Q: My husband recently passed away. He was a wonderful person and we had 12 great years together. He was also very, very organized. His death was an accident, but everything was in order. He even left a note in a sealed envelope for his lawyer to present to me. It was one last love letter, Dan. Our relationship wasnt perfect, no relationship is, but thats who he was. Or thats who I thought he was.
My husband was a very good-looking man who took meticulous care of his body. We actually met in a gym at a hotel. He wasnt a conceited, which I think may be because he didnt come into his looks until he was in his 20s, but he enjoyed the effect his appearance had on others. In addition to his last love letter and other documents, I was given a list with the passwords to my husbands social media accounts. I made the mistake of looking at his messages on Instagram. He exchanged private images with hundreds of women and gay men all over the world. Not just photos of him shirtless. Photos of him fully nude from the front and back, images of his genitals, even video clips of him masturbating with his face clearly visible.
I knew he had exhibitionistic tendencies. Years before we met he got in legal trouble for exposing himself in a public place. He sought help for impulse control and never did something like that again. But he always had a very high libido, much higher than mine, and he masturbated frequently, and public sex remained his biggest fantasy. I didnt judge or shame him for any of that. We jokingly called masturbation his thang and sex, which we had roughly once a week, our thang, and one time, when it seemed safe, we did manage to have sex in public. He expressed an interest in opening up our relationship years ago, but I am monogamous by nature, and he agreed to keep our relationship closed. And I believe he did: Ive read through all his messages with these strangers and there are no mentions of any meetings. Ive seen dozens of messages from people wanted to meet in person, and he always turned them down. But he never turned down a request for more photos.
Help me understand this. I cant tell anyone else about this and I hate sitting here feeling like my marriage was a lie.
~ Wishing Instagram Didnt Open Window
P.S. Also, men? My husband was straight. Why was he sending photos to gay men?
A: I am so sorry for your loss, WIDOW, and Im so sorry your grief has been complicated by what you found in your husbands Instagram account. But you shouldnt for a moment doubt the love of a man who wanted to make sure you got one last love letter if he should die unexpectedly. Thats not something a person would think to do for a someone they didnt truly love. Your husband was who you thought he was. Your marriage wasnt a lie, and your husband wasnt a liar, WIDOW, its just that your grief like you and your husband and your marriage and anything human beings do or feel or touch is imperfect.
So far as you know, WIDOW, your husband never cheated on you and after reading thousands of his DMs, and since your husband didnt think you would ever see those DMs, its safe to say you know everything. And what you know now that you didnt know before is that sharing pictures with strangers was one of your husbands thangs.
Now Im going to ask you to make a leap, WIDOW.
Instead of seeing what you found on Instagram as evidence of your husbands unfaithfulness, WIDOW, try to see it as something that made it possible for a man like your husband to remain faithful. Think of those DMs like a pressure-release valve. On Instagram your husband could expose himself to strangers who wanted to see him nakedavoiding both consent violations and legal troublewithout exposing himself to the temptations of face-to-face encounters, WIDOW, temptations that mightve led him to violate the monogamous commitment he made to you and, like all people who make monogamous commitments, sometimes struggled to keep.
One person cant be all things to another person sexually. People can ask for monogamous commitments, of course, and we all have a right to expect consideration and compassion from our partnersand not having the needs we cant meet or the ways we fall short thrown in our faces is one way our partners demonstrate consideration and compassion. Your husband needed more attention than any one person could ever provide. He didnt rub that in your face. He cut an ethical corner by swapping DMs with strangers to meet a need you couldntbut if getting that need met the way he did made it possible for him to stay in your marriage and stay faithful to you, perhaps you benefited too. And while your husband shouldve asked for your permissionwhile he shouldve gotten your okayif you had found his DMs while he was alive, WIDOW, he would no doubt ask for your forgiveness. Think of the years he gave you and the love he showed you and ask yourself if you could give him the forgiveness he would be asking for if he could. Then give himgive yourselfthat gift.
P.S. Your husbands willingness to accept attention from gay men is another sign he was ones of the good guys. Straight guys who are secure in their sexuality are much more willing to accept compliments from gay men these dayssome straight guys, like your husband, even seek them out.
P.P.S. I am, again, so very sorry for your loss.
Q: I sent you a letter yesterday. Today I told my husband I want a divorce. So I didnt need any advice from you after all. Once I laid it out in my letter to you and thought about the last three years and the amount of struggling with this I have gone through, I realized that it was SO. DAMN. OBVIOUS. There was no question. There was only an answer. Divorce. It has been horrible the last couple days but things are starting to feel a bit better. The worst part is the intense pain that I have caused him. He loves me so much and it is painful to tell him that I do not love him the same way. But I am holding tight to my firm belief that in a few years, he will understand that I did this out of lovefor him and for me. Thank you. Even though you did not need to respond, just being there to write to helped.
~Writing Was Enough
A: Im happy it helped just to write the letter, WWE, and I read your letter and I agree: youre doing the right thing for yourself and your husband. Best of luck to you both.
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