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My Husband Said He Wanted An Open Marriage—So I Started Dating His Best Friend

By World WideJuly 2, 2025No Comments8 Mins Read
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My husband said he wanted an open marriage—or a divorce. Because I love him, I agreed.

Six months later, I started dating his best friend, Ben.

My husband resented it but stayed silent.

Then, last week, Ben shocked us both when he confessed he had been in love with me for years, long before my husband ever suggested the open marriage. He said he kept it hidden because he valued his friendship with my husband, Orson, more than his own feelings. But watching Orson with other women had crushed him. The confession poured out one night over dinner, tears gathering at the corners of Ben’s eyes.

I sat there in stunned silence. Ben’s words felt like a slap and a warm hug all at once. I’d fallen for him too—he was gentle, attentive, everything Orson had stopped being. But now, it wasn’t just a casual open-marriage fling. It felt like a betrayal that had been years in the making. When I told Orson about Ben’s confession, he exploded. He yelled that I’d gone too far, that the open marriage was supposed to be physical, not emotional. I reminded him it was his idea. He stormed out, slamming the door so hard our picture frames rattled.

For days, Orson stayed away. I found myself comforting Ben instead. I didn’t want to lose either of them, but the situation was crumbling. One night, Orson came home drunk. He slurred about how stupid he’d been, thinking an open marriage would save us. He confessed he’d only suggested it because he was afraid I was bored with him, and he thought letting me explore would keep me around longer.

I told him I felt abandoned the moment he proposed it. Like he was giving me permission to leave instead of fighting for us. He sank to the floor, sobbing. Seeing him like that broke something inside me. I realized I still loved him, but maybe love wasn’t enough anymore.

Over the next few days, I spent hours talking to both Orson and Ben separately. Ben wanted to pursue a real relationship with me. Orson wanted to patch things up, close the marriage, and pretend the last six months never happened. I felt torn in two. My heart craved Ben’s tenderness, but my soul was bound to Orson by years of memories, inside jokes, and promises whispered in the dark.

Then, Orson’s sister, Livia, came to visit unexpectedly. She’d always been a voice of reason in our lives. When she heard what happened, she sat me down with a cup of tea and said, “An open marriage works only when both hearts stay open to each other, not just to new lovers. Were you and Orson truly open with each other, or just avoiding the truth?”

Her words haunted me. I started replaying every conversation, every fight, every quiet dinner with Orson. I saw how we’d drifted, how we’d pretended we were okay. We’d stopped being partners and started living like polite strangers.

Meanwhile, Ben gave me space, but he wouldn’t hide his feelings. He’d send me texts: “Thinking of you,” or leave little notes by my door reminding me of things he loved about me—my laugh, the way I talked to stray cats on the sidewalk, how I always tried to see the good in people. He made me feel special in a way Orson hadn’t for years.

But it wasn’t simple. My guilt weighed heavily. Orson started seeing a therapist and asked me to join him. I agreed, and our sessions were raw. We fought, we cried, we sat in silence. Orson admitted he’d been unfaithful even before he proposed the open marriage. That was the real reason he suggested it—he thought if I cheated too, it would even the scales. That revelation felt like a dagger. I realized the open marriage was never about giving us freedom; it was his way of absolving his own guilt.

When I told Ben about this, he was furious. He said Orson had manipulated both of us, and he begged me to leave him. But I wasn’t sure. My life with Orson was all I’d known since college. Ending it felt like cutting off a limb.

A few weeks later, Orson planned a weekend away for just the two of us. He said he wanted to remind me why we fell in love. We drove to a cozy cabin near the lake where he’d proposed years ago. The first night was awkward, but the second night, after a bottle of wine, we started laughing about old stories, silly things we did when we were young and stupid. For a moment, I felt like we could get back what we lost.

But the next morning, Orson’s phone buzzed with a message from another woman. It was explicit, undeniable proof that even now, he hadn’t stopped seeing others. My heart sank. The illusion shattered. I confronted him, and he just looked defeated. “I don’t know how to stop,” he whispered.

I packed my bag and left the cabin alone. On the drive home, I called Ben. He offered to pick me up, but I told him I needed time to think. I went to stay with Livia for a few days, sorting through my feelings. She told me love shouldn’t feel like a prison or a game. That stuck with me.

A week later, Ben invited me to dinner at a small Italian place we used to go to as friends. When I arrived, he was already there, fidgeting nervously. After dessert, he slid a tiny box across the table. My heart stopped. He wasn’t proposing marriage—inside was a delicate silver key. “To my apartment,” he said softly. “Only if you’re ready.”

I felt a surge of peace. He wasn’t pushing me, just offering a place where I could heal. I moved in with him a few days later. We spent slow mornings drinking coffee, long nights talking about everything and nothing. There was no pressure, just warmth.

Meanwhile, Orson tried to contact me, but I ignored his calls. I needed to break the cycle. A month later, he showed up at Ben’s place, looking pale and desperate. He apologized, truly and deeply, for everything—for his affairs, his cowardice, his selfishness. He said he was checking into a rehab center for sex addiction. I was shocked. Part of me felt pity; part of me felt relief. It was the first time he admitted he needed help.

As the weeks passed, I settled into life with Ben. We weren’t rushing things, but our bond grew deeper. One evening, as we watched the sunset from his balcony, he took my hand and asked, “If you could go back and change anything, would you?”

I thought about it long and hard. “I’d have asked Orson for the truth sooner,” I said. “But then I wouldn’t have found you.” He smiled, and we sat there, grateful for the stillness.

Orson kept in touch through letters he sent from rehab. They were raw and honest. He took full responsibility for everything he’d done, and over time, I felt my anger soften into forgiveness. But forgiveness wasn’t the same as forgetting or returning. I told him I wished him well, but I couldn’t come back.

A year passed, and Ben and I built a home together. We traveled, cooked new recipes, adopted a scrappy little dog named Moxie. I realized love wasn’t supposed to feel like something I had to earn or fight for—it was supposed to be given freely, with kindness and care.

I ran into Orson once at the grocery store. He looked healthier, calmer. He told me he’d met someone new who knew about his past and accepted him anyway. We wished each other happiness, and for the first time, it felt real. There was no bitterness left.

That night, I curled up next to Ben, thinking about how strange life can be. If Orson hadn’t asked for an open marriage, I might have stayed miserable for years. But through all the pain and confusion, I found a love I never knew possible. I found a version of myself who was stronger, braver, and more honest.

Looking back, I realized the most important lesson was this: love can’t survive without honesty. Lies rot relationships from the inside, no matter how well you hide them. And sometimes, what feels like the end is really a beginning in disguise.

If you’re reading this and stuck in something that feels wrong—ask the hard questions. Be brave enough to hear the answers. And remember, you deserve love that lifts you up, not love that tears you down.

If this story touched you, please like and share it with someone who might need a little hope today. ❤️

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