#1

She saved up the same amount of cash I spent on her engagement ring and surprised me with my dream motorcycle. Dream bike, dream wife, dream life.
#2

#3

Having secrets isn't as black and white as it may seem. We might be quick to judge others who keep secrets from their significant others and don't fess up until marriage. But there might be reasons why they're keeping a thing or two from their prospective spouse. Here are some possible explanations why a partner would keep secrets:
- They don't want to hurt your feelings. Maybe they're afraid the secret might hurt you and think that not telling you is the better choice.
- Shame and fear of being judged. Perhaps the secret is so big and personal that they're only willing to share it with someone with whom they're spending the rest of their life: a spouse, for example.
#4

#5

#6

I just came home one day and there he was sitting in my favorite pair of panties and my silk robe just playing video games.
Now we sit around together playing video games in our panties. It's actually really great.
- Avoidance. Some people just can't deal with difficult conversations. They hope a conflict will resolve on its own or until the secret comes to light on its own.
- Trust issues. Although we're supposed to trust our spouses with our lives (in sickness and in health, right?), some people have trouble being an open book.
- Fear of breaking up. In some cases, people keep secrets because they're afraid that the truth might mean the end of a relationship. Infidelity is often an example of this.
#7

Don't marry someone who is bad with money.
#8

#9

We dated for 5 years before we were married, and during the first year of our marriage, I found a stash of incontinence pants in her cupboard when I was hanging her clothes up. I asked her about it, expecting to hear that she has occasional accidents, as I knew her bladder was weak, but I never expected the extent of it. She burst into tears and confessed.
She was 16 when I met her, and he had been mixing regular underwear with incontinence pants for years. She would wear them when we were together, but change into regular underwear when we would sleep together.
She always carried a bag with her, quite a large one, and she would take it everywhere with her. I was never allowed near it, as she didn't want me finding her change of clothes in there.
On our wedding day, she had her sister keep a bag with her. She was wearing incontinence pants during the ceremony, for the full day, and she would go with her sister to the toilet to change occasionally. At night, she changed into regular underwear.
There was a few times when she either ran out of her incontinence pants and peed through her regular panties, or couldn't change in time and overflowed. Once in my car she peed in her already full pants and they overflowed onto the seat. Another time she ran out of her incontinence pants while on holiday, and would occassionally run back to the hotel with pee running down her leg. I found out later this was because she was wearing regular underwear.
I was not bothered at all. I still love her, and I understand her not telling me, as she was embarrassed by it. It's her little quirk and I love her for it.
People may need time to share big, serious secrets like childhood trauma, even with their spouses. But when we keep smaller, more trivial secrets in a marriage, they add up with time and can erode trust and intimacy between spouses.
Relationship expert Judith Sill, PhD, claims that every petty lie and secret alienates us from our partners. "However trivial the distortion, every time you mask yourself to avoid conflict, you take a small step away from your partner," she explains. "Emotional distance does not foster great love," she concludes.
#10

Edit: spelling.
#12

We met in high school and married in college, been together for 22 years. An odd couple, I was (am) very much the social introvert and science geek, she was (is) the extreme extrovert, the popular girl, a former cheerleader! How in the world did we click? But we did and two decades, two kids, a mortgage and a minivan later we're still going strong.
But... over the years she started to let slip some things she never revealed during our courtship. Initially she didn't care for my nerdy movies or TV shows but over time she'd pause more and more while walking through the room with STTNG playing, or would go "we don't hafta see the latest Meg Ryan movie, lets go see your sci-fi action flick". At first I thought it was just her humoring me, maybe even my building up her tolerance to something she previously didn't care for, but over time it became clear she was covering up something that was always there - she loved Star Wars, she loved ET, she loved Back to the Future, but she kept it hidden because the 80s were a different time for nerds, they hadn't taken over the culture like they have now and she was fitting in with her crowd.
Now, she has a bigger collection of Darth Vader memorabilia than any of my nerd brethren proudly displayed in our house. I still poke her about her coming out of the nerd closet, and now I understand a bit better why we clicked as well as we did.
However, Sill also notes that sharing every thought that comes into your head can do more damage than good. There's a balance between knowing what to share and what to keep quiet about. Sill believes in "shielding your mate from the parts of yourself that he or she finds most difficult to love." As relationship expert Sheri Stritof puts it, only share secrets that are "kind, helpful, honest, and necessary."
#13

Edit - by hours I meant around 2 hours while I tried to sleep not the whole drive and this is just an example. He's weird 100% of the time now. Right now he's holding the youngest kid going "bluoop" and sticking his tongue out over and over and over again. He's a good dad.
#14

#15

We divorced after 3 years. She was a lovely woman and treated me very kindly, knowing I had no idea and believing I was horrified by the circumstances. She wasn't surprised at his duplicity and later regretted not warning me about her son, but, she had hoped I'd be a "fix" for him. I wasn't.
#16

#17

She threatened to sue him and instead settled for a single payment of £4k, which she proceeded to use as deposit money on a house with the guy she'd been having the affair with.
My SO made her sign a form saying she won't have anything to do with him ever again, yet she still feels the needs to attempt to add me on facebook on fake accounts, regardless of me blocking her.
Oh, and to make matters worse, she's a f*****g police officer!
NUTS.. just feel bad on my hubby for losing out to such a c**t.
#18

Also, she told her sister that she only married me because she knew I'd be a stable provider and father, not because she loved me.
Yeah... That hurt
I've got more too!
#19

#20

I can't believe she did not run away.



