Wife Up In Arms Over Hubby’s Secret Lunch Dates With Tearful Female Coworker, She Demands It Stop
Interview With ExpertThey say marriage is built on trust, but nothing rocks the trust boat quite like a mysterious new work bestie with tearful “I miss you” confessions. While work friendships are great, when lunch meetups turn sneaky and boundaries get blurry, it’s hard not to wonder where friendship ends, and something murkier begins.
For one wife, her husband’s budding “bestie” situation with a new female coworker went from casual office banter to emotional confessions faster than you can say “red flags,” and she’s asking the internet for advice.
More info: Mumsnet
Work friendships are a bit like office plants; they can brighten your day, but if you’re not careful, they might start taking over the whole desk
Image credits: Ketut Subiyanto / Pexels (not the actual image)
One woman started asking herself if she was being unreasonable after her husband formed a close relationship with a female colleague but said they were just friends
Image credits: Lovetoread2024
Image credits: Mikhail Nilov / Pexels (not the actual image)
The husband and his colleague started having one-on-one lunches outside the office every day, and he even offered her emotional support
Image credits: Lovetoread2024
Image credits: Racool_studio / Pexels (not the actual image)
The woman got suspicious when her husband let her know his colleague told him she missed him after he changed teams
Image credits: Lovetoread2024
The woman told her husband she didn’t want him going on “dates” with his colleague anymore, but they could hang out as a group with the rest of the team
Our protagonist has been happily married to her husband for 10 years, and they’ve built a beautiful life with their 6-year-old daughter. Everything seemed peachy until a new female colleague joined the husband’s workplace about a year ago. Apparently, they bonded over having kids of similar ages, a pretty innocent connection that’s as relatable as swapping diaper horror stories at daycare drop-off.
At first, it was all above board: casual texts and work chats, nothing shady. But then, things started to enter “hmm, that’s odd…” territory when hubby switched teams at work. His new bestie got all teary-eyed during a catch-up and confessed she missed him. I don’t know about you, but I think I might be spotting some red flags here. And so did our OP (original poster).
The husband assured his wife he was just being a good friend, and nothing more. But when she discovered they’d been sneaking off for one-on-one lunches out of the office, eyebrows were raised, and she became suspicious.
When confronted, her husband pulled the classic, “I didn’t tell you because I knew how you’d react!” defense. He claimed he was offering emotional support because the coworker was going through a rough patch. But his wife wasn’t buying it. If it’s no big deal, why keep it a secret?
So, our storyteller put her foot down: no more one-on-one lunch dates or tear-filled strolls down Emotional Lane. She’s fine with them catching up in groups but feels these private meetups are teetering on dangerous territory.
Her husband insists they’re “just friends,” and since they’re both married with kids, nothing would ever happen. But let’s face it, “we’re married” isn’t exactly an impenetrable force field against questionable choices, now is it?
You know, emotional affairs don’t always start with intentions to cheat—they just creep in disguised by innocent connections. Add some secret lunches and a sprinkle of secrecy, and suddenly you’ve got a recipe for trouble.
Image credits: Diva Plavalaguna / Pexels (not the actual image)
Emotional infidelity often sneaks in quietly, making it tricky to spot until it’s already causing damage. It’s not about a single act but a gradual shift of emotional closeness from a partner to someone else. To find out more on this topic, I interviewed Dr. Jane Greer, a marriage and family therapist and author of the book Am I Lying To Myself? How To Overcome Denial and See the Truth, for some comments.
She told Bored Panda that emotional infidelity happens when someone forms a deep, personal connection with someone outside their romantic relationship, eroding trust and commitment. While it may begin as a harmless friendship, it evolves into something more emotionally intense.
We asked Dr. Greer what some common signs that a friendship might be crossing the line into emotional infidelity are. She told us that a friendship starts to cross into emotional infidelity when it begins taking precedence over your relationship. If you’re spending more time talking to this friend than with your partner, or you start confiding personal thoughts and feelings to your friend rather than your partner, it can be a sign of trouble.
“Secrecy is another red flag—if you’re hiding the depth of the connection or downplaying it to avoid concerns, that often suggests you know it’s crossing a boundary. Unaddressed physical attraction can further complicate the situation, making it feel less like a friendship and more like something deeper,” Dr. Greer explained.
We wanted to know how someone can differentiate between their own insecurities and legitimate concerns about a partner’s emotional connection with someone else. Dr. Greer explained that to tell the difference between insecurities and legitimate concerns, it’s important to reflect on the relationship and your feelings.
Ask yourself whether your partner is emotionally present and engaged. Are they prioritizing your time together, or is their focus elsewhere? If they share more with someone else than with you, that may be a sign worth discussing.
We also asked Dr. Greer if emotional infidelity is just as damaging as physical infidelity. She told us that “Emotional infidelity can be just as damaging as physical infidelity because both break trust and challenge the foundation of the relationship. Sharing deep emotional connections or intimate details with someone outside the relationship can leave a partner feeling excluded and betrayed.”
Don’t get me wrong, genuine friendships are incredibly valuable. However, there’s a big difference between friendship and romance. So, does this mean men and women can’t truly be “just friends”? That’s an age-old debate with no clear answer—it’s more of a “maybe, maybe not” situation.
Many people have purely platonic friendships, but when one person starts to take priority over a romantic partner, it can raise eyebrows. If your significant other begins to feel like they’re being sidelined, it might suggest there’s more than simple “friendship” happening.
For those critics who are ready to type, “Well, obviously, this was bound to happen,” hold your horses—it’s not always that easy to spot when you’re in the middle of it. Research has looked into scenarios similar to what our protagonist experienced. Interestingly, women are more likely to believe that men and women can maintain a platonic relationship.
Men, on the other hand, often struggle with completely ruling out the potential for something more, and this difference in perspective often complicates friendships between men and women. Although both genders acknowledge that attraction in a friendship can create issues, men are less likely to see it as a negative compared to women.
So, what do you think? Is the wife being overly jealous, or is her husband’s “friendly lunches” story just a little too convenient? Drop your comments below!
Netizens are divided on this one, with some saying the woman is just being jealous, while others think the man and his colleague are having an emotional affair
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I like the comment that OP should suggest a double date with the woman and her husband. Their reactions should tell her everything she needs to know.
Yes, I picked up on that one too - I wonder how much the other husband knows, or if work-wife has been keeping it secret o at least underplaying it to him as well?
Load More Replies...It's a dangerous game this guy is playing. They could easily blow up their marriages and jobs.
If I were OP, I'd show up for lunch with them. :) No warning, just show up at lunch time.
I dunno. I have had lots of female co-worker friends over the years and am still friends with them, My wife knows them and knows that we sometimes get together to talk about... life. What I'm curious about and what might determine if they are having an emotional affair is this- is she going through a rough time with work stuff or with her marriage? If it is just work, then that is innocent but if it is problems at home, that *might* be an issue but not necessarily. I think that I may be an outlier but it is because I a a guy with lots of female friends and am happily maried.
The moment she found out that the colleague cried because she misses him would have been it for me. The woman is definitely invested in this relationship and his actions show that he is happy to continue even knowing that his wife wouldn't approve. I think the wife saying that they shouldn't be having one on one lunches/ walks together is fair. They can meet up for group lunches or even in the cafeteria if there is one. This is a work relationship after all.
I think the issue is him knowing how she will react to the truth and deciding that not telling her is the correct thing to do. He is her husband. He knows his wife will dislike his actions and yet he decided in order to do something she dislikes, he goes behind her back and does it anyway. Does he not respect and trust his wife enough to communicate and understand why she wouldn't appreciate him doing what he has done? This is a huge red flag in my opinion.
Do you know where your spouse is every second of the day? do you know all their friends and colleagues from work , if people are that delusional just plant a body cam and force the partner to keep it on 24 /7
Load More Replies...I used to go out of the office for lunch with a female colleague, even for a while after she left the company, just to keep in touch; I went out for lunchtime walks around London with other female colleagues. All of it was perfectly innocent - just an excuse to get some fresh air without letting a female walk around on her own. It is perfectly possible to have friends - even attractive, young friends - without anything happening. That doesn't mean it isn't - but it doesn't mean it is. It depends how much trust and insecurity there is in the relationship.
But did you keep it secret tho... That is the problem. That is what is causing the issue between the husband and wife. and i am with the wife here.
Load More Replies..."We are both married with kids so we couldn't possibly have an affair." Because of course affairs only happen when one of the two has a spouse, and neither have kids. If I rolled my eyes any harder at that I'd be staring out the back of my head.
Many years ago I had similar situation. We had someone we hired to pet sit occasionally, and we became friends but she and husband had more in common. They became good friends, but I felt like she relied on him to much to help her. Fast forward, and I'm finding out she's been to our house alone with him while I'm out of town, and he never told me. Fast forward again, and he leaves me at a concert to help her during an emergency (it wasn't an emergency). I insisted he cut her out of our lives, and it took years for us to recover (and still a touchy subject). There was no affair, I am certain. But emotional affairs happen and develop over time...and this reads like at least one of them is too emotionally invested with someone else's husband!
Either the husband is hopelessly naive, or he's being less than honest about his relationship with the colleague. This is precisely how affairs start--with one-on-one interactions, followed by secrecy. It hasn't occurred to him how he would feel about his wife meeting a male colleague for lunch and "nature walks." He minimalized not only the seriousness of the situation, but his wife's feelings as well. If he doesn't rein himself in and soon, it could mean the end of his marriage.
I'd tell him, "Okay, then I'll start "dating" too." and start discussing my thoughts for guys at work I could cozy up with. LOL!!
"We generally have a good relationship." This is statement is not really what I would use to describe a healthy, happy relationship. I mean "generally"? I would suggest marriage counseling. Yes, it sounds like he's having an emotional affair, if not, by now, a physical one as well, but it also sounds like this is not the only problem in the relationship. I suspect that there is a lot more "generally" going on than "good" in this relationship.
What is an emotional affair? More made up nonsense? Another term could be “ close friendship “
Maybe this will help clear up the confusion: https://www.guystuffcounseling.com/counseling-men-blog/the-difference-between-emotional-cheating-vs.-friendship-where-is-the-line
Load More Replies...I like the comment that OP should suggest a double date with the woman and her husband. Their reactions should tell her everything she needs to know.
Yes, I picked up on that one too - I wonder how much the other husband knows, or if work-wife has been keeping it secret o at least underplaying it to him as well?
Load More Replies...It's a dangerous game this guy is playing. They could easily blow up their marriages and jobs.
If I were OP, I'd show up for lunch with them. :) No warning, just show up at lunch time.
I dunno. I have had lots of female co-worker friends over the years and am still friends with them, My wife knows them and knows that we sometimes get together to talk about... life. What I'm curious about and what might determine if they are having an emotional affair is this- is she going through a rough time with work stuff or with her marriage? If it is just work, then that is innocent but if it is problems at home, that *might* be an issue but not necessarily. I think that I may be an outlier but it is because I a a guy with lots of female friends and am happily maried.
The moment she found out that the colleague cried because she misses him would have been it for me. The woman is definitely invested in this relationship and his actions show that he is happy to continue even knowing that his wife wouldn't approve. I think the wife saying that they shouldn't be having one on one lunches/ walks together is fair. They can meet up for group lunches or even in the cafeteria if there is one. This is a work relationship after all.
I think the issue is him knowing how she will react to the truth and deciding that not telling her is the correct thing to do. He is her husband. He knows his wife will dislike his actions and yet he decided in order to do something she dislikes, he goes behind her back and does it anyway. Does he not respect and trust his wife enough to communicate and understand why she wouldn't appreciate him doing what he has done? This is a huge red flag in my opinion.
Do you know where your spouse is every second of the day? do you know all their friends and colleagues from work , if people are that delusional just plant a body cam and force the partner to keep it on 24 /7
Load More Replies...I used to go out of the office for lunch with a female colleague, even for a while after she left the company, just to keep in touch; I went out for lunchtime walks around London with other female colleagues. All of it was perfectly innocent - just an excuse to get some fresh air without letting a female walk around on her own. It is perfectly possible to have friends - even attractive, young friends - without anything happening. That doesn't mean it isn't - but it doesn't mean it is. It depends how much trust and insecurity there is in the relationship.
But did you keep it secret tho... That is the problem. That is what is causing the issue between the husband and wife. and i am with the wife here.
Load More Replies..."We are both married with kids so we couldn't possibly have an affair." Because of course affairs only happen when one of the two has a spouse, and neither have kids. If I rolled my eyes any harder at that I'd be staring out the back of my head.
Many years ago I had similar situation. We had someone we hired to pet sit occasionally, and we became friends but she and husband had more in common. They became good friends, but I felt like she relied on him to much to help her. Fast forward, and I'm finding out she's been to our house alone with him while I'm out of town, and he never told me. Fast forward again, and he leaves me at a concert to help her during an emergency (it wasn't an emergency). I insisted he cut her out of our lives, and it took years for us to recover (and still a touchy subject). There was no affair, I am certain. But emotional affairs happen and develop over time...and this reads like at least one of them is too emotionally invested with someone else's husband!
Either the husband is hopelessly naive, or he's being less than honest about his relationship with the colleague. This is precisely how affairs start--with one-on-one interactions, followed by secrecy. It hasn't occurred to him how he would feel about his wife meeting a male colleague for lunch and "nature walks." He minimalized not only the seriousness of the situation, but his wife's feelings as well. If he doesn't rein himself in and soon, it could mean the end of his marriage.
I'd tell him, "Okay, then I'll start "dating" too." and start discussing my thoughts for guys at work I could cozy up with. LOL!!
"We generally have a good relationship." This is statement is not really what I would use to describe a healthy, happy relationship. I mean "generally"? I would suggest marriage counseling. Yes, it sounds like he's having an emotional affair, if not, by now, a physical one as well, but it also sounds like this is not the only problem in the relationship. I suspect that there is a lot more "generally" going on than "good" in this relationship.
What is an emotional affair? More made up nonsense? Another term could be “ close friendship “
Maybe this will help clear up the confusion: https://www.guystuffcounseling.com/counseling-men-blog/the-difference-between-emotional-cheating-vs.-friendship-where-is-the-line
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