My husband (M30) asked his “work crush” for a date while I (F24) was visiting my father in palliative care. How to deal with it now?

A husband asked his “work crush” out on a date the very day his wife left to be with her dying father in another country. The betrayal unfolded while she was grieving, turning a moment of vulnerability into one of deep hurt. She discovered the messages by checking his phone three weeks ago, and despite his tears and apologies, forgiveness remains out of reach.

What makes the story more complicated is the couple’s prior openness about attractions—yet crossing into action shattered that trust. The wife, only 24, canceled planned holidays and withdrew from shared activities, unsure how to move forward without ending the marriage. His remorse feels genuine to him, but to her, it rings hollow against the timing of his choice.

‘My husband (M30) asked his “work crush” for a date while I (F24) was visiting my father in palliative care. How to deal with it now?’

The poster’s crisis began with an emergency trip abroad to her father’s bedside as lung cancer claimed him.

It's been almost 3 weeks. I was stalking his (M30) phone (I know it's wrong...) when I read a very short convo he had with a girl he already talked...

he told me she was very flirty with him and he was receptive to this little flirt. I was ok with that, I think it's totally ok to have attraction...

Grief compounded the betrayal when the husband joined her only after pursuing the coworker.

A few days after he told me that, I had to go in emergency to see my father who was litteraly dying (he had lung cancer) in another country. My...

Suspicion led to confrontation, revealing the date request made the day she left.

The same week, I had some suspicions and decided to look in his phone (he seemed a bit upsed and touchy for no apparent reason). This is how I knew...

He also reacted to her story (he usually never click on stories). The girl said she wasn't, she had a boyfriend... Anyway, I talked to my husband right after this...

We had holidays programmed together but I canceled them. I don't want to go out or do anything with him. I feel betrayed and hurt.. I know I don't want...

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Betrayal during grief strikes at the core of marital vows, exposing a partner’s priorities in the worst moment. The husband admitted a “work crush” and flirted openly, which the wife tolerated as harmless—until he acted on it the instant she left for her dying father’s side. His tears upon confrontation suggest regret, but the timing reveals opportunism: pursuing another woman while his wife faced loss alone in another country. This isn’t mere attraction; it’s a deliberate choice to prioritize fleeting desire over support.

Opposing views might frame it as a lapse in judgment, not full infidelity, since the coworker rejected him and no date occurred. Some could argue his receptiveness to flirtation was mutual play, and crying shows accountability. Yet this ignores the power imbalance in grief—his wife needed him most, but he sought excitement elsewhere. Broader society often normalizes “crushes” in relationships, viewing them as inevitable sparks that keep things alive, but experts warn that feeding them erodes commitment.

Relationship therapist Esther Perel notes in her book Mating in Captivity, “Infidelity is not about the other person; it’s about what is missing in the relationship or within oneself.” Here, the husband’s actions highlight a void in empathy during crisis, urging couples to rebuild through concrete steps like therapy and transparency, though trust once broken rarely fully mends without ongoing proof of change.

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Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

Many users rally behind the poster, urging her to prioritize self-respect over reconciliation.

[Reddit User] − He asked out his “work crush” while you went to visit your dying father. I’d hate to see what he would do if you were diagnosed with...

Cultural_Shape3518 − What has he done to fix the situation besides cry? Is he in therapy? Has he cut off the woman at work? Is he looking for a new...

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sanguinare12 − Anyway, I talked to my husband right after this "discovery", he was very sorry, and still is, he cried of guilt. Whenever someone cries at being confronted for...

This doesn't feel any different. It makes a decent show for those who believe it, and the good actors are almost convincing at times, but thinking better of those actions...

If someone is really sobbing for remorse, how does that only occur when one is confronted? Feelings of guilt which only spring up when being called out don't really feel...

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Restomeri − Deplorable behavior. Deal with it by choosing yourself. You really don't have to accept this transgression.

Dark_Skin_Keisha − He tried to cheat on your while your father is dying. There’s better men out there. Considering the age gap… my may not know that but there are...

Some commenters offer nuance, acknowledging remorse while validating the hurt on both sides.

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super_bluecat − Everyone gets little crushes and attractions. But it's entirely his choice to keep feeding that and giving it life instead of realizing what he is doing is wrong.

Blonde2468 − Never forget - he wasn't sorry until he was caught! ! He asked someone for a DATE while married. I couldn't come back from that.

mamachonk − It sounds like you didn't entirely trust him already. And now he's given you a very solid reason not to. He jumped at the chance to cheat on...

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If you think you're able to get past this and trust him again, sure, give it a try. I'm not sure I would but some people do. But ask yourself...

A few lighten the mood with wry observations, reminding everyone not every betrayal needs a dramatic end.

purpleroller − You feel betrayed because that’s what he has done. Husbands are not supposed to ask other women out on dates. Even if you do discuss ‘crushes’ on other...

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No way of staying with a man who sees an opportunity to cheat the minute you are away. And if she fancied him back, then he would have gone on...

No amount of crocodile tears would make up for it (Also why was he crying? Because he got caught? Because she rejected him? I doubt it was guilt). I don’t...

You deserve better. Take some time away from him. Gather your thoughts. See a divorce lawyer without him knowing. Get one step ahead. I’m sorry for the loss of your...

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Willing_Board_293 − Divorce is what you do. He is a cheat and a liar. I bet if you pressed further there is more women

The poster’s husband crossed a line from fantasy to action at her lowest point, leaving her grappling with betrayal amid fresh grief over her father’s death. His apologies and tears haven’t bridged the gap, prompting canceled plans and emotional distance, though she hesitates to end the marriage entirely.

Have you experienced a partner’s poor timing during a family crisis, and how did it affect trust long-term? What specific actions beyond apologies would convince you remorse is real in a similar situation?

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