


During this time my parents lent us over $25,000. Some of this was for our household, but most of it was for his business and his secret life. So, without realizing it, my parents essentially paid for my ex’s gambling and his affair! My divorce lawyer insisted on not pushing my husband on repayments because he was severely depressed and she feared he “would snap.”
The loans became my responsibility in the divorce. My parents have mentioned that maybe it is my former in-laws’ responsibility to pay their son’s bills. Asking for help would require divulging information that his folks know nothing about: the loans, the gambling, the affair. Your thoughts?
If your folks want to try to pressure your ex’s parents to repay this money, it’s up to them, but why should these parents be responsible for their son’s debts? I’m inferring that either they cannot afford this sort of expense or perhaps they aren’t the soft touches your folks are, otherwise, your ex might have gone to them for money in the first place.
Each person in your family system seems to have enabled your ex. Keeping his problems (mental health issues, spending, gambling, cheating, lying) a secret seems to enable him to continue in this cycle without getting help. There is an argument to be made that these issues are connected.
You should continue to comply regarding your own legal responsibilities, and let your parents do whatever they think best. It benefits you if they get this money from a different source; it might ultimately benefit your ex if his secret life is finally exposed.
Is it ever OK for a single girl to date a married man?
So no, it’s never OK for a single “girl” to date married men. Furthermore, if you thought of yourself more as a grown woman, you might have more of a handle on this.
Any man (married or not) who hits on you at work is flirting with a sexual harassment situation. For you, even engaging in a consensual affair with anyone at work leaves you open to unpleasantness and unintended consequences, especially if the man is married and the relationship sours.
Are you all really in management? Don’t your clients and colleagues deserve your full attention?
I almost let this person who hurt me prevent me from traveling to the funeral of a beloved cousin. Her mom and sister needed me there. Then I looked at your advice again and again. I practiced. It not only worked, but I took back my power.