Tuesday, June 3, 2025

A woman knows when there is another woman, she can feel her all over her man.



Asparagus Soup

 

There were a lot of tell-tale signs when my husband would have an affair or at the very least, started pursuing a potential supply.  He would become distant and suddenly VERY busy at work.  He would dress differently or suddenly have an interest in a new author, musician or even food.  He would become very impatient with me, cranky and rude.  He would talk to me like I was a servant to be dismissed.  But then, when that pursuit didn’t pan out, he would usually come at me with some grandiose gesture.  Book a getaway for our 10th anniversary, buy me a gift of some sort, do something really special and of course, suddenly become charming and loving again.

I didn’t know this all at the time it was happening.  I didn’t know what the new meaning of Narcissism was let alone how to spell it.  I always thought a narcissist was someone who was in love with their own image and would take constant pictures of themselves or stare lovingly into a mirror. It wasn’t until the end that I discovered what he was.

But in 2018, something drastic changed.  Something so much different that any other time.  His WHOLE personality changed. He became more dismissive, rude, angry, and most of all, more emotionally distant.  I didn’t know what was happening, but I could feel the space between us growing by the day.  He started spending more time at work, especially late hours after his shifts at Kohls, sometimes not getting home until 2AM.  He would practically ignore me when he was home, or pick a fight. The drama he created and the meanness he exhibited was getting to me.  I didn’t know what I had done wrong and when I brought it up, he would tell me I was imagining things, or over reacting.

One day, this woman shows up at our daughter’s state tournament.  She flitted in, didn’t even acknowledge me, nor did he introduce me to her.  However, she knew my mother in law, my brother in law and my husband lit up and they closed their little visitation circle, putting me on the outside.  They laughed and joked and she would reach out and touch his arm, or his back.  I seethed. Our daughter was in eliminations for the medal rounds and I was focused on her, unlike her father or her uncle or grandmother. This woman commanded all their attention.  RED FLAG!  Our daughter made it into the gold medal match, but none of her family was aware.  Finally, I put my foot down and pulled him away, stating our daughter needed our attention.  I asked who this woman was?  She worked at Kohls with him and his mom.  She was his mom’s friend and she came out to see the tournament.  I mentioned how she didn’t even pay attention to what was going on. That’s when I got clapback about it…so I shut up.

The coldness between us on the drive home iced up the car, spoiling the mood of a podium finish. He was animated like he’d just taken a shot of espresso.  I, on the other hand, was steaming.

A week or so later, our daughter and I stopped in at the Kohls where he was working to shop for return to school clothes and backpacks. While there, I talked to my husband about some shoes she was looking at but her size wasn’t available. He was about to come off shift and we were going to head out to dinner.  Well, here comes the new supply…bouncy and smiley…and said hello to our daughter and fawned over her, completely ignored me.  But then, my husband started laughing and pulled something out of the pocket of his jacket and the two of them laughed hysterically.  She touched him again in that way she did before.  A familiar touch, one that had no hesitation from insecurity. This was an act that had been done many times and was welcomed.  I caught a glimpse of what made them laugh so hard.  A can of Campbell’s Asparagus soup. I didn’t even know there was such a thing. But I DID know what connotation asparagus had and the sexual innuendo it derived from. My heart dropped to my shoes and it was all I could do to not cry.  I didn’t want to go to dinner.  I wanted to hide away and figure out what was happening.  Every nerve in my body was screaming at me that this was an affair.

Later that night, I asked my husband about the soup.  He got really vague passing it off as an “inside joke” between them.  They often work in the same department and they joke around.  I was not convinced.  I know my husband.  I’ve known him since we were 16.  He doesn’t just buy a can of soup for a joke with another woman unless he’s trying to woo her. I’ve watched him through all of his relationships.  I know how he works. So I pushed it again and he turned on me. Defending her and accusing me of butting into his private life.  Since when does he have a private life?

Weeks went by and he just wasn’t acting right.  A sudden interest in country music and tv shows that he normally didn’t watch or wasn’t even home to watch.  So, who was he watching them with?  He spent more and more time in the bathroom during weekends when he was home, and there were times where I would wake up and he would be on his phone.  He claimed to be playing a game, but often it was a text screen he was in.  

Thanksgiving came and we were going to his brother’s home.  One of the few times I didn’t host. We drove separately because he had to work at Kohls. It was of the era where stores were opening at 6 or 7pm on Thanksgiving night. Of course SHE worked too as well as my mother-in-law.  My husband refused to go up the elevator with us.  He didn’t offer to help carry any of the bags or serving dishes I was juggling either, opting to go up the stairs because suddenly he was on a self-improvement kick!  When we got the right floor, we had to wait a really long time for him to show up from the stairwell.  I jokingly asked if he ran out of steam and he glared nastily at me and walked away from me, again, leaving me to lug everything by myself.  When the time came for him to leave, he basically bolted out the door.  No goodbye kiss, no endearment, just gone.  I started to get really upset and as our daughter and I left, I dropped a serving dish and it shattered.  That was just too much for me that day and I completely lost it. I wound up sobbing as I tried to pick up the pieces of glass and the mess of the dropped leftovers in the entrance of the building.  My brother in law and daughter were trying to console me but I wouldn’t have it and ended up just throwing everything away and we left.

Over the next few weeks, I saw less and less of my husband. His daughter maybe saw him a few hours a week.  He missed her Christmas concert and several tournaments.  He missed parent teacher conferences and some other school events.  He had never missed anything before and our daughter was starting to feel the effects. Christmas came and his gifts to me were not thoughtful or personal. In fact, they felt like he’d stopped at a convenience store to purchase them. He was distracted and took hours to come down Christmas morning.  His bathroom time became so bad that I threatened to call a doctor.  He became a stranger to me.  Whenever I tried to talk to him, he dismissed me or ignored me completely.

On New Year’s Eve, we, as a family, did our usual puzzle.  He was obviously distracted and uninterested and when he did focus, he would take over a section I was working on, pushing me out. When midnight came, he wasn’t with me.  He was….guess?  In the bathroom. 

January, I started investigating.  Pouring over phone records and trying to figure things out. I did find a recurring number in both phone calls and texts and I researched it.  It was hers.  The new supply.  Over 3000 texts in the month of December alone. Phone calls lasting hours and at times when he was supposed to be working late.  At the end of the month, he was supposed to go downtown Chicago to participate in a “Kohls Cares” event to raise money for charity.  He told me he was going down with “a bunch of coworkers” in a car and he was doing a stair climb at the Hancock (I think).  He didn’t communicate with me at all during the time he was gone and didn’t get home until HOURS after the event was over.  So I confronted him.  He was with Debra, right?  He denied it until I showed him the phone records.  Of all the times he was in the bathroom Christmas day coincided with his texts to her and on New Year’s eve.  I had other events highlighted where he had lied to me.  The times he kept wandering off at a tournament he came to matched up with texts to her.  He exploded on me.  Told me that it was MY fault he HAD to have someone to talk to.  They got along so well and she made him feel alive!  I grabbed his phone in anger and he threw me to the floor, putting his knee in my back and twisting my arms til they hurt to get it back.  He ripped into me for hours about what a horrible wife and mother I was. How I didn’t meet his needs. How he could never do anything right for me and how awful I was to the kids.  He told me Debra was wonderful and she got him and she understood him. 

During the weeks after this, when I should have left but was too scared to, he acted like nothing was wrong.  But he wouldn’t talk to me either. I asked him to choose and he didn’t.  I went into full scale FBI investigative mode on this woman and confronted her and begged her for the sake of the kids to leave my husband alone.  She actually laughed at me and told me how he had told her how my marriage was over a long time ago and how awful I was.  That she and my husband “Got Tight” and when I asked her about her own husband, and did he know about what was going on, she stated that it was none of my business but yes, he knew all about my husband.  (lie)

That was the beginning of a 5 year downhill spiral to the finalization of the divorce.  The mask, when it finally came off, showed me how ugly narcissism is.  His mother, the pot stirrer and enabler pushed them together.  They destroyed two families and she is still going through her own divorce but her kids were grown and out of the house.  She is 6 years older than we are. 

So many years he played me. He put every thing on me.  I know I wasn’t innocent, but I wanted to work out our marriage. But as time went on, and I found so much evidence to how he deceived me and how stupid I was when I believed his lies, I began to question my ability to ever trust again.  I questioned my ability to trust my intuition and my sanity after the years of being told I was the problem. 

Don’t ever doubt your intuition.  If something is off, there is a reason. There is ALWAYS a reason.  

 

Mine started with a can of Asparagus Soup. 


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