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Ex-Wife, Serially Cheating, Begs Ex-Husband To Reunite, He Firmly Refuses Her Suspicious Pleas For Another Chance

by Jeffrey Stone
December 2, 2025
in Social Issues

A guy, burned by serial betrayals – first affair at 2.5 years of marriage, then secret flings across three more – finally divorced his ex six months ago. Now she’s pleading with puppy-dog eyes and therapy promises, claiming her cheating “isn’t who she is.”

Heartbreak, failed reconciliation, and family loss fuel his firm stand for peace, despite guilt gnawing. Reddit’s hooked on this reality-TV twist, debating cold-hearted or self-preserving in a saga of red flags and unwanted sequels.

Ex-wife persuades her ex-husband to get back together after many of her affairs, the man firmly says “no”.

Ex-Wife, Serially Cheating, Begs Ex-Husband To Reunite, He Firmly Refuses Her Suspicious Pleas For Another Chance
Not the actual photo.

'AITAH for not wanting to get back with my now ex wife?'

Sorry for being a little long but the back story is important. My now ex wife and I divorced roughly six months ago.

Recently, she's been asking me, rather frequently, to move back in, to do couples therapy, and if we can start dating again.

I keep refusing to do any of the above.

Now, to the reason we divorced and why I'm not interested in getting back together.

Six years ago she had her first affair, we had been married 2.5 years.

I decided to do what I thought was the right thing and tried to save the marriage.

Going as far as accepting all the blame she placed on me for her actions.

The following couple years were rocky, but we managed to find some peace and mostly mend things.

Two years later, my father was diagnosed with cancer and eventually lost the battle.

I spent the following months focusing on my marriage (I spent as much time with my father while I could) and supporting (emotionally) my mother.

Fast forward 6-8 months, and I noticed my wife started to withdraw, started acting differently,

and started going out with "friends" a lot more than normal. I suspected she was cheating again but I couldn't find actual proof.

Flash forward to last fall. She comes back from a weekend with friends and says she wants a divorce.

I agreed because things never were the same after the first affair, and she had been acting distant again

and doing the same "suspicious" actions as before. Once we filed and the wheels were in motion,

we had a lot of conversations about the previous years, and as suspected, she had been cheating off and on for the last three years.

This brings us to the present, where I now know most of the truth and refuse to be with a serial cheater.

She keeps saying that's not who she is as a person, that I'm giving up on us/her, and that she regrets everything she's done in the past.

It's really messing with me mentally. I feel like an a__hole for putting myself first for once, and I feel like I'm being selfish.

I guess I'm just really looking for some unbiased opinions, AITAH?

Edit: I can't keep up with all the comments here and honestly didn't expect this much interaction. I'm going to answer some common questions.

1. Why did I even post this? I guess I was having a bad day and second guessing myself. Yes, I know how crazy that sounds.

2. Do we have kids? No kids, just a very old dog that's been there the entire relationship.

3. Why haven't I blocked her? Because I was trying to be civil and not completely lose a best friend.

I know she doesn't deserve that title after everything she's done. I also still have belongs in the house

and getting a storage unit isn't in the budget right now. Also, all my family and friends live in another state,

so keeping stuff there isn't really an option at the moment either.

A man filed for divorce after countless of times his ex wife cheated. Now she wanted them to get back together. He said no, undoubtedly.

In this Reddit story, the OP (original poster) forgave a bombshell affair early on, even shouldering blame to keep things afloat.

They patched up enough for a fragile peace, but then life threw a curveball: his dad’s cancer battle and eventual passing. Amid the grief, his wife pulled away, ramping up “girls’ nights” that screamed suspicion.

Come last fall, she drops the divorce bomb after a weekend getaway. Post-filing chats confirmed the gut punch – she’d been unfaithful on and off for three whole years.

Now, she’s all regrets and reconciliation pitches, claiming that’s “not her true self.” But actions speak louder, right? The OP’s refusal stems from exhaustion. He’s done being the safety net for someone else’s chaos.

Flip the script to her side, and you might see a woman in panic mode. Divorce isn’t the fairy-tale freedom some imagine. Solo living hits the wallet hard, and loneliness can creep in fast. Maybe she’s genuinely remorseful, viewing therapy as a magic eraser for past mistakes. Or perhaps it’s convenience talking: why start over when the old setup (stable, supportive hubby) is right there?

The OP, meanwhile, tried the forgiveness route once. It only invited round two. His guilt over “giving up” feels like classic nice-guy syndrome, but protecting your heart isn’t selfish, it’s survival.

Zoom out, and this mirrors broader relationship woes: infidelity’s ripple effects. According to a 2023 study by the Institute for Family Studies, about 20-25% of marriages experience cheating, with repeat offenders often citing unmet needs or thrill-seeking.

Yet reconciliation success hovers low. One Journal of Marital and Family Therapy report pegs it at under 20% long-term without massive changes. Here, the timing adds salt: straying during a partner’s grief is exactly emotional abandonment.

Relationship expert Dr. John Gottman, famed for his “love lab” research, noted on Greater Good Magazine: “Trust is built in very small moments, which I call ‘sliding door’ moments. In any interaction, there is a possibility of connecting with your partner or turning away from your partner.”

Apply that here: the ex’s “that’s not me” line dodges ownership, while the OP’s boundary-setting aligns with Gottman’s advice on self-respect. It’s a textbook case why one strike (let alone multiple) often means game over.

Neutral ground? If kids or shared assets complicated things, co-parenting therapy might warrant a chat. But with no little ones and just an ancient pup in the mix, full no-contact could be the kindest cut. Block, store belongings creatively, and lean on far-flung family via video calls. Ultimately, advice boils down to: date yourself first – gym, hobbies, new circles.

Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

Many insist the ex-wife is exactly who she showed herself to be.

Prestigious_Sir2856 − NTA. Not even close.

ProfPlumDidIt − That is EXACTLY who she is as a person. The only thing that's changed is that

she's realizing being single isn't as easy as she thought it would be.

She only wants you back so that she can go back to having affairs while using you to make the rest of her life easy and stable.

Don't fall for her b__lshit. Tell her bluntly that, if you wanted a cheating w__re, you could find one way better than her.

That she has nothing to offer that you want. NTA

NerdySwampWitch40 − NTA. She is your ex- wife for a reason. She asked for the divorce. She confessed to cheating on you repeatedly. T

hat is EXACTLY who she is as a person. Assuming there are no kids involved, for your mental health, it's probably time to cut all contact.

Put on your own oxygen mask first. Go live your life.

Some urge OP to prioritize himself and block contact.

DesertSong-LaLa − She worked hard earning her Serial title. If this is not what she is 'as a person', then what is she? -

NTA Yes, put yourself first after being emotionally and mentally damaged in your marriage.

You have beautiful life potential ahead. Make it a good one. Remember when you made yourself small and insignificant?

"Going as far as accepting all the blame she placed on me for her actions."

This did not make a difference so try something else like believing you matter.

You have value. She made a career of feeding you, "You don't." Reset this BS of feeling selfish. Best to you!

teresajs − NTA She doesn't want to be in a relationship with you. It's far more likely that she wants your financial support.

It's expensive to be a single person living on your own. She could have a very strong financial incentive to try to get you back.

If you don't have kids together, you don't need to ever talk to her again. Just block her. Go live your best life.

watchtower5960 − By the sounds of it, you don't have kids? If so, run. Don't even listen to her, you need to focus on moving forward, not backwards.

You gave therapy a try, you gave her another chance. You have no further obligations to her, especially after she asked for a divorce.

Some warn against reconciliation based on personal regret.

Impressive-Fee-16 − Tell her she is 6 years too late to that party.

Foxbur19 − NTA. Do not go back ever. I did and regret it. Not just because of the cheating (which was on both sides),

but because of how different we have become. We are many years down the track now and she has become financially and medically dependent on me.

I feel guilt whenever I think about leaving. I know my adult children would have trouble understanding as it would seem out of the blue.

So learn from me my friend. DO NOT GO BACK!

Some highlight her regret is about consequences, not actions.

djsherin − Imagine

1) cheating on your husband only for him to try to reconcile

2) cheating again

3) cheating after his father dies

4) initiating divorce

5) having the absolute, unadulterated gall to tell him that he is "giving up on us"

NTA. Of all the Felicias to get byed, she's the byeest

Revolutionary-Dog835 − She keeps saying that's not who she is as a person, that I'm giving up on us/her,

and that she regrets everything she's done in the past. It's really messing with me mentally.

I feel like an a__hole for putting myself first for once, and I feel like I'm being selfish.

1. She gave up on your marriage, multiple times, over many years. Once should've been enough.

2. She has no regrets about what she did. She just regrets the life she had, then lost, with you.

3. She is messing with you mentally by telling you how you should feel, versus how you really feel about the situation. Remember the difference.

4. Be selfish. Put yourself first, because she never ever did.

You owe it to your younger self to make the right decision, only for you.

Your future self will be proud for standing your ground and putting yourself first. NTA.

This Redditor’s firm “no” feels less like quitting and more like graduating from a toxic cycle. Cheers to that fresh start!

Do you think his ex’s regrets are the real deal, or just buyer’s remorse for single life?

Would you ever reopen the door after multiple betrayals, especially during grief?

How do you spot true change versus convenience? Share your hot takes with us!

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone is a valuable freelance writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT. As a senior entertainment and news writer, Jeffrey brings a wealth of expertise in the field, specifically focusing on the entertainment industry.

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