I (46f) need a reality check dealing with husband (46m) in regards to texting my ex husbands new wife (43f).

Keeping things civil with an ex is hard enough, especially when there is a long history and shared children involved. For one woman, that line was clearly drawn years ago. She could be polite, she could be respectful, but friendship was never on the table. That boundary felt reasonable, firm, and necessary for her own peace.

Everything changed when her current husband decided to take matters into his own hands. What he framed as an attempt to smooth things over for their son’s upcoming wedding quickly turned into secret messages, compliments, and private conversations she was never meant to see. Once screenshots surfaced, the situation exploded across social media, with readers reacting strongly. Some focused on betrayal, others on manipulation, and many questioned how trust can survive when lines are crossed so quietly yet so completely.

I (46f) need a reality check dealing with husband (46m) in regards to texting my ex husbands new wife (43f).

The situation is rooted in a long and complicated past that still affects the present

My ex-husband (46M) and I divorced 9 years ago because of his infidelity, alcohol issues, and some domestic violence. We were married for 18 years and have three kids together....

Upcoming family milestones brought old tensions back into focus

Our oldest son is getting married next year. My current husband suggested we try to be more amicable for the sake of our kids and future family events.

I explained clearly that I would be civil and respectful, but I would *never* be friendly with my ex or his wife. Without telling me, my husband decided to message...

Yesterday morning, my ex called me and said my husband and his wife had been texting inappropriately. He sent me screenshots of messages that hadn’t been deleted.

What she saw left her stunned and questioning everything

In them, my husband was complaining about me and telling her she was pretty. She sent him photos. I didn’t see any explicit pictures from my husband, but my ex...

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The emotional impact hit harder than the messages themselves

I’m completely shaken. I feel betrayed, humiliated, and honestly questioning my own judgment. Right now, I feel like I keep choosing the wrong partners and somehow end up being blamed...

I don’t even know what to think, let alone what to do next. Do I try to process this? Confront my husband? Walk away? I could really use some outside...

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This situation centers on trust, consent, and boundaries that were clearly stated and then ignored. The poster communicated exactly what she was comfortable with, which was basic civility and nothing more. When her husband chose to reach out privately, especially without telling her, he removed her agency from a deeply personal family dynamic. That alone is enough to shake the foundation of a marriage.

From another angle, some partners convince themselves they are helping when they are actually avoiding discomfort. Acting as a “peacekeeper” can feel noble on the surface, but it becomes harmful when it crosses into secrecy or emotional intimacy with someone who represents past trauma. Complaining about a spouse and offering compliments to another person is rarely accidental. It is a choice that opens doors most marriages cannot afford to leave unlocked.

Dr. John Gottman, co-founder of The Gottman Institute, has spoken often about betrayal beginning long before physical acts. He explains, “Betrayal is about breaking trust, and trust is built in very small moments.” Private conversations, hidden messages, and emotional alignment with someone outside the marriage all chip away at that trust quickly. Practical next steps depend on what the poster wants and what she can tolerate.

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A direct confrontation focused on facts rather than emotions can clarify whether her husband understands the harm caused. Couples counseling may help uncover why he felt entitled to cross a boundary that was never ambiguous. At the same time, individual therapy can support her in separating his actions from her self-worth. No one causes another person to behave this way. Whatever decision she makes, prioritizing emotional safety and stability, especially with a major family event approaching, is not only reasonable, it is necessary.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Many users immediately sided with the poster, calling the behavior a clear betrayal

PepperJacs − You divorce your husband and take a breath. You are not the one at fault, you are the victim here. You might want to try some therapy

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if you truly think it’s a pattern of picking people who do not treat you with the respect you deserve. Start the new year by getting rid of last years...

FairyCompetent − Of course you leave your current husband, but don't blame yourself.

DocTymc − He is a f. ..ing scumbag! Get rid of his ass, no matter how he tries to wriggle his way ou of this!

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Key-Airline204 − Even if there wasn’t a d__k pic, your husband was certainly breaking boundaries and telling her she’s pretty and complaining about you.

And certainly with a person with no connection to you that would be enough to walk away but the fact that he did it with this woman is particularly awful.

pepcorn − You didn't do anything wrong. Your ex and your current husband are both awful. Divorce this one too.

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Others focused on how calculated the situation felt

Dear_Parsnip_6802 − Even without the d__k pic how did he think bitching about you would mend bridges?

dart1126 − I love how he laid the groundwork for his sexting her as some sort of thing he’s doing to help your son for the wedding. That’s so gross.

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So, you said you asked him about it and he claims he ‘got too comfortable’…but he was building bridges…. oh honey he’s going to sell you quite a bridge soon.

REMreven − Wow did he manipulate that situation. You leave him, he's a manipulator.

captianjack60 − You soon to be ex wanted the families to be friendly so he could more easily interact with the wife. You said no, so he did an end...

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A few comments leaned blunt or darkly humorous while still supporting her

Life-Bullfrog-6344 − Divorce your husband. He was the AH and set inappropriate contact with her. Why he thought it was ok to try and be a peacekeeper and take things...

She likely was more than glad to egg her animosity towards you but he let her feed into it. He knew exactly what he was doing and never shut it...

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That would be a dealbreaker for me. Kick him out and just focus on your son's wedding. Yeah you've got terrible taste in husbands. I'm sorry.

Purpledoors3 − You seem to be comparing his awful behavior to your old husband's awful behavior. They're both awful. Stop talking to new husband about it.

You have two choices, choose to stay with this man who will be HATED by your children (you don't think old husband has told them yet? He will) and accept...

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This is not "trauma" or "out of character" behavior. .. This is him. Check his phone, I'm sure he's done this before. OR you can leave and start over by...

puddinandpi − Okay I’m sceptical and maybe it’s a reach…. . however, do you know for certain that the copies of the texts are legit? Is there a chance they’ve...

OrizaRayne − ? Your ex husband called you a rancid bish? No worries. His current wife will soon be a rancid bish too. He doesn't like women. All three of...

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Full stop. No nunnery. And the wedding isn't about their petty, immature s__t so don't allow them to make it be. My dad and his wife came to my wedding...

He told me several months later. I appreciated that they came and were cordial and behaved and were kind publicly to my mom. Anyone who can't do that needs to...

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Grouchy-Storm-6758 − Time to clean house (literally and figuratively). Not sure about the housing situation (who owns the house), but call up your attorney,

or look online your courthouse may have the needed documents online (less money). I picked two crappy husbands as well, 3rd is a gem and been together over 20 yrs.

Just getting rid of the current AH, then work on being ok with yourself. Do some traveling, some therapy, and enjoy your adult kids! Good luck.

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Comfortable-Ad-2223 − Whatever you decide just to start do not take this man to the wedding. That would be awkward. But if it was me i would divorce for sure.

This story resonated because it highlights how quickly trust can collapse when boundaries are ignored. What was framed as helping the family instead exposed secrecy and misplaced intimacy. The poster’s pain is understandable, especially given her history and the timing of her son’s wedding.

Whether she chooses confrontation, counseling, or walking away, the decision deserves clarity and support, not guilt. Situations like this force hard questions about respect and accountability. What would you do if the person meant to protect your boundaries was the one who crossed them?

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