Woman considers ending marriage immediately after the honeymoon after checking husband’s phone

Woman considers ending marriage immediately after the honeymoon after checking husband’s phone

BORED PANDA

In healthy relationships, trust, openness, and respect are fundamental. They’re non-negotiable! There’s nothing that erodes trust quicker than the sneaking suspicion that your partner might be cheating on you. For some people, emotional cheating is just as bad as physical infidelity.

A distraught and newly married internet user, u/didntknowpickingaus, asked the r/TwoHotTakes community for advice after considering ending her marriage right after the honeymoon.

Keep scrolling to read the full story, to see what advice the internet gave the author, and for an all-important update. Meanwhile, Bored Panda has reached out to u/didntknowpickingaus via Reddit, and we’ll update the article once we hear back from her.

It can be incredibly hard to rebuild trust once it’s been broken. For some people, emotional affairs are akin to physical ones

One woman desperately wanted the internet’s input on what she should do after she suspected her husband was chatting with another woman

“Would I Be The Jerk If I Ended My Marriage On The Day We Got Back From Our Honeymoon?”

Privacy and secrecy are very different. The former can be healthy while the latter is linked to feelings of guilt and shame

The author of the viral post opened up about how she and her husband had an open phone policy in their relationship. It’s not something that all couples will be familiar with, but it essentially means that both partners agree to give each other access to each other’s phones.

That means being 100% honest about any social media conversations, text messages, emails, and even search histories. On the one hand, this promotes total openness. On the other hand, it implies that there might potentially be an undercurrent of distrust in the relationship.

After all, having some privacy in your life isn’t a sin. Privacy is very different from secrecy. Broadly speaking, when it comes to secrets, you shouldn’t feel guilty about keeping them if they don’t directly affect your partner. It’s your choice in those scenarios.

However, if it does impact your significant other, you should be open about it. A bit of empathy goes a long way. Imagine yourself in your partner’s shoes and consider how you’d feel about certain information being kept from you.

Meanwhile, if there are feelings of shame and guilt associated with a piece of info, then you’re very likely being secretive (rather than simply private) by keeping it under wraps.

Once broken, trust takes a lot of consistent effort over a long period to rebuild. The bigger the breach of trust, the more time it will take to fix.

Open phone policies have their fair share of upsides and downsides. They can work for some couples but not others

Therapist Lea Trageser told ‘She Knows’ that it’s up to the couple to decide the boundaries for their open phone policy. Everything depends on your relationship dynamics and what you feel the most comfortable with.

Meanwhile, licensed marriage and family therapist Laurie Singer explained that for some couples, sharing passwords and access to each other’s devices can build a stronger relationship. In some cases, it can be a temporary policy after a breach of trust.

That said, these arrangements aren’t for everybody. There are certain drawbacks. For one, open phone policies are an invasion of privacy. Not everyone’s comfortable with that, even if they’re committed, honest with their partners, respect them, and have no intention of ever cheating on them.

Moreover, these policies can indicate a lack of trust, and some couples can end up weaponizing them. It can all lead to resentment rather than a stronger relationship.

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