If betrayal could be bottled, this story would fill an ocean. A woman discovered her husband’s string of affairs not because he confessed, but because she landed in the doctor’s office with a devastating diagnosis: gonorrhea that had already caused complications. While she pieced her life back together and raised their three children, her ex-husband married his affair partner.
Fast forward a decade, and the same man turned up at her door asking her to convince their now-grown kids to embrace him and his new wife as a family unit.
Her response? A slammed door and words he clearly wasn’t ready to hear. Was she too harsh, or finally free of carrying the weight of his mistakes? Want the messy details? Let’s dive in.
One woman’s blunt refusal to help her cheating ex-husband reconnect with their adult kids or validate his new wife’s role led to a heated clash and family fallout






















What stands out here is the ex-husband’s attempt to rewrite the story of responsibility. OP was betrayed, contracted a sexually transmitted infection (STI) with lasting health consequences, and had to rebuild her life while raising three kids. Now, years later, her ex wants her to act as a bridge between him, his wife, and the children he alienated through his own choices.
Research shows that untreated gonorrhea can cause pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), which is linked to chronic pain and infertility (CDC – Pelvic Inflammatory Disease).
It’s notable that Cathy’s reported miscarriages and stillbirths may align with these risks if she was also infected at some point, though we can’t know for certain. Either way, the damage to OP’s health was direct, and her lack of sympathy now reflects lived harm, not spite.
Parental alienation is often a contested subject, but here the kids themselves appear to have distanced from their father.
According to a 2020 Journal of Divorce & Remarriage study, adult children of divorce frequently cite manipulative behavior and emotional pressure as reasons for reduced contact with a parent. Forcing OP to intervene now would ignore that her children are independent adults making their own decisions.
Family systems theory suggests that when an abuser reframes themselves as the victim, they often rely on guilt or appeals to compassion from the person they harmed. Dr. Jennifer Freyd, who coined the concept of “betrayal trauma,” explains: “The injured person’s silence or compliance becomes a way to keep the peace, but it often allows the betrayer to avoid accountability.”
This applies here: John is seeking OP’s cooperation not to repair with her, but to legitimize Cathy as a co-mother and regain access to milestones like weddings and grandchildren. That is not OP’s responsibility.
A constructive response isn’t about punishing or helping John, it’s about setting firm boundaries. OP has every right to say: “Your relationship with the kids is between you and them. I won’t interfere either way.” This keeps her out of his orbit while making clear she won’t sabotage him but equally won’t prop him up.
Here’s the comments of Reddit users:
These users voted NTA, slamming John’s entitlement and speculating his STD may have caused Cathy’s fertility issues



This trio urged blocking John, Cathy, and his sister



This duo noted the potential link between John’s STD and Cathy’s miscarriages




These commenters focused on the kids’ autonomy, noting their rejection of John and Cathy’s pressure to play “mom”




This wasn’t just an ex showing up with sad puppy eyes. It was a man who had cheated, lied, and left a trail of damage asking his ex-wife to sweep up the shards. OP’s refusal may sound harsh, but sometimes drawing a hard line is the healthiest choice.
So what do you think? Should she have softened for the sake of future grandkids, or was shutting the door the only answer after years of betrayal?








