San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

In the middle of affair among friends

- By Jeanne Phillips

Dear Abby: I have two friends I am equally close to, “Jane” and “Mary.” We live in the same neighborho­od. They are both married and spend time together almost every day. I spend a lot of time with both families, and my children play with theirs. Jane is having an affair with Mary’s husband and has confided in me about every detail. She keeps telling me it’s over, and then I find out it isn’t. I spoke to Mary’s husband and told him if it doesn’t stop, I’ll tell Mary. ( Jane doesn’t know I talked to him.) They recently had another “weak moment.” Should I tell Mary what’s going on? Her husband has cheated in the past, and she chose to stay with him. I’m afraid the fallout from her finding out will be two broken marriages and several broken friendship­s. I feel like my silence is betraying Mary. Help!

Wish I Didn’t Know Dear Wish: You are already more involved in this than you should be, and Jane should not have placed you in that position. Mary knows she has a philanderi­ng husband but chose to remain with him. I say keep your lip zipped and try to stay out of the line of fire.

Dear Abby: My husband and I have been married for 38 years. We divorced once, but remarried. We have four grown sons and six grandchild­ren. He retired a year and a half ago, and I went through menopause. There has been constant contention since. He wants to fight over everything and won’t speak to me for days, sometimes weeks, at a time. I feel I am being emotionall­y abused. When I asked him for another divorce, he told me not to be ridiculous. Four months ago, I moved out and moved in with my dad to be his caretaker. Dad is 95 and on home hospice. I am so much happier not living with my husband. When my father passes away, I dread having to move back with my husband. I know we probably need counseling, but he doesn’t agree. I want to live a happy, peaceful life. My husband seems to enjoy the constant fighting. Should I get my own place and live apart from my husband when my dad passes?

Unhappily Married in Utah Dear Unhappily Married: Your husband’s silent treatment qualifies as emotional abuse. You do not have to tolerate it. Before making plans about where you will live after your father’s passing, discuss this with a lawyer. Marriage isn’t slavery, and you do not need your abuser’s “permission” to divorce him (again).

Write to Dear Abby at P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or www.DearAbby.com.

Universal Press Syndicate

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