Facebook romance worries wife
DEAR AMY >> My husband “Ben” and I have been married for more than 30 years. He and I are both in our 60’s.
He has been messaging a 35-year-old very attractive and single female that he became friends with over Facebook. To the best of my knowledge, they have never met in person.
I have surreptitiously checked his phone and have seen that these messages have become increasingly lengthy and personal and have included several pictures of themselves. Granted, none of these are X-rated, but one of my concerns is that the intensity of this online relationship has grown quite exponentially in a very short time and could very well lead to actual X-rated.
What would someone my husband’s age really expect to get out of such a relationship, and what is driving this woman to pursue a relationship with someone old enough to be her father?
I am not sure what to do because I really cannot confront my husband regarding this as I know it will only end up in a massive argument with denials on his part about it being anything but innocent. Your take?
— Alarmed wife
DEAR ALARMED >> You seem to draw the line at “X-rated” messages, and yet if sexual messages are passed back and forth in this completely virtual relationship, what difference would their rating make? I’m suggesting that the relationship is already happening, that it is already interfering in your marriage, that you don’t trust your husband, and you are surveilling him in secret.
Some people seek online romantic relationships because they want that thrilling, “You’ve got mail” rush. Your longmarried husband might be seeking emotional connection and a feeling of fantasy and romance with a woman who would not glance at him twice in real life.
A woman half his age might engage in this online relationship because she is looking for the same thing. Or something else altogether. In fact, your husband might be getting “catfished” by a stranger. His correspondent might not be 35, and might not be a woman. “Catfish” reel people in using fake identities and photos. After establishing an emotional connection, they will then sometimes move in for more — emotionally and financially.
This relationship is affecting your marriage in a fundamental way. I hope you can find a way to discuss it.
DEAR AMY >> “Tired” asked how to tell guests it was time to leave. My goto answer stems from a black-tie dinner my wife gave me for my 70th birthday at our home.
My way to get friends to finally end the night (well after midnight) was to go upstairs, shuck my tuxedo jacket, and come down wearing my bathrobe.
It was funny then and it remains a memory that friends still invoke.
— Al in VA
DEAR AL >> I’m definitely going to use this. Thank you!