna
|
888.18 | Open Marriage? Why Bother Marrying Then? | GRANPA::TTAYLOR | cause I'm the WOMAN, that's why. | Tue Oct 31 1989 12:52 | 14 |
| Lorna:
I beg to differ (re: .17) "We need to remember that this is almost
1990 ...."
If everyone had that type of attitude about fidelity, then there
wouldn't be any such thing as marriage and commitment, for the two
go hand-in-hand with fidelity.
I agree with you about hearing the woman's side too, but I guess
we'll never know ....
Tammi
|
888.19 | they are not synonamous | YODA::BARANSKI | Happiness is a warm rock in the sun | Tue Oct 31 1989 12:57 | 8 |
| "If everyone had that type of attitude about fidelity, then there wouldn't be
any such thing as marriage and commitment, for the two go hand-in-hand with
fidelity."
Not everyone would agree with you. I know of several very committed non
monogamous people who's relationships have stood the test of time...
Jim.
|
888.20 | | DEC25::BRUNO | | Tue Oct 31 1989 13:16 | 6 |
| RE: .18
I have to agree with you Tammi. I may be an old dinosaur, but
I mourn the passing of the old-fashioned relationship.
Greg
|
888.21 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Tue Oct 31 1989 14:09 | 9 |
| Re .20, and .18, what I am trying to explain is that when someone
strays from an "old-fashioned relationship," there is probably a
good reason. It may not be just a light-hearted whim. It may be
a sign that something was seriously wrong with the "old-fashioned"
relationship, and we should have a little compassion and understanding
and not be so ready to "cast the first stone."
Lorna
|
888.22 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Demonic vulture stalking... | Tue Oct 31 1989 14:20 | 13 |
| It is possible that the problem that exists between the couple is "nobody's
fault." That seems unlikely from what we have heard. If she has a problem with
her relationship, jumping in the sack with someone else is extremely unlikely
to have the effect of solving the problem- it will more likely exacerbate it.
The point that we have only heard half the story is well taken, however.
If she is indeed having an affair, I would be likely to hold her responsible
unless she has attempted to solve the problem with her husband and been
unsuccessful. Unilateral renunciation of marriage vows does not strike me
as an effective method of solving marital problems.
The Doctah
|
888.23 | | DEC25::BRUNO | | Tue Oct 31 1989 14:25 | 5 |
| It would be FAR more decent to break-off the relationship before
violating the marriage. I would prefer to be 'dumped' before I am
'cheated on'.
Greg
|
888.24 | It doesn't often happen that way in life | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Tue Oct 31 1989 14:35 | 6 |
| Greg,
I'd be willing to bet that most people do the latter before the
former. In fact many may do the latter and never do the former.
Bonnie
|
888.25 | | PENUTS::JLAMOTTE | J & J's Memere | Tue Oct 31 1989 16:18 | 1 |
| Unhappiness and stress rarely are combined with good decision making.
|
888.26 | Open a $eparate account | POGO::REINBOLD | | Tue Oct 31 1989 20:37 | 3 |
| I'd suggest he open a separate bank account, and transfer some of the
joint funds so they don't just disappear. I agree with a previous
reply that he protect himself financially.
|
888.27 | I second the separate account | COMET::BOWERMAN | | Wed Nov 01 1989 17:37 | 38 |
| I agree with the suggestion of protecting the finances. Once the
finances for managing the home and taking care of the children is
in safe hands(a separate cheking account is a great idea).
Document her movements and try to detirmine what she is doing.
I would agree with the suggestion of the private investigator.
Decide what all your options could be given the different senarios.
Then chose your time to confrount and ask for an explanation.
Once you have allowed for the worst (in my view this would be a
nasty "she will try to take every thing" divorce) You can then
work on what ever comes up because you have prepared for the worse.
My own choise would consider the childrens needs as well as my own
emotional needs. I will not stay with anyone who has lied to me.
When this has happened in the past I have serched for and found
an apartment and moved my kids and me in the space of a week.
An interesting thing about preparing for a divorce I have learned
through talking with other women is the consept of stashing staples
(can goods and boxed foods and possibably frozen goods if the freezer
is available) and cash with a trusted friend or family member(father or
mother) in the event that cash becomes scarce. Lawyers and cleaning up
bills sometimes makes the cash flow pretty thready and soup will keep
a long time in the cans.
And dont forget to stop the charges on the cards for a while.Find them
and hide them or cut them up and send them back to the company.
Once you confrount her and share feelings about what is going on and
what is going to take place in the future you can use your judgement
on what's to happen next.
A posibillity that occured to me while writing this is maybe the
gambling or another habit has got her money tied up.
janet
|
888.28 | Interesting contrast... | CADSYS::BAY | J.A.S.P. | Wed Nov 01 1989 18:44 | 19 |
| Completely off the subject...
Its interesting to me that the person in this note observed a change in
behavior, and recieved dozens of suggestions to COMMUNICATE! To talk
to his wife and find out whats up. Very few people recommended to
"drop her" like a hot rock without finding out the real scoop.
But in an earlier note, a girl witnessed her boy friend's behavior
change to aloofness, and there were all kinds of responses to the
effect of "Hes a jerk like all men, forget about him".
Obviously, a marriage with children has a lot of extra considerations,
but why the big switch in attitudes? How come all relationships
aren't worth some fact-finding before the action-taking?
Jim
(should this be a seperate note?)
|
888.29 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | the urge to splurge | Wed Nov 01 1989 18:57 | 23 |
|
uhm, jim...
> Its interesting to me that the person in this note observed a change in
> behavior, and recieved dozens of suggestions to COMMUNICATE! To talk
> to his wife and find out whats up. Very few people recommended to
> "drop her" like a hot rock without finding out the real scoop.
I see most people in this string being just as
awful.....hiring a private investigator, THEN confronting
her is what seems to be the going thing in here, and I find
that to be awful.
Surely if you marry someone, you have enough faith in them to
be able to sit down and discuss it with them.
I agree totally with you....quite a few people seem to be
negative as of late.
kath
|
888.30 | When men do it...... | HEFTY::RIVARDB | | Wed Nov 01 1989 21:29 | 26 |
| Yes, it's sad but true. When a guy cheats, it's "dump him, he's no
good." When a woman does, it's "talk to her, find out what's wrong."
As I mentioned in .0 he has tried to talk to her, to no avail. It's
true he hasn't asked her "are you cheating on me?". Possibly because
he's not ready for the answer she may give him. Like "yes I am.
So what?" Tomorrow he will have a chance to read all your replies
(*very* good advice, too. I knew I came to the right place!) and
decide what to do.
It's true he has his faults, but nothing that I would consider CHEATING
on someone for. Like he said to me "can't she talk to *me*?" This
is the woman he has trusted, loved and been faithful to for 7+ years.
Thanx for the advice so far and PLEASE continue.
b.r.
|
888.31 | | VALKYR::RUST | | Thu Nov 02 1989 09:50 | 17 |
| Re the "cheating" double-standard: I hope people haven't really been
saying that. My view (and what I thought I'd seen in the latest round
of Dear-Noters) is: if a spouse/long-term partner cheats, talk to
him/her; if a new interest cheats, drop him/her. Or, to blur the line
a bit - if the "cheatee" has, or wants to have, a close, relatively
long-term relationship with the cheater, then try and open
communication. But if there isn't anything else in the relationship
that's worth fighting for, cut your losses. (This is wildly simplistic,
of course; there are too many possible circumstances for any
cut-and-dried advice.)
Sadly enough, sometimes it seems that people are more willing to raise
the subject when the relationship is new; perhaps, as .30 suggests,
people in long-term relationships feel they have more to lose if their
fears are realized, so they're more reluctant to press the point.
-b
|
888.32 | it isn't very pretty anyway... | WITNES::WEBB | | Thu Nov 02 1989 21:46 | 35 |
| re .17 & .29
The base note said that he tried to talk to her and was rebuffed.
While hiring a private investigator may appear to be "sneaky and
underhanded," the behavior he suspects her of doing is sneaky and
underhanded. Given how easily divorces get really nasty these days,
hiring a P.I. seems a sensible precaution just to preserve his rights
and protect himself. If she is cheating, he will have the facts to
support his case, and if she is not and is involved in something more
damaging, maybe he will be able to get her helped. And if she is not,
and is doing nothing of consequence, he will at least be able to have
some peace of mind about it, which will help him be able to approach
her and work on the fairly obvious issues.
It is unfortunate that people have to think about protecting themselves
in situations like this. It would be so much nicer if we could count
on the one's we love having been truthful, open, and trustworthy; but
so often it is those people who turn out to be shockingly viscious and
vindictive when it comes time to part. Without hard evidence about
behavior that will stand up in court, he could get 1) cheated on, 2)
deprived of the right to have a part in his children's upbringing, and
3) cleaned out financially.
Sorry... but there's a lot about relationships that ain't very
romantic.
BTW, Oprah had a show with P.I.'s recently, and they all said that
much more often than not the same husband or wife ended up calling them
back for repeat business after the straying spouse had promised to
never do it again.
Would I want to do this... never... would I do it... in a minute if I
were in this guy's situation.
R.
|
888.33 | basic problem solving skills... | CSC32::R_MCBRIDE | Rockies Horror Show... | Fri Nov 03 1989 14:39 | 5 |
| Wouldn't it be terrible if the lady had a gambling problem or
something? What if there was some other nefarious activity she was
involved in? Suppose she isn't cheating. The first rule of problem
solving: "find out what the problem is!" After that comes the "Decide
what to do about it."
|
888.34 | Are You Sure? | HENRYY::HASLAM_BA | Creativity Unlimited | Fri Nov 03 1989 15:46 | 13 |
| After reading all the replies then re-reading the basenote, I would
lean more toward a drug problem than a boyfriend. The "boyfriend"
her child saw could very well be a dealer. It seems unlikely that
money would disappear to the degree that it sounds like it's doing
if something like cocaine, crack or some other drug wasn't involved.
Also the sudden change of attitude and being very closed seems odd.
I would think that if she is seeing someone else, she would somehow
try to make it up to her husband by being nicer than usual rather
than colder because she felt guilty.
Whatever happens, I wish her family the best.
Barb
|
888.35 | UPDATE | SA1794::RIVARDB | | Fri Nov 03 1989 20:41 | 47 |
| Re:.0
Well, there is another developement in the situation. Bill found
a note, apparently from his wife to her boss. In it she mentioned
an incident between the two of them concerning sex. It was brief
but explicit. She also mentioned her review and a raise and hinted
at buying something. (For him?) The thought crossed my mind that
maybe she is just trying to make Bill jealous. Possibly she thinks
he doesn't spend enough time with her. But would someone do that
just to get more attention? It seems kind of drastic to me.
Tomorrow is his birthday so he'll find out if she's been taking
the money for that. And he also told me that her boss picked her
up one night last week to take her to work. On the way they were
supposed to pick up dinner for one of the other girls. An hour and
a half later the girl called the house looking for Kathy and said
she wasn't at work yet. A few minutes later Kathy called Bill and
told him she was at work, but he says it sounded like a pay phone
somewhere outside. I think he should have hung up and called where
she works, but he didn't. Maybe he's in a stage where the fear of
knowing the truth is greater than the anxiety of not knowing. Hope-
fully he'll get over this soon. He's still trying to talk to her,
but he hasn't come right out and asked her if she's screwing around.
He is considering all the advice he's gotten here and trying to
decide what to do.
b.r.
|
888.37 | | DODO::AMARTIN | Freddy Krueger reincarnated | Sat Nov 04 1989 19:35 | 8 |
| She may be one cruel woman then Mike...
It wouldnt be the first time that SOMEONE has done this...
correct?
I tend to think that it is not, and that she is indeed having an affair
but that seems to be the thing NOT to say so I wont.
:-)
|
888.38 | Could she be squirreling it away? | POGO::REINBOLD | | Mon Nov 06 1989 19:01 | 2 |
| As far as where the money is going, she might be socking it away with
the intention of leaving when she gets enough money.
|
888.39 | with or without her | SA1794::CHARBONND | It's a hardship post | Tue Nov 07 1989 08:11 | 7 |
| This guy needs to talk to a lawyer and a marriage counselor,
right away. The trust is already gone. The MC is in case
the trust can be rebuilt, the lawyer in case it can't.
Dana
PS don't let the MC dissuade him from seeing the lawyer.
|
888.40 | She probably is.. | JULIET::BOGLE_AN | | Wed Nov 22 1989 17:08 | 32 |
| Your friend is definitely in trouble. If everything you have posted
is absolute truth and not his imagination, I believe she is having
an affair. If it is her boss, he may be married also.
A theory: Her boss is promising to divorce his wife so they can
be together. She won't tell Bill the truth in case the boss
is full of it, she will have him to fall back on.
Who knows where the money is going. The fact remains, his wife
is either spending it or stashing it. She obviously does not care
about her marriage. Regardless of her excuses or what her side
of the story is, nothing justifies an affair. If you don't want
to be married, then don't be married. I agree with the others,
I would rather be told the truth and have to deal with it, than
be cheated on. Furthermore, Bill will never be able to trust her
again. Even if she says she won't, he is only human. Everywhere
she goes, he will have that knowledge in the back of his mind.
It will never go away.
It sounds too far gone to me. He best be taking notes, hiring a
private investigator, and fancy footing the accounts and charge
cards. It's funny, the one who is most innocent, often ends up
with the short end of the stick. Tell him to protect himself now.
Forget the lawyers unless she tries to take him to the cleaners.
If it all comes out in the open soon, maybe they can work out a
viable settlement with properties and custody. If you get lawyers
involved, they will both end up with much, much, less. Some lawyers
like to drag things out and stir up things. They might even plant
seeds in his wife's head of ways to make things worse. Believe
it! It really happens.
Most important, tell him to TAKE NOTES: DATES, TIMES, EVENTS!!!!!!
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