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22 Women Reveal Gut-Wrenching Partner Deceptions

22 Women Reveal Gut-Wrenching Partner Deceptions

Buzz Feed10-05-2025

We recently asked members of the BuzzFeed Community to tell us the heart-shattering moment they realized their partner wasn't the person they thought they were. Here are their stories:
"The day after I came home from brain surgery, he asked if I could go to the post office for him, since I was off from work. I couldn't even walk straight, let alone DRIVE."
"The moment I realized I didn't really know my husband was when I was pregnant with our child, and he confessed to me that he had been cheating on me throughout most of our nine-year marriage. He even had an account on Ashley Madison and would hook up with women when I was out of town. I had no idea and was not suspicious, nor had I ever checked his phone because I trusted him. I knew that he had a pornography addiction, but I had no clue it had escalated to this level. Needless to say, our marriage did not last long after that. I tried to make things work because of our child, but we got divorced shortly after she was born because the trust was irrevocably broken."
"When he told me during mediation he would never NOT see me as a whore. I had never been unfaithful, acquiesced to his (often wild) demands regarding my appearance, mannerisms, and way of speaking, and had changed my career trajectory to ensure he could 'find meaningful work' at the drop of a hat. He was not the man who wooed me from afar during COVID. I wish I had stayed off Tinder."
"When I met my husband, I had a 4-month-old baby that he immediately stepped in to help me raise, no questions asked. I thought I found 'the one.' Eight years later, he dropped the bomb on me that he had opened credit cards without my knowing and had accrued a balance of $25k. He also told me he'd been stealing money from a family member to make the payments. THEN, I found out he'd been making videos of us during our intimate moments without my consent or knowledge. I've been gone for almost eight months and haven't missed him."
"At the beginning of our separation, while having difficulty parenting our teen son, I asked him for help. He told me I was getting everything I deserved and that I was on my own. He didn't care about our child; he was just trying to hurt me. Turns out he was totally self-motivated our entire 20-year marriage, and I hadn't seen it as clearly as I had in that moment."
"He wouldn't let me have the children vaccinated against COVID because he bought into conspiracy theories over science."
"When he swatted a bee just enough so it was still alive, put it in the freezer until it fell asleep, and put it in a plastic bag when it woke up so he could watch it suffocate. He did this every time an insect got into our house afterwards and laughed while doing it. That's when I realized how abusive he had been and how preying on innocence was his game. I left him soon after."
"I was eight months pregnant with my first and went into his email to get a recipe from his mom. We had each other's email passwords, but I had never checked on it unless I needed something, and he always knew when I was. This time, laid out very clearly, was a long-term affair where he was engaged in a BDSM situation. Not going to harsh anyone's kink, but to say I was shocked was an understatement. Even given all I did know about him and his preferences, an affair, especially such a long one, when there was nothing lacking in bed with us (to my knowledge), was jarring. Especially considering I still did anything he asked, even while I was very sick (went into liver failure) with his baby. He wasn't the person I thought he was. I should have run then, but I was young and naive."
"When I saw the texts he sent to his affair partner, like, 'I can't control myself around you,' and more. After 10 years together and eight years of marriage with no other partners, his explanation was, 'How was I supposed to know we were monogamous?' Or maybe the email I found caused me to finally decide to get divorced. We had separated while I was in a two-month-long intensive outpatient therapy program to deal with the PTSD symptoms and suicidal ideation from the discovery of the affair. Despite promising me that he had no interest in dating and would let me know if that changed, he emailed his affair partner to reconnect. The first line of the email? 'It's been a while...silence at best, contact from my wife at worst.'"
"When I found out he had been secretly taking Cialis for a year, and the amount of pills missing from the bottles didn't match the number of times we'd been intimate. I could never trust him again, and we eventually divorced."
"Within the first month, he threatened to leave me. That didn't feel great, but I chalked it up to the intense emotions brought on by our argument. What made me realize he was operating on a whole other level was when he apologized for saying it. He followed his apology with, 'Don't worry. If I ever didn't want to be here, I promise I still wouldn't leave you. I'd just make you miserable enough to want to leave me.' It took eight years, but he kept his promise."
"After giving birth to our new daughter, he was insistent on going out all the time and said if I didn't accompany him, then he would be swayed to find a new girlfriend. We had only been married for about one year at that point."
"I loved him, and I was sure he was the one. But one day, he didn't show up after work. My friend works with him and told me she saw him leave with another woman. I called and texted him, trying to get him to reply, and when he didn't, I drove to his location. He was parked outside a Starbucks, cheating with that woman. I later found my now husband. And he has been there for me every step of the way. There's truly no one I'm more grateful for, so really, my ex cheating was just a stepping stone to my husband. There's always someone out there."
"After a very intense, emotional conversation about the fact that we were drowning in bills and going to have to choose between paying rent/utilities or the car payment, I finally broke down and cried like I never had before. He looked me straight in the eye and swore he would watch his spending and help find a way to fix the situation. I woke up the next morning to over $300 spent out of MY account on ridiculous Google Play purchases. The fact that he knew how badly it would hurt our family and my feelings and did it anyway immediately caused me to shut down emotionally. We separated shortly after when several other situations came to light. I will NEVER allow someone to know my account info, whether we're married or not. The complete lack of shame or empathy still gets me to this day. How can someone not care at all?"
"When Homeland Security busted down my door at 4 a.m. I had been married for 28 years and had no clue who my husband really was."
"When I came home from being hospitalized for bilateral pulmonary embolisms. I was on two different blood thinners and needed to be super careful. I asked him to bring down the Christmas decorations from the attic for me, seeing as our attic stairs were steep and narrow. He refused. I did it myself. The person I married made me feel adored and respected. The person I divorced lacked empathy and was full of contempt."
"We (both women) were long distance, and after she went to bed one night, I was having a chat with her friend, and things started to not add up. Long story short, I found out she was cheating on me with her male cousin."
"Right before the wedding, he got a call from a number labeled with a girl's name. He has no siblings, and it wasn't his mom's name."
"Five months into our marriage, he was in the middle of a custody battle for his son from a previous relationship. His ex wanted him to get drug tested. No problem, right? He tested positive for cocaine. Turned out he'd been using benzos and coke on and off for over 15 years. Never disclosed that before we got married because he thought I wouldn't marry him. Ya think? We stayed married for eight years. After the cocaine, it was fentanyl. After the fentanyl, it was meth. He'd get sober but couldn't stay sober, and then he'd just lie to me about his drug use."
"We hadn't spoken to each other in five years, but reconnected through social media. I thought everything was going okay until I peeked at his socials and discovered he was in a relationship with some girl on the other side of the country. I gathered from their posts that he was planning on moving to be with her, which his daughter confirmed. Had I not asked, I wouldn't have known, and sometimes you're better off not knowing, just like you're better off without that person. When I found out about her, I stopped returning his calls."
"Probably two days ago, when he told me that I was the reason women shouldn't be president because we always put emotions before thinking — alI because I found out it would probably cost about $600 to fix my radiator fan, and I loudly exclaimed, 'What the fuck? I don't have $600!' Too emotional, no rational thinking, apparently."
And: "After five tumultuous years with a man who professed his undying love for me one minute, then would tear me down the next, we tried a three-month separation. I agreed to get back together under the premise that we would get therapy to work on our problems, and he agreed. Fast forward two weeks, and he made me promise I would never leave him. I reminded him that we were going to get therapy to work on our issues, and I could not make any such promise; I only promised we would seek help for our problems. He lied about everything he said he would do and berated me for deceiving him. His outright denial about what he did and simply refusing any accountability made me realize that the man I thought I loved never existed. I feel sick for giving such a narcissistic human five years of my life. RUN from a narcissist!"
What's the moment you realized you didn't really know your partner? Tell us in the comments or share your story anonymously using this form.
Note: Submissions have been edited for length and/or clarity.
Dial 988 in the United States to reach the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. The 988 Lifeline is available 24/7/365. Your conversations are free and confidential. Other international suicide helplines can be found at befrienders.org. The Trevor Project, which provides help and suicide-prevention resources for LGBTQ youth, is 1-866-488-7386.
If you or someone you know is in immediate danger as a result of domestic violence, call 911. For anonymous, confidential help, you can call the 24/7 National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 (SAFE) or chat with an advocate via the website.
The National Alliance on Mental Illness helpline is 1-800-950-6264 (NAMI) and provides information and referral services; GoodTherapy.org is an association of mental health professionals from more than 25 countries who support efforts to reduce harm in therapy.
If you or someone you know is struggling with substance abuse, you can call SAMHSA's National Helpline at 1-800-662-HELP (4357) and find more resources here.

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This is why it's important for people to learn about the Green Scare, Occupy Wall Street, Standing Rock, and Ferguson and other anti-police protests that led up to 2020, as state tactics being used now were built upon by the repression of these movements. Trump's presidency is in part a response to the year 2020, both the protest and the pandemic. There was a naivete that riots had resulted in a cultural revolution, but what we see now is the changes of that moment were fleeting. This is why movement gains must go beyond individual benefits under capitalism like diversity initiatives, which have come and gone since the protests. There needs to be an understanding when these spontaneous uprisings happen that the sense of power that people feel will not last forever. Once the riots began to settle later in summer 2020 and people were still engaged, it would have been a great opportunity to build assemblies either based on locality and/or affinity. This would have created entry points for newcomers and opportunities to build power outside the current political system and away from the Democratic Party. This model would allow broader segments of our communities to be building actual political opposition against Trump and the oligarchy that enables him. When I look back at 2020, some of the most urgent lessons for this moment are about protecting and defending one another. I think about how the Chicago Freedom School sheltered young protesters who had been brutalized and gassed by police, and protected those young people when cops showed up to raid the building. I think about the safety teams led by young Black activists in Chicago, distributing masks, treating wounds, and doing everything they could to keep people safe in the streets. I think about the connection between a mass uprising and a mass mobilization of mutual aid, and what that tells us about what it takes to sustain collective action. There was a time in 2020 when people were deeply invested in one another's well-being. There was so much mutual concern, care work, a growing interest in the lessons of disability justice, and a storm of empathy that cracked something open in us, and in the world around us. The same impulses that led to an explosion of mutual aid propelled a lot of people into the streets. In many ways, we've drifted from that level of connection. But we'll need to find our way back to it. Empathy is essential in any fight against fascist, dehumanizing politics. This moment is about holding onto our humanity, and to do that, we need to reach for and hold onto each other. We need to anchor ourselves to each other. That means remembering how to care, commit, and throw down together, even when we don't like each other. We need to recover the sense of solidarity that a lot of people felt in the early days of the pandemic. There was a lot of fear and panic in that moment, but also a lot of potential. We still have that potential, but we are going to have to bring it back to the surface. I think the lessons are many. One lesson is that cultural work is irresistible — the art, music, dancing and bombastic energy of those uprisings still thrum through my system. Another lesson is that when we let ourselves feel into our hurt and anger, we can harness those righteous emotions into powerful action, even when we have to adapt to conditions like a global pandemic. Our task as movement workers is to support organic moments of popular unrest and uprising, recognizing we can shape these moments but we are not meant to control them. And we have to remember that we are not the beginning or the end of this fight, and we are not always the center of focus — a lot of people showed up in solidarity with us, and I see so many of us showing up in solidarity with other communities. There are way more people than we expect who are frustrated and angry about the brutality and greed of the current systems, who will join in bold, even risky collective action when they see others in the streets. After 2020, the militancy of our movements increased — more people willing to take risks and break rules to stop business as usual. This is visible in the student uprising against genocide in Palestine, and the disruptions of weapons manufacturers, as well as in mobilizations against ecocide [or the destruction of the environment by dangerous human activity]. We need this kind of rule-breaking, bold militancy more than ever now. 2020 saw the mainstreaming of the idea of police abolition — suddenly the concept of defunding the police was being discussed across the country and many city councils made big promises about cutting police budgets that had been steadily rising for decades. However, we weren't able to hold them to it. The dedicated work that people did to keep the pressure on ended up showing us that our city governments really are owned by cops and Chambers of Commerce, and elected officials backpedal to keep their jobs, or they get replaced. This is an important lesson — that their systems don't work for dismantling what they are designed to build, expand and preserve. This is important, too, because we saw that trying to direct and focus the upsurge into electoral and government-centered reform projects not only doesn't work, but it reifies the widespread liberal misunderstanding that resistance should focus on changing the hearts and minds of elected officials, which is, ultimately, a dead end. Under this administration, this is particularly clear — that direct action and mutual aid are what is needed, not more efforts to convince elites to stop wars, policing, ecocide. It's not about convincing them, it's about stopping them. [Trump's] desires and plans for the current moment are terrifying, but we defeated the Alt-Right and Trump in the streets once and we can do it again. From the Airport Shutdowns to OccupyICE to #MeToo, from the successful no-platforming campaigns, mass marches and education to punching [white supremacist] Richard Spencer (twice!) to vigilantly combating them wherever they appeared, we successfully stymied their ambitions and shattered their movement. Our many anti-fascist victories, which came at great cost, culminated in the historic defeat of Trump at the ballot box in 2020: Biden was the only presidential campaign since the '60s to outnumber the traditional most popular option among eligible voters — abstention. The US working class has gone through over a decade of intense radicalization, organization, street movement and political awakening since 2010, and the state has offered us little more than table scraps. 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