She finally rekindled the flame with ex-fiancé Jacob. Then the truth detonated: for weeks he’d believed her business partner Nick (married, expecting a kid) was her live-in boyfriend, and Jacob was happily playing secret sidepiece.
He never asked, never blinked, just accepted the role of “the other man” in a romance that only existed in his head. Now she’s staring at the guy she almost married, wondering how someone can love you that much yet be totally okay stealing you from a nonexistent relationship.
Woman debates ending rekindled romance after discovering boyfriend happily played “mistress” under a wild misunderstanding.

























OP is wrestling with a gut punch: the man she adores was willing to date her while believing she was betraying someone else. That stings worse than the misunderstanding itself.
Jacob’s silence when he thought she had a partner reveals more about his boundaries than any intentional act of cheating ever could.
Many commenters pointed out the obvious communication fail (calling Nick “partner” without the “business” prefix is a recipe for disaster in 2025), but OP’s deeper fear is valid: if he’s okay being the “other guy” once, what stops him from being okay with it again, only next time with someone who actually is taken?
Psychotherapist Holly Roberts, from the relationship charity Relate, explains the raw edge of these moments in a 2022 Guardian article: “When you open up to a friend, you make yourself vulnerable to that person.”
Though OP’s story is romantic, not platonic, the principle slices deep here. Her vulnerability in rekindling with Jacob, only to learn he saw her as capable of deceit, mirrors that exposed feeling.
It’s not just about the mix-up, it’s the emotional bare-all that leaves her questioning if he truly sees her values, especially after sharing her painful family history with infidelity.
Statistics back up OP’s unease. A 2022 study published in the Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy found that individuals who had previously engaged in or been willing to engage in “mate-poaching” (pursuing someone already in a relationship) were 2-3 times more likely to cheat in future relationships themselves.
The researchers concluded: “Willingness to violate relationship boundaries once predicts willingness to do so again.”
Jacob may have been acting out of desperate love rather than serial side-piece energy, but the red flag is still flapping proudly in the wind.
The healthiest path forward? A brutally honest conversation (which OP says she plans to have). She deserves to ask: “If you really thought I was with Nick, why were you okay staying?”
His answer will tell her everything she needs to know about his values. No judgment, just clarity.
Relationships can absolutely survive misunderstandings. This one might even become their funniest “how we almost broke up” anecdote, but they rarely survive unspoken deal-breakers.
Take a look at the comments from fellow users:
Some people see it as a massive (but funny) misunderstanding caused by poor communication and advise talking it out first.
![Woman Reconnects With Ex-Fiancé Only To Discover He Happily Played 'Mistress' In Massive Misunderstanding [Reddit User] − Hahaha!! Sorry, but this is actually a pretty funny miscommunication story.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1763798198951-1.webp)















Some people say his willingness to be the “mistress” shows how much he loves OP and that breaking up over this would be an overreaction.







Some people focus on OP’s hurt feelings and say it’s valid to end things if she can’t get past him believing she’d cheat.
![Woman Reconnects With Ex-Fiancé Only To Discover He Happily Played 'Mistress' In Massive Misunderstanding [Reddit User] − You wouldn’t be breaking up with him for cheating you’d be breaking up with him for whatever this was.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1763798173764-1.webp)



Some people think the situation raises red flags about his own boundaries or past behavior regarding relationships.




Sometimes love isn’t derailed by actual cheating, but by discovering your partner would have been fine if you had cheated. Our Redditor now has to decide: was Jacob’s silence born of selfless devotion or a flexible moral compass?
Can a hilarious misunderstanding become the foundation for a stronger relationship, or is it the universe handing her an exit sign wrapped in awkward wrapping paper? Tell us in the comments: would you stay with someone who was ready to be your affair partner, even when there was no affair? Spill the tea!









