My mom tells me I should cut dad off for cheating on her, am I a bad person for not wanting to do so?
from ravigoter@jlai.lu to nostupidquestions@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 07:10
https://jlai.lu/post/20481535

My dad has recently been caught having an affair with his young personal assistant. Huge scandal; mom was very angry. Now they’re in the middle of divorce proceedings. Mom moved out, the other woman moved in and I chose to stay with him because we’re super close; he’s like my best friend. Now mom’s telling me to go and live with her and go no contact with him cause he’s a bad person and by continuing having a relationship with him I’m condoning his actions and “ignoring her suffering”. My relationship with my dad hasn’t changed, I don’t see why I should end it.

#nostupidquestions

threaded - newest

Lembot_0002@lemm.ee on 03 Jun 2025 07:21 next collapse

I bet you haven’t the slightest idea what the reason was for that “affair” and therefore lack the information to make a rational decision.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 07:22 next collapse

You staying with your dad, at least in your mom’s eyes, is you choosing the new chick over her also.

And if thats what you want to do, so be it. But you’re actively choosing another woman over your mother.

Think of it like this: Someone was caught doing x. X being any deplorable act you wanna fit in there. Let’s say being racist to the point of violence.

Said member of that race who you’ve hung out with comes to you, tells you what happened, and asks you not continue hanging with said person or else they’re going to deem you racist too.

Although you don’t have any racist views, and although that person has never been racist to you since your not that “undesirable” race, you continuing the relationship puts you in the racist category.

You could stop the relationship although it hurts. And in doing so you may even help the person learn the errors of thier ways, or atleast the consequences of their actions.

Or you can say nothing and allow the racist tyrad to continue.

Edit: I also want to say I’m sorry your in this position. It sucks you have to make this decision. And although its hard now, I hope everything works out in your favor in the long run.

Truly am sorry

Edit edit: yall don’t love your mom’s and have her back and thats just sad. Boo me all you want, but if either of my parents was to cheat I’d side with the other until the cheater comes back and apologizes like their the adult their supposed to be.

Hold people to higher standards, especially the ones that are supposed to be raising you

ValiantDust@feddit.org on 03 Jun 2025 07:30 collapse

You can turn this around as well. Their mom asking them to stop having contact with their father is her choosing to take away their father from them. If that’s what she wants to do…

Children should not be pulled into the relationship problems of their parents. The parents are the ones who chose to have a child together, they are the ones who have to deal with the consequences of that.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 07:42 next collapse

I’m just trying to give the mothers perspective. I know nothing else about these people besides one is willing to throw away the love and trust of someone they’re supposed to be closest with for their own selfish gain.

What caused that to happen I can’t speak for.

Aussieiuszko@aussie.zone on 03 Jun 2025 09:43 collapse

And the dad is the one who bought those relationship problems to move in with his son.

The dad has 100% already pulled his son into this before the mother ever said anything.

snausagesinablanket@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 07:30 next collapse

Don’t let her use you as leverage.

Cypher@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 07:32 next collapse

The demand for no contact is extreme and controlling behaviour and not something I would agree with based on the information provided.

Marriage breakdowns happen, by itself that isn’t a reason to ruin a parent-child relationship.

Yermaw@lemm.ee on 03 Jun 2025 08:09 next collapse

Yeah i can see wanting to do it of your own volition, my brother went the same way, but having one parent ask that of you is something else.

jeffw@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 22:36 collapse

It’s extreme if it continues. Lashing out emotionally in response to being hurt isnt that crazy.

loomy@lemy.lol on 03 Jun 2025 07:35 next collapse

no.

whaleross@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 07:39 next collapse
  1. Your dad cheated on your mum, not on you.

  2. Everything involving humans is more complex and complicated than it might seem at first glance.

  3. Everybody makes mistakes, even your loved ones.

  4. You only have one dad, so it’s better to forgive them. (I didn’t forgive mine for other mistakes, and that was my mistake. Now I’m old and he is dead and that’s that.)

  5. Your mum is being selfish and manipulative because she is afraid and hurting. It’s not right what she is doing, but see the points above for her as well.

  6. Life is hard and unfair and difficult for everybody. For your dad, for your mum and also for you. It sucks when you’re stuck in the middle of other people’s problems, but remember all of this will pass. And remember to take care of yourself.

Hugs my dude. You’ll get through this and so will they.

Edit: 7. Time. Let things take time. Don’t rush what you feel or what you should feel. Don’t go overthinking everything. Things that are complicated need time to settle.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 08:03 next collapse

There’s a bit of difference between making a mistake and stabbing your partner in the back. He could have done it the right way, but he chose to do one of the most emotional hurtful things you can do.

He betrayed family to get laid

[deleted] on 03 Jun 2025 08:15 next collapse
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UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 08:26 collapse

My dad has recently been caught having an affair with his young personal assistant… Mom moved out, the other woman moved in

Staying makes it pretty clear OP is choosing a side. Theyd rather have a cool friend dad than an actual parent

Edit: not only was dad willing to blow up his family to get his dick wet, but he’s also cool with abusing his power for said reason

[deleted] on 03 Jun 2025 08:32 next collapse
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UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 08:34 collapse

Nah. I’ll keep my family values

You can go have fun blowing up a family and chalk it up to “whoops. Just another mistake”

skye@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 08:45 next collapse

If you are this allergic to nuance, I recommend staying away from threads that require logical/rational breakdowns of heavily-emotional topics.

You can’t just jump the gun (having fun blowing up families) about someone just because they answered OOPs question in an impartial manner.

So if you seriously cannot engage with this topic without resuming to attacks, I implore you to take a step back, reasess, and move on to something else.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 08:50 next collapse

Nah. Im allowed to do whatever I want.

And I want to call out people for excusing an affair. The dad could have done it the right way, like an actual adult. Asking for a divorce is hard, but immeasurably easier emotionally to the person you make a commitment to than sneaking around and finally getting caught WITH YOUR ASSISTANT

skye@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 09:08 collapse

No one is excusing an affair. People are merely trying to help OOP navigate an emotionally complex situation: wanting to keep contact with their father despite the circumstances, and wondering if their mother’s actions are justifiable or not.

You can do whatever you want, but that does not absolve you of consequences.

I only gave you genuine advice, taking breaks/disengaging is helpful. I cannot force you, ofcourse, there’s only so much I can do.

So please consider above, and have a nice day

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 09:15 collapse

Hey I know this guy just did one of the most deplorable things a man can do, but just continue having fun with him. It’ll be fine.

[deleted] on 03 Jun 2025 08:55 collapse
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UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 09:01 collapse

Not from Kansas. Well traveled and have seen a bunch of relationships. I’ve seen people get divorced and I’ve seen infidelity.

I have immeasurably more respect for those that get divorced no matter how hard it is. Breaking the vow through being a cheater is about as low as you can go.

Sorry you don’t hold marriage to sanctity it should be

[deleted] on 03 Jun 2025 09:07 collapse
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UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 09:14 collapse

Says the man posting from lemmynsfw. Things in your second marriage must be going super well

If you held marriage to any standard, a man breaking his vows to sleep WITH HIS ASSISTANT should be pretty deplorable. And recommended an atleast young adult to just brush past that like it’s just another mistake is insane.

Yeah, just look the other way that he figuratively slapped your mom across the face. Atleast he’s cool though

[deleted] on 03 Jun 2025 09:17 next collapse
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UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 09:24 collapse

Yes, I am judgemental of people who are advocating for not having the back of a noncheating parent.

“Oh she’s being mean by saying dont talk to him. How could she”

He literally fucked his assistant behind her back. What he did was 100x as worse. But its ok. He’s fun though!

[deleted] on 03 Jun 2025 09:26 collapse
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UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 09:28 collapse

This isn’t an airport. You don’t need announce your departure

AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 09:32 collapse

Says the man posting from lemmynsfw. Things in your second marriage must be going super well

Ah yes, you’re one of those who think porn is a sin. Explains a lot about your attitude in the comments here.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 09:34 collapse

Never said porn was a sin

But that person had a choice to make an account on any instance they wanted to, and chose to make it on the most inappropriate one they could find.

Just saying

AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 09:37 collapse

It’s not a sin, it’s just inappropriate. God you’re a judgemental dick

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 09:42 collapse

You would be happy if your partner had the easiest choice to not make their account on the porn instance but still did?

AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 09:45 collapse

No, why would I care one way or another which instance they were on? People like you are why we have ‘morality’ laws.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 09:50 collapse

Because it’s lack of respect to your partner.

Literally hundreds of regular instances. Instances that still have NSFW on them.

But they decided they needed to be surrounded by porn to be happy.

It’s the message you give to the person your supposed to be faithful to. A message that, to be happy, I need to have porn around me at any given time.

Which, kinda shows why he’s working on marriage number 2 in my book.

whaleross@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 08:49 collapse

I’m curious to learn what you think about your username in this context? What crime are you partner in and is it only breaking a partnership that is an unforgivable crime?

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 08:51 collapse

Are you a whale, Ross?

whaleross@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 08:58 collapse

Yes. Now your turn, my morally incorruptible dude.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 09:05 collapse

Cool. I also love lying to make a point

Jaywalking. I’ll be your partner in jaywalking cause it was made up by the motor industry to pass on pedestrians getting hit onto the pedestrian instead of the driver

To bad you’ll never get to experience it though, being your a whale and all

whaleross@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 09:13 collapse

I’m not the one that is making claims of perfection on people. You are. It seems to me you are not living up to your own high standards on others though.

But it is ok. Again, see point 2.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 09:18 collapse

Im not saying people have to be perfect. Cheating with your assistant is faaaar from perfect though.

Get a divorce and move on. To show your kid the right way in life. Dude failed that though. Showed his child that family is nothing. And the child is now supposed to just continue being family with him cause he’s fun

They should be having thier mother’s back, as they didn’t go an do one of the lowest things you can do in a marriage

whaleross@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 09:31 collapse

Yeah, the father made a mistake. You’re the one that conflates making a mistake with an oopsie, nobody else has made that equivalence. Mistakes can be big and they can take lots of effort to correct. OP will surely deal with this in their own time and way with all the complex and contradictory and painful thoughts emotions.

But - OP is not an adult when living with their parents. Children or young adults are not adults. They have a dependency on their parents. OP is not responsible for their father. OP should not be required to take responsibility for their father’s mistakes. OP is getting caught in the middle of the worst conflict a child can be caught up in and they did nothing to deserve it.

I think what you are doing is projecting high moral ideals into this that are inconsiderate regarding the consequences when OP is asking for help and advice and support. This is the last thing OP needs right now and it is not helping them in any way. OP is in a moment of crisis.

Discuss morality all you want but this is the wrong context for it.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 09:39 collapse

? It was literally point number 3 you made. How people make mistakes and it happens

The OP asked if they should have their mother’s back even though it means not having their best friend

Yes. Their best friend stooped to one of the lowest places they can go and now they want to stand by them. If they do, theyre are bad by association and deserve their mother eventually not talking to them either.

Edit: if he’s such a best friend, he’ll make amends with her even if they choose their mother right now.

whaleross@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 09:48 collapse

That’s you reading it that way and others not. Maybe this is your point two playing tricks on you now?

Dude, I don’t know if you are consciously cherry picking to win this argument or if any best interest of OP simply does not exist for you.

Regardless, I have no interest in discussing this further with you as it seems to be a self fulfilling purpose disconnected from the original post. I’m out.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 09:56 next collapse

Still ain’t an airport. Don’t have to announce your departure.

My argument has been the same since the beginning as literally the first comment. Sticking with dad is also choosing the new chick in the mom’s eyes. What dad did is deplorable and OP staying with shows their morals and lack of them

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 10:03 collapse

Also, you say im cherry picking but you’re the one going around saying “read point 2 again” as if your not cherry picking your own commandments

Mac@mander.xyz on 03 Jun 2025 10:28 collapse

There are no ‘sides’.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 10:36 next collapse

Maybe not in a perfect world. But here there are clearly very opposing sides.

Even if the dad is cool about it and makes it seem like choosing to stay with him isn’t picking a side, it still is

My recommendation is not to side with the guy who not only had an affair but invited Ms side peice to live in their old family home

Jhuskindle@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 2025 11:28 collapse

Between an immoral piece of sh and a person who was dedicated and believed they weren’t yes there are sides.

Father isn’t just committing an act of betrayal, which he does to the person he loves, so op will definitely also be fair game for betrayal, father is also abusing his seat of power over his very young employee which is called coertion or quid pro quo and is UNACCEPTABLE. The fact OP could look into the eyes of a man who would betray him without a second thought is just cope.

Eventually it will sink in how horrific this was and op I am sure being moral themselves hopefully will take moms side.

Normal to go through a period of shock or denial before it sinks in.

whaleross@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 08:46 collapse

Point number 2. Read it again.

As of why, we can only speculate. Sometimes a disaster is what is required to get things happening that should have been over a long time ago.

They are living together already, so it was not only to get laid.

[deleted] on 03 Jun 2025 08:51 collapse
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Venus_Ziegenfalle@feddit.org on 03 Jun 2025 09:49 next collapse

I agree with almost everything you said except 4. is only true for past mistakes. I don’t think you should excuse ongoing, genuinely harmful behaviours just because that person will be gone one day. Not that I necessarily think that’s what you meant but I wanted to emphasise it.

whaleross@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 09:53 collapse

Absolutely. That post was not a list of commandments. It was intended as support for OP in this very moment that they are having a crisis.

Alxe@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 10:08 next collapse

Honestly, I’m very happy that your post has the highest score.

All other people are spewing vitriol over either parent and not even trying to be understanding. Life is about making and learning from mistakes, and mistakes can be oh-so-horrible at times. Character value is measured by how well you navigate the stormy waves, and there’s almost never a single correct choice.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 10:15 next collapse

One choice is helping a faithful parent grieve, the other is to say fuck you to that person and stand by a cheater.

Such a difficult choice.

Grainne@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 2025 11:26 collapse

Have you considered the fact that one is a woman? Clearly it is all our fault.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 11:33 collapse

Oh wait? This isn’t about 2 gay men so its equal?

Ahhh. Yeah. Its all her fault. I understand OPs dilemma now

Edit: /s

whaleross@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 10:20 collapse

Thanks. Yeah, anything relationship oriented tends to become completely and binary moral high ground burn all bridges and salt the earth from people that have no stake in it except to have a short moment of hormones pumping before they scroll to the next bit of entertainment.

Mrkawfee@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 10:55 next collapse

This is a wise response.

josefo@leminal.space on 03 Jun 2025 12:51 collapse

I mostly agree with this comment. I want to emphasize two things:

  • Your mom is now alone, and probably feels like you are choosing him instead of her. She must feel very rejected as a person, betrayal is not something you easily recover from, the more time they spent together, the harder it is to separate yourself from the situation. She will eventually get better, but take into consideration that she is desperate now.
  • Depending on how old are you, I would suggest leaving your house, either to go with your mom (see above) or living alone/with roomates if you are an adult. Your dad bringing the woman to your house raises some big red flags to me. Something is not right there, I can’t quite put my finger on what it is.

That said, don’t cut your dad out of your life, but your mom is alone and betrayed, and your dad isn’t. If I were to support someone here, would be her, without cutting anyone from your life.

MeekerThanBeaker@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 07:45 next collapse

I am not a therapist. I’m guessing most people on Lemmy are not. Take anyone’s advice with a grain of salt… including this.

People make mistakes. It’s human nature for men to seek younger women because they are supposed to be more fertile. It’s human nature for women to seek older men because they are supposed to be more mature and protective.

However, that’s just thousands of years of basic instincts. We’re more educated now. We are supposed to behave like advanced creatures, go beyond our primal thinking.

That said, if you have a good relationship with your dad, don’t break ties simply because of his infidelity. Learn from his mistakes. Maybe help him understand what he did wrong. Your mom is angry because he broke a promise, a vow. She wants you on her side because she is angry with him and wants to punish him for it.

I don’t know your mom or dad or their relationship. Maybe she was a perfect saint or maybe she was cold and manipulative. Either way, he shouldn’t have chosen someone else before their relationship ended. It’s just not right to hide something like that.

Typically, a man choosing a younger woman over their wife tends not to think with their brain, but with their lust. He could very well do it again in five ten years with someone younger.

Your mom shouldn’t force you to choose, but you should definitely have some empathy for her on how their bond was broken. She is in pain. She trusted him and he failed her.

Hopefully, you will find some sort of compromise and balance. It may take time for her to understand. A long, honest talk might help the two of you get to that point.

Best of luck.

timewarp@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 07:54 next collapse

No you’re not wrong for wanting to keep your dad in your life. Any reputable family counselor would say your mom shouldn’t be asking you to pick a side. Your mom does need support though, but it isn’t your job. What your dad did sounds really hurtful to her, as it would be for most people. Maybe he is your best friend, but being a parent is more than being a friend. It means being a role model & wanting to teach things like honesty & respect, especially for the people you’re supposed to love.

Has your dad offered to pay for counseling for you to process these things & talk to a professional about? It sounds like you could probably use it. I don’t know how old you are, but given that you’re asking the question here & the way you’re asking leads me to believe you’d be much better off talking to a professional about it.

ryedaft@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 08:44 collapse

Eh, you should support your family. The dad fell in love with someone else and now OPs parents are splitsville. It’s not fair to ask that OP cuts dad off but OP should try living 7/7 days with their parents if at all practically possible. OPs mom is going through so much grief right now - ignoring that is cruel.

SaneMartigan@aussie.zone on 03 Jun 2025 08:08 next collapse

You shouldn’t cut him off on behalf of your mother. Maybe I’m projecting here because I’ve got a shitty dad, but I reckon your dad’ll give you a reason of your own to cut him off soon enough. He’s starting a new family with the affair partner and doesn’t have time for you? The new affair partner doesn’t like that you call her the “cheating slag” on your weekends with dad. Really there are plenty of reasons likely to pop up, no need to use your mothers excuse.

SolOrion@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 08:10 next collapse

No. That doesn’t make you a bad person. Frankly, I think it’s awful that she’s asking you to, but I imagine she’s going through some things herself at the moment.

I think you have the right take here already- your relationship with your dad wasn’t the one impacted.

Drbreen@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 08:19 next collapse

Your mum is hurt and this is okay but the manipulation is not. As Judge Judy always said to divorced parents who tried to use their children against each other. , “You need to love your children more than you hate each other.”

Mothra@mander.xyz on 03 Jun 2025 08:26 next collapse

Your parents have some beef they need to settle between themselves - not with you. Any parent requesting their kids to retaliate against the other parent is a red flag. It’s manipulation. Beware of her !

Now, if your dad had done something to you and you felt like cutting ties, or perhaps your dad represents a serious threat to your mother and cutting ties is necessary for her safety, well that’s a different case scenario. But that’s not what you are telling us.

TLDR: you are not a bad person.

kwedd@feddit.nl on 03 Jun 2025 08:44 next collapse

A good mother will prioritize the wellbeing of her children over winning a conflict with her (ex) partner. It is completely unfair of her to ask you to pick a side or go no contact with your father. Hopefully she’ll realize this once she’s had some time to process her (understandable) emotions. In the mean time, best of luck to you!

NGL, IMO your dad sounds like kind of a piece of shit (based on the limited information available to me). However, at the end of the day he is still your father and it’s not your job to punish him for that. That’s your mother’s lawyer’s job.

Be there for your mother if you feel up to it (and you love her), but keep in mind that it’s a parent’s job to emotionally support their children, not the other way around.

Aussieiuszko@aussie.zone on 03 Jun 2025 09:41 collapse

And what would a good father do champ?

kwedd@feddit.nl on 03 Jun 2025 10:04 collapse

Tell his son or daughter that he made a mistake, apologize for setting a bad example, and tell them the right thing to do, assuming the relationship was untenable, would’ve been to end things with his wife before pursuing someone else.

Edit: A bad husband doesn’t necessarily make a bad father, though.

Edit 2: Come to think of it, a good father would probably also have waited a little longer before having his girlfriend move in.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 11:21 collapse

Yup, but the dad here instead DID just moved on and brought the side chick into their old family home

FistingEnthusiast@lemmynsfw.com on 03 Jun 2025 08:45 next collapse

Most of the advice here has been good, apart from one person a few dicks who have an overly simplistic view of the world and think they have some moral authority

You don’t know the details of your parents’ relationship. You don’t know how they behaved when you weren’t there

Life is never black-and-white. This isn’t condoning cheating, it’s an acknowledgement that it’s very simple to say what’s right and wrong when you are on the outside

What’s shit is that you are being put in the middle

The problem is between your mother and father and neither of them should expect you to take a side, but once again, life is messy and hurt people do things in their anger and frustration that aren’t rational or reasonable

Time definitely helps, and things can take years to settle, if they ever do

It’s unfair for you to be used as a pawn in their game. People who make demands and try to squeeze you with a “you’re with me, or you’re against me” aren’t looking out for you, they’re looking out for themselves

No child should be weaponised.

If you can handle the conflict, or potentially messy details, you can ask her why she expects you to abandon your father. She might come to realise what an unfair position she’s putting you in

Either way, good luck, and remember that it’s easy to judge, but there’s a lot of truth in the old saying about walking a mile in someone else’s shoes

Kia kaha

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 10:11 collapse

The problem with this dicks fine persons arguement is your choosing sides either way. Its unfortunate but true. And do you want to stand on the side of the person who didn’t cheat, or the one who did

Inaction is still an action

TheDoozer@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 17:14 collapse

One side it trying to force them to choose a side. It is up to adults to say “this is between us, and our relationship doesn’t change your relationships.”

OP could be very supportive of their mother and still not want to move out of the home they already lived in. But it doesn’t sound like the mom wants to let OP do that.

Also, from their other comments, their father has been more supportive through their life while their mom has been cold and judgemental. Trying to force her child into a position whete they are expected to mete out judgement as well just emphasizes that they aren’t terribly concerned with the well-being of their child.

And anyway, if you want support, you should give support. And OPs mom missed that boat, so it makes sense for OP to stay with the parent who supported them.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 18:39 collapse

Eh. As an adult I get to fully choose which side I’m on. And going off of the facts I had at the time, id choose the side of not being with a cheating power abuser

But since more facts have been stated besides just i dont feel like it, its easier to pick a diffrent side.

This wasn’t cheater vs homophobe at first

NoneOfUrBusiness@fedia.io on 03 Jun 2025 08:59 next collapse

Okay so... your dad is unequivocally a piece of shit. You said he's like your best friend, but are you okay with your best friend being a piece of shit? There need to be social consequences for being an unapologetic piece of shit (which one would need to be to have an affair with their personal assistant and then move in with her). Just business as usual isn't gonna cut it (think if instead of cheating he'd come out as a Nazi) and you would be condoning his actions if there aren't negative consequences of some form for this fiasco, though how much you escalate is up to you.

Edit: I have to say, the attitudes some of y'all have about parent-child relationships range from ungrateful to absolutely deplorable. Like, seriously if I heard "it's the parent's job to emotionally support their children, not the other way around" from someone in real life I wouldn't let that person within five miles within anyone I care about.

OutForARip@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 2025 09:07 next collapse

Exactly, everyone is giving this piece of shit a pass and going after the mom for being manipulative?

The fuck Lemmy.

Lupus@feddit.org on 03 Jun 2025 09:29 next collapse

Honestly from what we know, which is next to nothing, both parents here are in the wrong partially.

But as someone else already said here, humans and their relationships are super complex and from just a little paragraph we shouldn’t judge either of them too harshly.

For example, my mom cheated on my dad, but we children stayed with her and understood her actions, because our dad was an emotionally unavailable alcoholic at that time. He turned himself around in the years following, becoming a better father. Both my parents made grave mistakes during their marriage and both shared blame in the breaking apart of our family and both, over time, accepted their part in it.

Life is not that easy, for none of us, everybody makes mistakes.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 10:26 collapse

Man fucked his assistant behind his wife’s back and he’s just “partially” wrong

Lupus@feddit.org on 03 Jun 2025 10:33 collapse

It’s not that hard of a concept to understand. In the described scenario both did something wrong, which is why I said, that both are partially wrong (regarding the described problem).

He is wrong for betraying his family and she is wrong for trying to pull the child into their dispute by making them choose sides.

So OP posted this, not only because his dad cheated and not only because his mom is trying to make them choose, but because of BOTH those things happening.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 10:41 collapse

Hey, that person isn’t a good role model and did something absolutly deplorable. For whats best for you, you shouldnt talk to them again or else I fear your going to look up to them and also consider doing that in the future. And thats the last thing I want for you. That person needs to understand there are consequences for their actions.

Seems like a reasonable to say to your child

Maybe add in a maybe if they really clean up their actions you can talk to them later, but the divorce is literally still happening as well as the side chick having already moved in

Lupus@feddit.org on 03 Jun 2025 10:59 collapse

Hey, that person isn’t a good role model and did something absolutly deplorable. I want you to understand that this not a way to act and that these actions are very hurtful and demeaning to me and our family.

These actions now do have consequences, which is why I am divorcing him. I hope you will understand that I can not reconcile the betrayal and that actions like this will always hurt people and have harsh consequences.

But I understand that this person is your father and your relationship to him is important to you so I will try to make peace with that, in order to not hurt you any more than has already been done.


Seems also like a reasonable thing to say to your child. You know, not instrumentalizing your child to hurt the partner that betrayed you. Seems selfish to me, but what do I know.

But I should’ve know better than to expect healthy nuance from an online discussion anyways.

Edit: I got a little combative there, which was unnecessary

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 11:09 collapse

Maybe I just care for my mother more. Idk

Can’t imagine living with the side chick during the divorce

Lupus@feddit.org on 03 Jun 2025 11:40 collapse

Can’t imagine living with the side chick during the divorce

I did, but it was my mom who betrayed my dad, we lived with her boyfriend for some time. But like I mentioned, my dad was an emotionally distant, almost cold alcoholic, who spent his time drinking alone or working instead of caring for his family. So I get that she had needs that weren’t fulfilled. Of course I was mad with her for some time but after some time I understood what moved her, as a child I didn’t really realize how our dad left us alone in that time.

Could my mom have made better decisions? Absolutely, she could’ve just divorced him.

Does my dad share blame for distancing himself from his family, years before the infidelity? Also yes.

Did I like living with my mom’s side piece? Hell no, I didn’t like that guy.

In the end it turned out alright, my dad got sober and through therapy learned to have meaningful relationships with his children and partners. My mom is married to another man, who I love dearly, even my father had an okay relationship with him.

All I’m trying to say is that human relationships are complicated, things like this betrayal don’t always happen in a vacuum. I mean sometimes they do, but we don’t know that here.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 11:57 collapse

I see where you’re coming from. And I’m sorry that happened to you. Truly.

But OP only stated they dont want to go because well, it didn’t really effect them so why bother? So maybe I took this all wrong and I’m sorry if I did.

But for OP to be so dismissive of his mother’s feeling because he wants to continue hanging out with his dad is choosing a side.

Like, OP isn’t saying that mom says i have to move out but she’s never really been there for me. Or she makes bad decisions. Or some other reason would have me way more supportive. Just, I like hanging with my dad cause we’re best friends

But the dad is clearly not the best role model as he makes bad choices. He didn’t sleep with some random women. He didn’t sleep with one of his equal power co workers.

He slept with his young assistant. Which is not only shitty for the cheating reasons, but that’s literally abuse of power. Then as soon as the mom left, before the divorce is final, he moved her into the home which once house OPs family as if its no big deal

And OP acts like its nothingl and the mom is actually the bad person for feeling hurt.

The question could have been how do I tell my mom I still would like to have a relationship with my father after all this went down. But no. This whole question was looking for validation to not actually have to go with his mom for selfish reasons.

chonglibloodsport@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 10:01 collapse

You gotta read between the lines. OP is close to father, not mother. Mother demands OP cut off all contact with father because he cheated.

It’s clear to me that mom is just trying to drive a wedge between OP and dad in order to hurt him. She doesn’t care how that will affect OP!

Maybe dad started cheating because mom was cold and unavailable? Maybe he fell in love with someone who reciprocated and was available emotionally because his wife wasn’t? He invited this woman to move in, so obviously it wasn’t just a fling.

Im_old@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 09:08 next collapse

You have no idea why that happened though. Are you absolutely 100% sure he’s the only bad actor in the relationship? Maybe it wasn’t “just an affair”.

Don’t draw conclusions from limited information.

NoneOfUrBusiness@fedia.io on 03 Jun 2025 09:14 next collapse

I don't know, but also don't care. There is no good reason to have an affair (outside of maybe being coerced to enter/stay in the relationship). If he wanted to fuck the assistant, he should've (and, given that she's moving in, clearly could have) gotten a divorce first. Ergo, piece of shit.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 10:28 next collapse

Says the one drawing conclusions to make the dad seem better

“Maybe she was actually a piece of shit, you never know”

Congrats on blaming the victim!

BakerBagel@midwest.social on 03 Jun 2025 11:51 collapse

Dude had an affair with his young secretary and she is now moving in. That’s a tale as old as time, and tells me a fair bit about the dad. Maybe he does have a good relationship with OP, but the mother is in the process of losing everything to her scumbag husband.

OP is old enough to make their own decisions, but Dad’s relationship with his mistress is going to fall apart in 6-12 months when the novelty wears off.

daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 2025 12:13 collapse

life is complex. You really cannot assume he is a piece of shit just based on the information we have.

Was their marriage good? Was he happy with his life? If not, is he a piece of shit for wanting to live a happy life in the little time we have on this world? Is other person entitled to chain you to an unhappy life?

He may or may not be a piece of shit, I wouldn’t know.

NoneOfUrBusiness@fedia.io on 03 Jun 2025 12:58 collapse

Was their marriage good? Was he happy with his life? If not, is he a piece of shit for wanting to live a happy life in the little time we have on this world? Is other person entitled to chain you to an unhappy life?

As I said in another reply, there was a way for him to live a happy life in the little time he has on this world (or get his peen wet, whichever it is): Get a divorce. As long as he could do that, which is clearly the case given that he is getting a divorce and his mistress is moving in with him, he had absolutely no excuse to have an affair behind his wife's back. Hence, piece of shit.

daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 2025 14:40 collapse

He is getting a divorce.

You need to put yourself in both perspectives. It’s not so easy to make such a big change in life without being sure first, that’s why people tend to already have met other one to love before leaving their current partner .

Anyway, it would not be easier for the leaved part to accept it. Normally the pain tends to come for the fact that someone who you loves, and that you think they love you back, no longer loves you. The temporal fact that their new relationship overlaps a little with the time before leaving you does not ease much the pain.

Because, let’s be real, is not like people don’t want to be cheated, it’s that people, reasonably, don’t want their partner to leave them. Cheating is just the realization of this leaving. But you cannot force love on someone, of they don’t love you, they just don’t.

If a relationship is broken, I don’t really see cheating as a cause, more like a symptom.

Ideally people will be more brave and just end things as soon as they feel no love. But that’s a little too utopic in my humble opinion. And being so harsh on people who didn’t manage to be as brave as to end something to be alone instead of ending things when they have sure they are not going to be alone is not that justified from my point of view.

Yeah it is unfair for the other part who has “lost” time in a failed relationship and could be have been looking for other partners sooner, as their SO is doing. But a failed relationship is usually evident from both sides equally, so at some point is also their own fault for clinging themselves to a death relationship.

Things would change if there’s manipulations, abusive behavior or harm is being done on purpose of course. But there’s no evidence that it is the case here. In fact the only harm tried to do in purpose here comes from the mother asking the son to break relationships with his father just to make him suffer.

NoneOfUrBusiness@fedia.io on 04 Jun 2025 00:27 collapse

He is getting a divorce.

From the context it's clear he's getting divorced by his wife after getting caught.

It's not so easy to make such a big change in life without being sure first, that's why people tend to already have met other one to love before leaving their current partner .

Okay then meet with the side chick and then get a divorce. He didn't do that; he waited until he was caught. That's the most piece of shit development possible.

Anyway, it would not be easier for the leaved part to accept it. Normally the pain tends to come for the fact that someone who you loves, and that you think they love you back, no longer loves you. The temporal fact that their new relationship overlaps a little with the time before leaving you does not ease much the pain.

The fuck? You do realize that people commonly leave their spouses due to cheating right? As in from their own side divorce/break up after finding out. Clearly cheating as an act, irrespective of the context, is hurtful. If you can't get that simple fact then frankly you need to do less armchair psychology and more talking to people.

Things would change if there's manipulations, abusive behavior or harm is being done on purpose of course.

Cheating is inherently abusive. It's a betrayal of the consent their partner has given for an exclusive relationship.

lath@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 09:13 next collapse

My bad advice for this situation would be for you to start planning on pursuing the mindset for independent living.

Aussieiuszko@aussie.zone on 03 Jun 2025 09:37 next collapse

Mate, first off he’s not your best friend.

Could anyone here imagine if their friends did something so horrible to their mother that they caused her to break down upset? I wouldn’t fucking go hang out with them afterwards, like fuck he’s your friend.

He is your father, and apparently a terrible one if this is the life lessons he wants to impart on his son that it’s okay to be an immature fuck and cheat over get a divorce.

Cutting him off 100% doesn’t sound right, but you have clearly chosen his side and to stand by him despite how wrong it is — you’re going to have to work hard to make up for your poor choice.

RowRowRowYourBot@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 11:44 next collapse

He is their father. If they currently have a healthy relationship with their parents why should they ruin that just to have their mother’s back in this? That sounds like a great way to become sadabout this in the future.

liverbe@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 11:49 next collapse

You can’t immediately call dad a horrible person. We only know one side of the story. Maybe mom was cheating too? Maybe mom was abusive? Maybe this marriage was over years ago and they stayed together for the kid?

He needs to tell each parent he’s not taking sides and loves them both. People make mistakes and can be forgiven.

UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 17:07 collapse

This person likes victim blaming

wellheh@lemmy.sdf.org on 03 Jun 2025 12:05 collapse

Why are you suddenly deciding that being with his father is a bad choice? We literally know nothing about whether he’s a good dad- it is possible to be a good parent and provider and a bad husband. No matter what happens in his parents relationship, both will still be his parents and it’s the parents’ job to sort it out. What we do know here is that his mom is absolutely a red flag- you do NOT manipulate your children into taking sides in a divorce. The parents should be there to support their children and not the other way around.

Grimy@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 09:44 next collapse

Why is your mom the one that moved out? Also, the affaire partner moved in?

He’s your best friend, so you three like hang out and watch movies together as a new family while your mom sulks in an appartment alone?

Not only does your dad suck but so do you. Maybe one day, you will get cheated on and understand the betrayal it feels like. Hopefully, you wont have children to drive the knife in even deeper. Relationships are suppose to change with a parent who has an affaire, it’s abnormal not to be angry at what he did to your mother.

al_Kaholic@lemmynsfw.com on 03 Jun 2025 11:08 next collapse

What an odd thing for an adult to say. I feel bad for you, do you get mad at the tv as well? Life isn’t a reality show and people’s emotions are not logical. Secondly making you child choose to take a side in divorce is 100 not healthy.

Grimy@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 22:47 next collapse

I would get mad at my tv if it cheated on my mother? Kind of does feel like a reality show with the father cheating, kicking his wife out and bringing in his affaire partner so they can be a happy family against with the new substitute.

What a joke comment.

al_Kaholic@lemmynsfw.com on 03 Jun 2025 23:05 collapse

You’re the type of person who gets mad your significant other cheated in your dream. So much personal projections in the novella you crafted about this guys family, I’m sure you got all the facts Detective Grimy.

Grimy@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 23:53 collapse

dO yOu GeT mAd At ThE tV aS weLl??

al_Kaholic@lemmynsfw.com on 04 Jun 2025 01:30 collapse

It’s extra funny to me that you don’t understand that I was insinuating that your intelligence was to dull to differentiate reality from a broadcast sitcom.

Grimy@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 2025 02:01 collapse

Lol, I got what you meant, it’s literally the rest of the comment. It took me a few though, you kind of said it in a silly way. It also brings nothing to the conversation, hence why I’m mirroring your bad attitude.

al_Kaholic@lemmynsfw.com on 04 Jun 2025 03:00 collapse

I don’t have a bad attitude, I merely suggest that life isn’t as black and white as you so badly desire that it is blinding and binding you unto a zealous fanatic.

Grimy@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 2025 03:11 collapse

I don’t have a bad attitude, I merely suggest

I was insinuating that your intelligence was too* dull

Pick a lane.

al_Kaholic@lemmynsfw.com on 04 Jun 2025 11:17 collapse

I’m going with a third option. I can have a great attitude and think you’re a moron. It happens every day.<img alt="" src="https://lemmynsfw.com/pictrs/image/92612bf7-3479-40f4-bc46-23f7483b2811.jpeg">

daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Jun 2025 12:28 collapse

Tell me one thing.

Is that much better to find out that your husband is leaving you for other person by his word before it happens rather than a time after it happened by yourself?

For my understanding most of the pain comes not for the lie, but for the fact that the people you love no longer loves you back and it’s leaving you. And you cannot force love or cohabitation to anyone.

Grimy@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 22:49 collapse

I’m assuming his mom found out after the fact, nothing the OP said when I commented pointed to the opposite.

Also, regardless if he told her or if she found out by herself, there is no question that the cheater is the asshole in this situation. Admitting to an affair doesnt suddenly make it okay or take away the pain.

daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 04 Jun 2025 06:32 collapse

What I mean is that the level of pain would be similar if he would have not cheated and would just have left her, and after leaving her he would have started another relationship. No cheating at all involved.

Grimy@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 2025 07:22 collapse

Sorry I misunderstood. In that case, cheating definitely hurts more I would say. It’s more of a betrayal then a break up imo. Its a bit like the difference between having 10$ stolen and losing 10$, or the difference between scratching your car on a branch and having someone key it. Depending on the person’s social circle, it’s a lot more humiliating being cheated on.

There’s also stds or just the fact that your significant other might have slept with someone else a few hours ago and then climbs in bed and has relations with you right after. And we are talking about 20 years of marriage in this case, I can’t imagine how disrespectful it must feel.

Both scenarios suck thought.

lurch@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 10:21 next collapse

I think you should consider your mom is very hurt right now and my be overreacting by pulling you into the fight because of that. However, a cheater isn’t a good role model and neither is the destroyer of marriages. She got that right.

IMO you should suggest a compromise, like staying with him, but berating him and his mistress from time to time and should also be transparent about it, so they know it’s due punishment and a compromise for not leaving him.

andrewta@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 10:50 next collapse

Tell your mom you and her need to go to a therapist. Maybe a therapist can help to figure out how to move forward. Then tell your dad the same thing.

Maybe some of what was going on behind the scene will come out.

No one on lemmy will be able to give you a good idea of what to do or how to move forward.

I mean, look at what everybody is saying. Really read it. They’re all basically saying, make a decision without all the knowledge. There might one or two are saying something else, but I may have missed them.

Some are saying go live with your mom well that’s making a decision. That’s picking a side. Some are saying stay with your dad. It isn’t between you and your dad , it’s between your dad and your mom. But again that’s making a decision without all the knowledge.

Social media will give you a reactionary view in general. A therapist will sit you down and ask questions of not only you but also your mom and your dad. Then you have a better idea of what is going on. You may not have all the picture but at least you have an idea.

Chee_Koala@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 11:18 next collapse

My dad tried this same trick and wanted to influence my relationship with my mom (who had an affair). I told him I understand his feelings but that he could never talk that way to me again or I would cut him out of my life immediately. This is my mom you’re talking about.

I can’t have other folks then myself decide who I interact with. It’s not like I’m taking sides or feel great about her actions, but I wasn’t gonna stop seeing her because it hurts someone else.

I never was that direct with my parents before, but it felt like if that line would be crossed it would all come crumbling down.

surewhynotlem@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 11:22 next collapse

He lied, snuck around, and betrayed his wife. You think he won’t do the same to you? Interesting…

Labtec6@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 12:58 collapse

The end result is, based on what I can see what OP posted, his mom may not be that great but he’s just like his dad and doesn’t seem to care much about her. He will probably cheat on his partner too based on his attitude.

Zerlyna@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 11:33 next collapse

I feel you. I went through a similar ordeal 30 years ago with my dad. You should not be in the middle. It’s your parents business about their marriage. Therapy is good suggestion from others.

[deleted] on 03 Jun 2025 11:40 next collapse
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beejboytyson@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 12:16 next collapse

Shitty men marry shitty women and have shitty kids.

Ah the circle of life.

Vetinari@reddthat.com on 03 Jun 2025 12:59 collapse

We are talking about the OP. Don’t try and make this thread about yourself.

beejboytyson@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 13:32 collapse

Same

CoffeeJunkie@lemmy.cafe on 03 Jun 2025 12:38 next collapse

…fuck…that is very hard. This is not your relationship, nor did you cheat, and their problems have now been made yours(ish). I’m sorry you’re caught up in this.

That said, your mom raises some excellent points & personally I’d be inclined to live with her. She is correct. But we must also acknowledge that she is way too close to this situation & is blinded by hurt, rage; women are prone to making decisions based on emotion & not logic, reason. How much more when she is cheated on.

The fact remains, this man is your biological father. Personally, I think it is time to reassess the depth of your relationship due to his adultery. But to cut him out entirely, forever is kind of stupid, too. That is your father. You only get one father. Your relationship to him is different than your mother’s relationship to him. You can distance yourself & react appropriately to his impropriety without…completely destroying the ties of family. It will hurt your father’s feelings, and you know what? I think he should have his feelings hurt. A little. Understand, he threw your mother away, treated her very badly.

But what’s done is done. This is the family you have now, and you have to decide what is right for you. If you don’t leave your father & distance yourself at least a little, she’s right, you do condone his actions & you’re hurting your relationship with your mother. If you care about that. But I would keep those lines open, and your mother will fuss, but explain to her that is your biological father & you have made the decision to keep in contact with him. That is your right, as his child.

Bo7a@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 2025 13:37 collapse

women are prone to making decisions based on emotion & not logic, reason.

LOL. GTFOH.

Sentau@discuss.tchncs.de on 03 Jun 2025 13:00 next collapse

OP you have given us way little information. How was your parents marriage before this blow up? Were you not close with your mother before? You mention you are close with your father but nothing about mother. Also were you upset or angry by the actions of your father? From the information you have shared (that you are staying with your dad and his mistress), it seems that you are not bothered by what is happening.

Now based on the limited information you have given, your father is clearly the guilty party here. He did something that is morally wrong. Hopefully you understand that. Your mom is very hurt and must feeling betrayed (slightly even by you because you chose to stay with your dad and his mistress). In that emotional state, she is making a unreasonable request to you (to go no contact with your dad). If you want a good relationship with mom, you will have sit down with her and reach an understanding and compromise with her. Maybe you can go to therapy with her like some other commenters suggested. One thing I am sure about is that if you side with father on everything, you will end up estranged from your mom.

ravigoter@jlai.lu on 03 Jun 2025 13:25 collapse

Their marriage was always hot and cold. I never had a great relationship with my mom. She’s a very judgemental/cold person. She hated my feminine behaviour/preferences growing up and still does and used to berate me for that. She didn’t support me when I came out as gay. My dad always supported me. In a way, I’m glad their marriage finally broke down. Life at home is so nice and peaceful now without her around.

barneypiccolo@lemm.ee on 03 Jun 2025 13:38 next collapse

Stick to your guns OP. People here are judging your Dad for cheating, but it sounds like your Mom has been actively alienating everyone around her for years. People who make life difficult for those around them will eventually find themselves alone. People eventually stop dealing with their bullshit, and move on in life. It sounds like you and your Dad decided to move in a less stressful, more fulfilling direction. He found love, and you found peace, while your Mom wants to continue sowing discord, drama, and chaos in your lives. I don’t blame you for rejecting her efforts, and choosing peace.

KeenFlame@feddit.nu on 04 Jun 2025 09:15 collapse

No, no, he cheated. If only he was open with it, it would be okay. But this is disgusting instead. Rather a honest asshole than an eye servant. Eventually, with this attitude you will succumb to stress and fall apart. Be honest instead. Before then, you can’t even work on not being an asshole.

a_wild_mimic_appears@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 04 Jun 2025 10:54 collapse

I don’t fully agree with you, we don’t have enough details. From what i’ve read mom could have been abusive towards dad (at least emotionally), and that makes doing everything in the open pretty scary. I’d forgive someone who cheated to get out of an abusive situation.

KeenFlame@feddit.nu on 04 Jun 2025 13:39 collapse

Yes, you are correct but it seems very unlikely that he ran to his young assistant for help instead of some other trustee and then got in a secret relationship by accident.

YesButActuallyMaybe@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 2025 15:01 next collapse

What I realized way too late is that my parents are human and humans are inherently stupid. They got their fucked up understanding of how relationships should work from their fucked up parents. You are an adult and you can make your own independent decisions, don’t let anyone power play you into feeling like an obedient child.

Some people are only meant to be together for so long and if the outcome of that relationship is you then it was worth it? Now move on and do something you like

Your mom needs therapy

kwedd@feddit.nl on 03 Jun 2025 16:20 next collapse

She hated my feminine behaviour/preferences growing up and still does and used to berate me for that. She didn’t support me when I came out as gay.

So she never accepted you as you are and didn’t support you when you needed her most? Your dad’s no saint, but if I were in your position, I’d sooner end contact with my mother than my father.

Sentau@discuss.tchncs.de on 03 Jun 2025 17:16 next collapse

Well if the that is case, there is no reason to compromise to have a relationship with your mom. Being with your dad is the way better option for you (since he loves you and you love him) and maybe it is the best option for everybody involved.

Still I hope you understand that at some level what your dad did was morally wrong. Irrespective how crappy things were, the correct order would have been to seek divorce before hooking up/dating somebody else. Learn from the mistake he made.

Cenzorrll@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 19:07 next collapse

Sounds like this is a no brainer to me. I’m a step parent to a brilliant kid who’s father is a complete narcissist, and I’ll tell you this, if a parent tells you to dislike the other parent, don’t trust them without evidence. Make your own decision, and listen to the parent that let’s you make it. A caveat is that a better parent probably won’t tell you all of the bad things they’ve had to deal with, and it’s important to remember that everyone is human and makes mistakes.

It’s ok to have a relationship with both parents, and it sounds like you know which parent to trust. That doesn’t mean you need to cut your mom out of your life, you just get to have a different kind of relationship with her. I’m a fan of honesty, if either parent does something you don’t like, tell them so and ask them to stop. If they won’t, you’ve got a real good answer as to who you want to spend your time with.

daggermoon@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 19:24 collapse

I’m very sorry to hear you’re going through this. I’m glad you have a father who accepts you for who you are.

MerrySkeptic@sh.itjust.works on 03 Jun 2025 13:12 next collapse

Ask her to imagine the following: let’s say she ends up being really close to your spouse one day, like she couldn’t have imagined a better pick. The two of them become super close, but as the years go on, for whatever reason, you end up having an affair. Now ask her if she would go no contact with you because maintaining a relationship would condone your actions and ignore your spouse’s suffering.

If she says no, then maybe she could see a bit of where you’re coming from. If she says yes, well then I would wonder if a lack of empathy was part of the reason your dad sought a relationship elsewhere (not that that justifies cheating).

Owlboi@lemm.ee on 03 Jun 2025 13:38 next collapse

I can see where your mom is coming from. She got cheated on and to her it looks like you still support him despite the awful things he did.

If he was Wifebeater and beat her instead, would you still support or “be friends” with your dad? probably not right? So why does Physical abuse cross the line but not emotional abuse?

sunzu2@thebrainbin.org on 03 Jun 2025 15:02 collapse

Bad take

vxx@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 13:47 next collapse

I get that she is hurt. To make you end your relationship with your dad is still toxic.

I get the feeling it’s less about you then her wanting to hurt him as well.

Darleys_Brew@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 2025 13:48 next collapse

There’s a lot of assumptions and excuses for cheating in this thread. Mum shouldn’t be getting involved in whether you see your dad. Dad shouldn’t have cheated on mum.

steeznson@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 15:36 next collapse

You should do whatever you want to. Don’t let your mother guilt trip you into cutting off a family member due to beef she has with him (regardless of whether it’s justified).

It’s frustrating to hear about parents treating their children like pawns in a break-up. I can see the temptation but it’s extremely unfair. Regardless of what people will tell you on lemmy/reddit losing contact with a parent is not a normal thing, even if some people have cut off their family members in extreme circumstances.

morphballganon@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 15:37 next collapse

Your Mom is hurting and lashing out.

You don’t need to fight her battles for her. But you can support her by spending time with her. If she doesn’t appreciate that, you can stop.

swordgeek@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 2025 19:41 next collapse

I have very very little respect for people who cheat in a marriage instead of getting out; but it is clearly not your mom’s choice to make.

If you’re closer to your dad, then stay with him. Explain to your mom that you’re not trying to attack her, but choosing your own well-being first (as you should).

Pnut@lemm.ee on 03 Jun 2025 19:50 next collapse

If you’re close with your dad you can ask him why. He has to explain himself. It’s likely he will explain things that he didn’t want to. There is the issue. If they filed, civilly, for divorce and then this happened, I know it would still be upsetting, but he did things in the wrong order. You can love someone who’s done something shitty. However, it’s their responsibility to provide you with an explanation. Just don’t make the same mistakes he did. Ever again. I’m so sorry. Please go out and get a nice supper. It might help.

some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org on 03 Jun 2025 20:55 next collapse

You’re fine. Your mom has legitimate pain but she’s no right to pressure you to end your relationship with your dad.

Freshparsnip@lemm.ee on 03 Jun 2025 21:29 next collapse

What your dad did was wrong and it’s understandable your mom would want to end her relationship with him, however that is between them and you should not have to end your relationship with him over it

scarabic@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 2025 22:15 next collapse

Your choices, as you’ve presented them, are so extreme. Cut your dad off forever and move out, or… do nothing?

Let’s set your mom’s demands aside for a second. Do you have any reaction to him cheating on his wife? How do you feel about that?

You should act based on how you feel about it. And if your mom is incredibly wounded by it, that can absolutely be a factor in how you feel. “Wow dad you really hurt mom. That sucks.”

I’d think that cheating on your mom should have SOME effect on you. You say your relationship with Dad hasn’t changed. Is that true? Or is it only true in comparison to your mom’s extreme demands?

Basically, stop playing this like it’s all black or all white and realize that you have a million ways to react to this situation that are in the middle somewhere.

You’re not a bad person for not moving out immediately. You actually might be a bad person if you have absolutely no problem with the cheating. But you can disapprove of the cheating and still have a good relationship with your dad.

I’ll tell you right now that your Dad has rediscovered sex after aging a bunch and perhaps feeling like he’d never experience it again. That is a powerful experience for him and he won’t easily cast it aside. If you value your relationship with him, I wouldn’t try to take that away from him. He’ll react like a dog when you try to take away the steak it’s eating.

But you can disapprove of the cheating and still have a good relationship with your dad. That seemed worth saying twice. He should listen to you if you think it was wrong. He should listen to you if you are upset that he hurt your mom.

If you really just absolutely don’t care about your mother or the cheating… I don’t know what to say about that. It seems pretty cold and inhuman.

phoenixz@lemmy.ca on 04 Jun 2025 00:28 next collapse

No you’re not.

Cheating doesn’t automatically make a person bad, it makes a person a human being. Mist people cheat, and I’d say that most “cheating sessions” happen without the spouse knowing. It happens and usually there are underlying reasons ranging from “he just really really likes sex” to “they never have sex together” to a host of other reasons. I don’t think that the reason “he’s an asshole” is the real reason, ever.

Having said that; even if your dad cheated just and only just because he wanted to be an asshole to your mom, that still doesn’t mean that anything should have to change between you and your dad.

Your dad is your dad. Anyone trying to forcibly change that is raising a host of red flags.

I understand your mother feels hurt right now but if she isn’t able to see beyond that hurt what your best interests are then maybe she is actually the problem, not your father.

Fondots@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 2025 02:31 collapse

Mist people cheat,

Assuming that’s supposed to be “most people”

There have been a lot of studies on this over the years, and the data is of course easy to skew because a lot of people are going to be reluctant to admit to their cheating, or people having different ideas about what constitutes “cheating” but every study I can find that seems credible, it seems to hover at more like 25% of people cheat, give or take maybe about 10%

Even when you look for people who have experienced a partner cheating on them most of the studies I can find have it at below 50%

You can get into the weeds and probably find some cases where most people in certain demographics cheat if you want to cherry-pick your data a bit.

So no, most people don’t cheat.

phoenixz@lemmy.ca on 07 Jun 19:29 collapse

Like Wikipedia says: <citation needed>

I’m sure studies haven been done, and I’d love to see them.

Where, though, what demographics? What types of people, men, women, rich, poor, what language, what culture, what ethnicity? All of those matter.

I can tell you right now that Muslims would probably cheat less, mostly because of less opportunities and the extreme punishments involved. Mexicans, on the other hand, different story. Having lived there for two decades in different cities over the country, having had friends in different layers, rich, poor, brown, white… I can tell you from personal anecdotal experience there that 80+% cheats or has cheated. You can meet a new guy and presume he has cheated or will cheat. Some guys cheat weekly, some women cheat weekly. There are fuck hotels within a 500 meter radius in whatever city you are. Cheating is also seen differently than in Muslim countries.

Yeah, loads of people cheat and if you really believe it’s only 10% then I got a bridge to sell you.

mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 04 Jun 2025 02:07 next collapse

No. Your mom is hurt, and probably feeling betrayed from multiple fronts. First from her husband having the affair, and now from you choosing to stay with him. But that doesn’t make her words accurate, nor does it make them acceptable.

She actually needs to be really careful in how she brooches the subject going forward, because this is a clear cut attempt at parental alienation. It’s a big issue in divorce proceedings; If one parent tries to alienate the child(ren) from the other, then the courts can step in and use that against the offending parent in the divorce.

Basically, courts recognize that divorce brings out the worst in people, and they don’t want children being caught in the middle or used as weapons/leverage. If it gets too bad, the court will even appoint a lawyer specifically for you/any siblings, whose entire focus is on your wellbeing. Because the court basically recognizes that during divorce, chances are very good that the parents will act out of spite instead of the child(ren)’s best interest. So to protect the kids, the court essentially appoints a lawyer to represent the kids.

That lawyer isn’t focused on which parent gets the bigger slice of the assets, or who pays alimony, except to determine how that would affect your living conditions. All that lawyer does is fight for your best interest. And when it comes time to decide who you stay with, your opinion does factor into it. They’ll weigh your opinion more heavily if you’re older, but it does play a large part in who ends up being your primary guardian.

Your dad had an affair, and torched the relationship your parents had. That sucks. But you’re not a bad person for wanting to stay with him regardless. Your mom needs to do some soul searching, and rethink how she talks about your dad in front of you in the future.

My dad was an addict and had multiple affairs. My mom never even told me about them until I was much older, and she did everything in her power to avoid talking shit, because she wanted to keep him in my life. The court wanted to totally end his custody, but she fought for supervised visits instead. Because she recognized that if I wanted to end my relationship with him, it should be my choice, not hers. And I respect the hell out of her for that. Because it meant that when I finally decided to cut contact, it was for my own reasons.

KeenFlame@feddit.nu on 04 Jun 2025 09:10 collapse

What a dope mom, congrats

Clent@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 04 Jun 2025 07:49 next collapse

When someone gives an ultimatum of “me or them” (a or b), the best choice is almost always never a. It is the least restrictive choice.

If there were an actual reason to not choose b, the best choice is likely neither.

I understand the argument that “she is struggling” but the moment they make their struggle your struggle they are choosing to spread the pain rather than deal with it. This is never acceptable in a parent child relationship, more so if the child is a minor.

KeenFlame@feddit.nu on 04 Jun 2025 09:09 next collapse

I don’t get how nothing changed for you? Maybe you’re next if a hot new son comes along? Anyway, ofc she shouldn’t demand that but it’s totally understandable when you’ve been betrayed by your family. Really, go to her. She doesn’t choose, but your dad is a major asshole that isn’t honest with his closest people. It’s not good for you to absorb that kind of life. It will punish you your entire life. Yeah. I’m giving you my opinion. You don’t need to do what your mom says, but if you don’t take care of her now she could be ruined forever. I don’t know you, but I know that you deserve a better role model than someone that isn’t man enough to admit he likes a younger girl. Also probably get you therapy. It is more important now than ever probably, and make sure your mom does too if she doesn’t flip back. I’m not saying don’t talk to dad anymore, but jesus christ he’s got a new kid to be with, and you just got a job. I don’t know your age but not stepping up now could be much more devastating than maturing too early. Just trust. People with no respect for themselves will never respect you and vice versa. You make tour own reality.

LordWiggle@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 2025 09:21 next collapse

Your mom shouldn’t use you in the fight with your dad. This is something which happens often, but ends up traumatizing the child.

No matter the fight they have, they should always be there for you as a parent and leave their stuff between them. You are not a pawn, you’re their kid. She’s your mother, he’s your father and nothing is going to change that.

detun3d@lemm.ee on 04 Jun 2025 09:27 next collapse

When you choose to forgive someone you’re not necessarily forgiving their mistake. It’s not condoning, it’s giving someone another chance to do better. Forgiving and protecting against risks isn’t mutually exclusive, it just takes more effort to do both.

ComradePenguin@lemmy.ml on 04 Jun 2025 10:34 next collapse

People sometimes cheat, not okay, but it happens. Most likely the marriage wasn’t going so well, and he got some attention he wanted from someone else. Your mother is hurt and angry. But she does not have the right to deny your continued contact and bond with your dad.

There is no good reason mentioned in your post to end your relationship with your dad to end.

However, how the divorce is handled is more important in my opinion. If he in some major way makes sure she gets a bad unfair deal, then things are different. If he not only cheats, but also does not share in a fair manner, then he is really hurting your mother in a way that is harder to accept.

2ugly2live@lemmy.world on 04 Jun 2025 11:20 collapse

I don’t think it’s wrong for you to want a relationship with your dad, but it is weird that you kind of brush over the cheating. Your father had an affair, does that not affect you? You don’t even look at him a little different? Do you not understand why your mom is lashing out or why she’s as hurt as she is? Again, I do not think her request is reasonable, but this woman, from what I’m getting from the post, was cheated on, publicly enough that it was a big scandal, lost her husband, her home, and her son. While everyone is having a great time with the mistress, she’s seemingly alone with no one in her corner telling her how what she went through was hurtful and offering her some comfort. You’re like, “he’s my best friend, so I don’t really care, him cheating on my mother didn’t change anything to me, it’s not like he cheated on me.”

Relationships are complicated. I don’t know what your relationship with your mom is, but if she wasn’t abusive and you do have some affection for her (even if she isn’t your best friend), I would talk to her. Both of you should explain how you’re feeling. Maybe she wants you with her because she thinks you like being around her as much as she likes being around you, maybe she thinks you two are closer than you actually are, or maybe she’s nuts and is making one final attempt to control. But your mom as seemingly lost everything important to her by putting her foot down against cheating while everyone is like, “finally, she’s gone. Just swap her out with a younger version.” I don’t know a lot of people who wouldn’t be hurt by that.