276°
Posted 20 hours ago

Your Neighbour’s Wife: Nail-biting suspense from the #1 bestselling author

£9.9£99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

But the night it happened, he just… stopped paying attention? She didn’t pull away immediately, but did she excuse herself from the conversation shortly after? That’s a pretty common response when women are uncomfortable, but don’t want to make a scene. Since I found out, she has been doing everything she can to show how much she wants this to work. My questions are: Should I give her another chance? Is the relationship worth it? Can this be fixed? — Mr. Wrong Sometimes

I told him if it was me walking with some dude from down the street at night, alone, in a secluded park, while he was at work, he would lose it. He admitted he would.This question comes from curiosity. How many women on here would need their husband to specifically ask how she felt about the situation before she would tell him? My wife said she told me because she didn’t want me to find out in another way. I’d appreciate your advice. I don’t see this so much as what happened between your wife and the other guy — it’s important, of course, especially if your wife feels in any way unsafe or uncomfortable — but I see this as more about what is (or is not) going on between you and your wife and how your immediate and most dominant reaction is concern for YOU and YOUR feelings rather than hers.

We have a great marriage and I’ve never had a reason to not trust my wife, but I’m having a hard time getting over this. I’m also reluctant to see him again as I’m not sure how I might react if we happen to be in a similar situation. If this is typical of you and your relationship, then perhaps your marriage isn’t as great as you say it is. And maybe that attention from the neighbor guy wasn’t completely unwelcome. That’s not to say it WAS welcome or that your wife did or said anything to prompt it. But maybe a wife whose husband would see such behavior and literally sit there and do nothing is desperate to be noticed. I have a feeling now though that he's not going to drop it and that he's got me lined up to be a friend for his lonely wife. This is probably really mean of me, but I just don't want to. I'm working full time and I have a generally busy life, but also I just don't want the pressure of being the person who has to resolve this stranger's loneliness. I've only met her that once when he brought her out to meet me, but I have bumped into him loads of times as he's gone out to work, gardening or he's going for a run. I only ever see her sat at her living room window staring out. It feels like I've been earmarked to resolve the issue of her never going out. But, in the spirit of honesty, I think relationship counselling might help you to work through your feelings and talk about where the marriage is heading.You want to know how to feel about this? Here are some ideas: maybe you could feel concerned about how your wife feels being called “hot” by another man. Did it make her feel uncomfortable? Was she flattered? Did it make her wish you called her hot more often? How did she feel when he grabbed her butt at a party? How does she feel knowing you saw and did nothing?

We live in a conservative, religious area. Many of the people belong to more mainstream religions but we also have quite a number of small, evangelical churches. Almost everyone that I work with who is my age attends church. Those in their 30s not so much and those in their 20s not at all. Even those who don’t attend church don’t approve of groping. As the night continued, I did not see any more groping, but I wasn’t really looking. I seemed to forget about it, probably from more drinks. You say you’ve never had a reason to not trust your wife, implying that maybe now you do. Because some other man called her hot and grabbed her butt at a party. You’re having a hard time getting over this, not because your wife might feel objectified, uncomfortable, or even victimized, but because YOU don’t like that someone is moving in on your territory. You know, maybe this neighbor friend isn’t the only guy treating your wife with less respect than she deserves. To be honest, I wasn’t that surprised by what my wife told me – over the past few months I’ve had a hunch that it was more than a friendship. My question is, should I just ignore it and leave things as they are or should I tell my wife this friendship has to stop? It hasn’t affected us in any way – we still have a healthy sex life and get along really well.The woman explained it was pretty dark outside but when she left home at 8.30pm she discovered her husband had been out with the neighbour. Recently I discovered that my girlfriend cheated on me. We have two kids together, one of whom is my stepchild. We’ve been together for three years and I have done my fair share of wrongs, such as cheat, lie, and call her names. I admit I wasn’t the best I could be. So she moved out, saying she didn’t know if she wanted to be with me or not, but the kids were still with me. New neighbours moved in a few months ago. I saw the husband not long after they had moved in and we introduced ourselves and exchanged pleasantries. Police launched a double murder investigation after they were called to Belle Walk at about 11am on Monday. The suspect’s wife was found with fatal stab wounds and pronounced dead at the scene. Bi, their neighbour, died later in hospital from suspected knife injuries.

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment