Husband Acts Suspiciously After Coming Back From Work Trip, Wife Goes Through His Search History
Interview With ExpertJealousy is a normal human emotion. But it might sometimes drive people to do crazy and inappropriate things. Like going through your partner’s phone or their search history. The statistics on this are pretty surprising: 51% of people in relationships claim they have checked their partner’s messages without them knowing.
This woman checked her husband’s iPad search history and found something suspicious. She then went to the Internet to ask for advice: is it really as bad as she thinks? And what should she do if her suspicions might actually come true?
To know more about privacy in relationships and how to deal with jealousy and suspicion, Bored Panda reached out to couples therapist Judith Aronowitz, RN, LCSW. She kindly agreed to share her expert insights about building trust and respect to foster connection and intimacy. Read her comments below!
Going through a partner’s phone might seem like a violation of privacy for some couples
Image credits: Chris Lynch / unsplash (not the actual photo)
But this woman felt justified, as she thought her husband might be cheating
Image credits: Priscilla Du Preez / unsplash (not the actual photo)
Image credits: Michael Heise / unsplash (not the actual photo)
Image credits: Picklingpickles
Every relationship is different, so definitions of ‘privacy’ differ from couple to couple
There isn’t one exclusive recipe for a healthy relationship. To some people, a complete lack of boundaries and shared passcodes signify absolute trust. To others, privacy and a partner not sharing their phone might be totally normal.
Judith Aronowitz, RN, LCSW, says that healthy relationships involve boundaries and trust. “There can be a place for privacy in a relationship. This doesn’t mean that a partner is up to no good. Trust and intimacy [aren’t] created by free access to someone’s phone.”
The couples therapist says being totally transparent with phones and passcodes makes sense when both partners are on board. “Many couples will generally want more privacy, and this is not indicative of cheating or unscrupulous behavior.”
“Having independence outside of your relationship is very healthy,” she adds. “When there is trust built up and safety, outside connections will not feel threatening. Couples need to exist separately without losing the ‘we’ in the relationship.”
Image credits: Cody Portraits / unsplash (not the actual photo)
The problem is usually not about the contents of said phone or iPad but an underlying trust issue
When a partner wants access to another’s phone, iPad, computer, etc., the couple needs to have a discussion. Aronowitz says there’s often an underlying issue that’s not about wanting to see the actual contents of the device.
“Are you open and honest with each other? Are problems discussed? Are problems left unresolved avoided? Are you avoiding important conversations? [Are you] snooping on someone’s phone instead of having a difficult conversation?”
“If you’re feeling worried or suspicious about something, can you have a conversation? Can you openly share your concerns? Are your needs being met? Understanding why you would need to look at someone’s phone is important,” the couples therapist believes.
Image credits: Budgeron Bach / unsplash (not the actual photo)
People become jealous when they’re afraid of losing someone
Aronowitz says that being jealous is a natural emotion and that many people feel it. “We often struggle with insecurity,” she says. “It usually comes up in [a] relationship when someone is feeling insecure or threatened.”
“Often, feeling jealous is a response to a fear of losing someone. The important thing is to be able to process it together as a couple. The goal is to understand where it might be coming from and grow together from the experience. Couples can then agree on boundaries to build trust and protect the relationship.”
The couples therapist says that jealousy isn’t always bad. It can actually help couples strengthen their relationship and help them grow. “It can increase self-awareness and develop a deeper understanding between two people,” Aronowitz says. “Couples can be more reflective and look at their reactions and behaviors. This work can bond a couple together.”
However, snooping around your partner’s phone and spying is hardly ever appropriate. According to Aronowitz, it signals an issue with communication and trust. “Partners can reflect on why they are feeling jealous and where is it coming from. It’s important to understand why one would want to snoop. Is this coming from a place of insecurity? A childhood wound? Are boundaries being violated?”
Image credits: SevenStorm JUHASZIMRUS / unsplash (not the actual photo)
There are healthy ways to deal with feelings of jealousy and suspicion
Relationships therapist Judith Aronowitz gives us some questions people should ask themselves to deal with jealousy in a healthy way.
Can you focus on your self-worth? Do you notice your positive qualities? Are you in touch with deserving a certain type of relationship? Do you respect yourself? Do any of these areas need work?
Have you identified your needs in the relationship? Have you communicated your needs? Do you feel seen, heard, and respected? Do you fear losing something you don’t deserve?
Regulate your emotions. Can you be self-reflective? Am I feeling insecure in my relationship? Why might I feel that way? Is it coming from a childhood wound? What is being triggered inside of you? Are there issues in the relationship that haven’t been addressed?
Can you discern if this is a ‘you’ issue or a ‘we’ issue?
Lastly, don’t be afraid to look into individual/couples therapy.
Many people agreed that the husband’s behavior was a red flag and that the wife should trust her gut
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Whatever is on the phone doesn't matter. He's distant, you don't trust him, you've been fighting and he's depressed. Those are enough current issues to address without looking for more. Sounds like the relationship isn't good. If you want to save it have a grown up conversation about how you feel and figur out what's going on with the distance. Don't accuse him of cheating until you at least figur out whats going on between you two, because if you can't talk about what's between you, there's no point in continuing. The relationship is over, if there's cheating or not.
And also don't be amazed if he decides to end the relationship if nothing actually happened.
Load More Replies...Ok. So maybe i missed something but this person went through their partners phone without permission. Thats a bit of a red flag there. And it doesnt seem like the OP is dropping the subject, which is probably causing tension too. Im not saying the OP is definitely wrong, but what i am saying is that they went looking for something with just an "i love you". I am in a very happy relationship and have said i love you to a bunch of friends in the last few days. Not in Arabic. Once in Japanese and another time in Mandarin. But that doesnt mean im cheating. It just means that my friends are awesome.
Exactly, I have several long time friends where we end a casual (phone) conversation with "bye love" / "love you mate" or "much love". Definitely doesn't have any romantic meaning but more a solid friendship thing...
Load More Replies...The lack of trust, warranted to whatever degree, is something really difficult to turn around or recover from.
Marriage counseling. Even if it doesn’t work out, can help prepare for divorce. Checking phones and other media though is just sh¥tty. If someone did that to me I’d dump her.
I'm really fascinated by the "never go through your partner's phone or you're automatically the bad guy" trend on Reddit. Um, what? People in relationships should be open with each other and access to each other's devices is part of that. Now, if that info is used to control a partner, then the problem is that person, not the fact they checked the phone, but it's easier to blame the phone thing than admit that the person is garbage.
Nah, spying on someone else's phone is an invasion of their privacy and an intrusion. I came home once to my gf (who had recently moved in) snooping through my personal paperwork, finances, photo albums and mementos. Decent people just don't do that. If i wanted to look through her stuff I would show her the respect of asking first. Otherwise, her personal stuff is off limits to me. And if you've been fighting "a lot, about various things" while someone is away, you can expect them to be distant when they come back.
Load More Replies...“Nobody says ‘I love you’ as banter”: What?! I’m pretty sure most of us do! Like when a friend tells you something evil/sneaky and it’s delicious and you wish you’d thought of it, you might say, “I love you!” (for having thought of/done it because it’s brilliant), or someone walked past a thrift store, saw something in the window you’d adore and gets it for you because it was cheap, and you’ll blurt “I love you!” from sheer delight. I can come up with dozens of examples; am I wrong? Do people *not* say this out of sheer happiness/delight/envy/etc, even to people we DON’T love (like a neighbor, acquaintance, and so on)? I even remember saying “I love you!” to a coworker who’s found the source of a bug that was making me crazy. It’s not saved only for romantic partners or close family.
It's funny. My wife and I have all the passwords to each other's devices (I help her with tech issues, and I gave her my passwords in case something happens to me and she needs to get into my accounts). If she asked to look at my computer search history, or look at my phone, it's hers, without question. And I've seen her accounts (or at least some of them) because I've helped her send things. That said, it's one thing to give permission, and to be open, but snooping is different. I'm not saying it's wrong: sometimes it's the right thing to do. But it's different. I think if you're snooping, maybe it's because something already seems off. Maybe the partner is doing something suspicious. Maybe the one snooping is feeling insecure. Either way: obviously this couple needs to communicate like adults, get therapy, reassess whether this relationship should continue. I'm feeling a lot of instability there.
More toxic content. Down voting this content as it's another of the many negative content on Bored Panda, which is far from what their mission states, "The mission is to spread good news and highlight top artists from around the world." Case in point is this post and many more which are about deception, personal problems, grudges arguments, cheating, divorce, getting back at others. In general it's becoming increasingly negative. SAD
Been in a similar situation with my ex wife. Communication vanished, trust vanished phones became super private and she ended up being super distant. Granted I would start most of the arguments she was the one thar was cheating. I can't side with either of these 2 people cause she only posted about him and not what she was doing in this situation and why they were fighting. Regardless this is a problem and only 1 side of the story and from the way it's written seems out of anger. If ge travels for work and she can't trust him either end it and move on or seek counseling.
One of the 1st signs of cheating is: the cheater becomes argumentative, critical, distant + reacts differently to their partner no matter *how* the partner tries to interact with the cheater. I agree: red flags. OP needs to start putting away $$$ for what comes next.
One of the first signs of giant red flag is automatically assuming the fact that you've contributed to the depression of another by constantly arguing and fighting about "various things", means they're most definitely cheating on you so therefore you need to start snooping on all of their stuff so you can justify being a jerk. Even the OP admitted he didn't get argumentative or distant until she started fighting with him, while he was away from home working, but then it got better (and her behavior got worse) He literally opened up to her and told her the arguments were contributing to his depression, making him feel bad, contributing to him not wanting to take care of himself. But sure...let's go with, he must be cheating, because men aren't allowed to have feelings when people make them feel like c**p, right?
Load More Replies...My question is, if it was a work mate that he always says I love you to, why did he ask of a sudden need to Google how to say it? Wouldn't he be aware of how to if it's a normal occurrence?
My first response to this was now I want to google how to say I love you in Arabic 😬
Uhhh... usually i am the side of reddit but they seem like rabid dogs here. The relationships is toxic. It needs to be fixed. If one of them is not cheating now they will be.
All those saying g confront him is egging her own to making a major domestic problem without sorting out the issue properly. There is a possibility he does feel she contributing to his general unhappiness. I say that because she went nosing through his phone, they are arguing and he said he's feeling depressed and she seems to ignore this. They need to sit down and communicate without arguing preferably with a counselor.
Whether there's fire to this smoke or not, the trust train has left the station. But OP... don't be gaslit, go with your gut.
What do I think? He's cheating on you. And you know it but can't prove it. So you're driving yourself crazy and he'll continue to lie. Just break up, work through the hurt, and move on.
Whatever is on the phone doesn't matter. He's distant, you don't trust him, you've been fighting and he's depressed. Those are enough current issues to address without looking for more. Sounds like the relationship isn't good. If you want to save it have a grown up conversation about how you feel and figur out what's going on with the distance. Don't accuse him of cheating until you at least figur out whats going on between you two, because if you can't talk about what's between you, there's no point in continuing. The relationship is over, if there's cheating or not.
And also don't be amazed if he decides to end the relationship if nothing actually happened.
Load More Replies...Ok. So maybe i missed something but this person went through their partners phone without permission. Thats a bit of a red flag there. And it doesnt seem like the OP is dropping the subject, which is probably causing tension too. Im not saying the OP is definitely wrong, but what i am saying is that they went looking for something with just an "i love you". I am in a very happy relationship and have said i love you to a bunch of friends in the last few days. Not in Arabic. Once in Japanese and another time in Mandarin. But that doesnt mean im cheating. It just means that my friends are awesome.
Exactly, I have several long time friends where we end a casual (phone) conversation with "bye love" / "love you mate" or "much love". Definitely doesn't have any romantic meaning but more a solid friendship thing...
Load More Replies...The lack of trust, warranted to whatever degree, is something really difficult to turn around or recover from.
Marriage counseling. Even if it doesn’t work out, can help prepare for divorce. Checking phones and other media though is just sh¥tty. If someone did that to me I’d dump her.
I'm really fascinated by the "never go through your partner's phone or you're automatically the bad guy" trend on Reddit. Um, what? People in relationships should be open with each other and access to each other's devices is part of that. Now, if that info is used to control a partner, then the problem is that person, not the fact they checked the phone, but it's easier to blame the phone thing than admit that the person is garbage.
Nah, spying on someone else's phone is an invasion of their privacy and an intrusion. I came home once to my gf (who had recently moved in) snooping through my personal paperwork, finances, photo albums and mementos. Decent people just don't do that. If i wanted to look through her stuff I would show her the respect of asking first. Otherwise, her personal stuff is off limits to me. And if you've been fighting "a lot, about various things" while someone is away, you can expect them to be distant when they come back.
Load More Replies...“Nobody says ‘I love you’ as banter”: What?! I’m pretty sure most of us do! Like when a friend tells you something evil/sneaky and it’s delicious and you wish you’d thought of it, you might say, “I love you!” (for having thought of/done it because it’s brilliant), or someone walked past a thrift store, saw something in the window you’d adore and gets it for you because it was cheap, and you’ll blurt “I love you!” from sheer delight. I can come up with dozens of examples; am I wrong? Do people *not* say this out of sheer happiness/delight/envy/etc, even to people we DON’T love (like a neighbor, acquaintance, and so on)? I even remember saying “I love you!” to a coworker who’s found the source of a bug that was making me crazy. It’s not saved only for romantic partners or close family.
It's funny. My wife and I have all the passwords to each other's devices (I help her with tech issues, and I gave her my passwords in case something happens to me and she needs to get into my accounts). If she asked to look at my computer search history, or look at my phone, it's hers, without question. And I've seen her accounts (or at least some of them) because I've helped her send things. That said, it's one thing to give permission, and to be open, but snooping is different. I'm not saying it's wrong: sometimes it's the right thing to do. But it's different. I think if you're snooping, maybe it's because something already seems off. Maybe the partner is doing something suspicious. Maybe the one snooping is feeling insecure. Either way: obviously this couple needs to communicate like adults, get therapy, reassess whether this relationship should continue. I'm feeling a lot of instability there.
More toxic content. Down voting this content as it's another of the many negative content on Bored Panda, which is far from what their mission states, "The mission is to spread good news and highlight top artists from around the world." Case in point is this post and many more which are about deception, personal problems, grudges arguments, cheating, divorce, getting back at others. In general it's becoming increasingly negative. SAD
Been in a similar situation with my ex wife. Communication vanished, trust vanished phones became super private and she ended up being super distant. Granted I would start most of the arguments she was the one thar was cheating. I can't side with either of these 2 people cause she only posted about him and not what she was doing in this situation and why they were fighting. Regardless this is a problem and only 1 side of the story and from the way it's written seems out of anger. If ge travels for work and she can't trust him either end it and move on or seek counseling.
One of the 1st signs of cheating is: the cheater becomes argumentative, critical, distant + reacts differently to their partner no matter *how* the partner tries to interact with the cheater. I agree: red flags. OP needs to start putting away $$$ for what comes next.
One of the first signs of giant red flag is automatically assuming the fact that you've contributed to the depression of another by constantly arguing and fighting about "various things", means they're most definitely cheating on you so therefore you need to start snooping on all of their stuff so you can justify being a jerk. Even the OP admitted he didn't get argumentative or distant until she started fighting with him, while he was away from home working, but then it got better (and her behavior got worse) He literally opened up to her and told her the arguments were contributing to his depression, making him feel bad, contributing to him not wanting to take care of himself. But sure...let's go with, he must be cheating, because men aren't allowed to have feelings when people make them feel like c**p, right?
Load More Replies...My question is, if it was a work mate that he always says I love you to, why did he ask of a sudden need to Google how to say it? Wouldn't he be aware of how to if it's a normal occurrence?
My first response to this was now I want to google how to say I love you in Arabic 😬
Uhhh... usually i am the side of reddit but they seem like rabid dogs here. The relationships is toxic. It needs to be fixed. If one of them is not cheating now they will be.
All those saying g confront him is egging her own to making a major domestic problem without sorting out the issue properly. There is a possibility he does feel she contributing to his general unhappiness. I say that because she went nosing through his phone, they are arguing and he said he's feeling depressed and she seems to ignore this. They need to sit down and communicate without arguing preferably with a counselor.
Whether there's fire to this smoke or not, the trust train has left the station. But OP... don't be gaslit, go with your gut.
What do I think? He's cheating on you. And you know it but can't prove it. So you're driving yourself crazy and he'll continue to lie. Just break up, work through the hurt, and move on.
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