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Definitely. Cheaters may be exposing their spouses to disease, so it's a matter of her physical safety. Be ready with some proof, but also be ready for however she reacts.
If she believes you, be ready to comfort her and help her through the break up. If she accuses you of trying to steal her husband, or just being a liar, I would caution you to be ready to lose her as a friend, but don't get angry back. The last thing you want to do is have her come to you in six months saying she has herpes or HIV, and you'll know you could have done something about it.
Just let her know it was your obligation as a friend, and you're always going to be honest with her, even if that means she doesn't want to talk to you anymore. I would avoid offering her any advice, because what she wants to do with her cheating husband is her business. It is your obligation to warn her, not talk her into leaving him, going to counseling, or anything else.
If she stays with him, don't judge her. You may not agree, but it is her marriage, and you may be the best friend she has if you offer her a supportive shoulder.
Yes and yes. I have had to do this before, and it's not easy either. Sometimes, women really do know and just don't want to know.
They'll ignore it, pretend they don't see it, try to make believe life is good. Sometimes, you'll find revealing a secret like this isn't really a secret at all. But when it really IS a secret, there is a responsibility for friendships to be honest, and if it were me, I'd want to know.
I lost a friend over telling her that her husband made a pass at me. She accused me of making it up and then accused me of making passes at him instead. She stayed with him.
Years later, they broke up, divorced, and she came back around and told me, "You know, I knew he was cheating. I believed you when you told me. I was just so embarrassed."
It's sad the cheat-ee had to be embarrassed. It's the cheater who's doing wrong. Anyway, she thanked me for being honest with her.
The thanks felt good, but didn't repair the hurt I'd felt. Even with the hurt though, if I had it to do over again, I would. It was the right thing to do and my integrity is in tact because of it.
Had I not told her, I would have had a hard time continuing a friendship with her, because of my own integrity--I'd feel like the cheater myself.
Yes I would tell her and hope for the best. She will be very angry, but if she's strong enough and you tell her in the right way - out of concern for her happiness and her right to know. Chances are, if you know about his philandering and he did make a pass at you then you're no longer comfortable around your own best friend.
This is an issue you have to address immediately for the sake of your friendship and your right to not feel threatened or guilty (even though the guilt is his, not yours). Tell your friend and be ready to roll with the punches, but stand by your allegations and be ready to prove them if you can. If you can't prove to her that he is cheating, then simply tell her about him hitting on you and tell her you're concerned that he may be straying, but you can't say for sure.(If nothing else, putting it that way will cover your back and keep you from getting stuck in the middle.).
Yes I would... Its not going to be an easy conversation to have, I'd really rather not do it at all. But part of being a good friend is that you're willing to do things for them that you'd really rather not. Its hard, because I know its something that she wouldn't want to hear.
But if its true its something that she needs to. And she'll need to hear it from a friend or the consequences will be worse.
Yes, and Yes. You just have to. Sure it'll be awkward at first, and your friend may even blame you and misdirect some anger your way.
But it will pass. Look at it the other way around. If your husband was cheating on you and hitting on your friends, wouldn't you want to know?
Look at how you'd like to be treated and there is your answer.
Don't keep harping on what was said, and try not to let the discussion change your friendship. Once you've finished your talk, resume business as usual. 5Communicate clearly that you're not interested (optional).
If you're friend is a lesbian and keeps hitting on you, and you're not interested in dating, turn her down nicely but firmly. Say that you're flattered she cares about you in that way, but you're simply not interested in dating girls (or, you're just not interested in dating her). Stress that you want to preserve the friendship, and that you hope she'll accept your decision gracefully.
If she needs a little time to get over the rejection, let her have a few weeks to mend. 6Resolve to be compassionate. Remember that this person became your best friend because there are many things you like about her, but that doesn't mean you have to like everything about her.
If you want to preserve the friendship no matter what you find out, tell yourself that you're going to respect who she is and keep treating her like your best friend even if she does turn out to be a lesbian.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.