My friend is very insecure and for some reason finds fault in every available guy she meets. "He looked homeless" "We had nothing in common" "He's too old". Maybe they are legitimate, and maybe she's simply looking for faults. I don't know if she'd actually date a guy that was single. She seems drawn to the ones who aren't emotionally available, for some reason.
Anyway, although I've deeply disapproved of her relationship with this guy, he lives in another city and I've pretty much kept my mouth shut. Until today.
The guy isn't happy at his current job and he's considering moving to the city my friend lives in. Not only that, she's trying to get him a job where she works. She wrote me this morning for "advice" on whether she should disclose that the job she wants him to apply for requires a certification he does not have.
This time I didn't mince my words. I'm not in the best mood today anyway, and I just decided it was time to say what I've been thinking. This is what I said:
Quote:
I’m probably not the best person to ask this, because the bottom line is that *** is married. I really wish and pray for you to find a guy that is free to love you the way you deserve to be loved, rather than having to take what you can get from a guy who is married. I’m absolutely positive that you don’t want to hear that, but it’s how I feel and it’s why I so rarely ask about ***. I have very strong feelings about the sanctity of marriage. I think it would be best if *** didn’t move to [city], because I can’t see this working out the way you want it to. I also feel compassion for ***'s wife, and have my doubts that she knows the full extent of what’s going on with you and ***. For her sake, I hope she doesn’t, and that she doesn’t find out.
In answer to your question, I think you need to be 100% honest with *** because this is his life and also greatly impacts his wife. It’s a huge thing to pull up stakes and move to another city AND another Country, and if he does he needs and deserves to know that he’s at least qualified for the job he applied for. Imagine what happens if he moves there, gets that job only to find out he’s unqualified and later loses the job. Then he’s in a new country and new city and has no job. Maybe that happens anyway, but don’t let it happen because you opted not to tell him a pertinent piece of information.
And I got back pretty much what I expected- a terse email saying, "Message received."I’m probably not the best person to ask this, because the bottom line is that *** is married. I really wish and pray for you to find a guy that is free to love you the way you deserve to be loved, rather than having to take what you can get from a guy who is married. I’m absolutely positive that you don’t want to hear that, but it’s how I feel and it’s why I so rarely ask about ***. I have very strong feelings about the sanctity of marriage. I think it would be best if *** didn’t move to [city], because I can’t see this working out the way you want it to. I also feel compassion for ***'s wife, and have my doubts that she knows the full extent of what’s going on with you and ***. For her sake, I hope she doesn’t, and that she doesn’t find out.
In answer to your question, I think you need to be 100% honest with *** because this is his life and also greatly impacts his wife. It’s a huge thing to pull up stakes and move to another city AND another Country, and if he does he needs and deserves to know that he’s at least qualified for the job he applied for. Imagine what happens if he moves there, gets that job only to find out he’s unqualified and later loses the job. Then he’s in a new country and new city and has no job. Maybe that happens anyway, but don’t let it happen because you opted not to tell him a pertinent piece of information.
Is it the role of a friend to support their friends 100% no matter what their friend does, even if it's immoral, and even if it's something that's bound to cause heartache for several people involved?
Was I wrong in stating my feeling on this topic? Frankly I was very gentle, because I have VERY strong feelings about infidelity, and don't understand how my friend can place herself in the role of a homewrecker. I've been cheated on, it's incredibly hurtful, and now I'm watching my friend acting in the role of the "other woman" and I feel nothing but compassion for this wife that is being cheated on and she probably doesn't really know since in my experience guys say pretty much anything to women when they are trying to justify an affair.
I suspect this is going to end my friendship with her, which has been on shaky ground for some time anyway.

I can totally get why some people go ballistic & do real harm to their significant other AND their lover. I know I wanted to, but I also realized THEY weren't WORTH going to prison!
but you truly did handle the situation appropriately. 
