Life stories 24/01/2026 21:34

He Said He’d Leave Me for Another Woman—And I Finally Believed Him

My Husband Joked He’d Leave Me for My Best Friend—So I Packed His Bag and Said, “Go.”
Có thể là hình ảnh về cây thông Noel và văn bản

My husband liked to call it a joke.

I called it death by a thousand cuts.

Keith had this habit—one he thought was hilarious—of saying he would leave me for my best friend, Natalie, if he ever got the chance. The first time, I laughed awkwardly. The second time, I forced a smile. By the tenth time, something inside me had already started to crack.

Every time Natalie came over, it was the same routine.

“If I had the chance, I’d leave you for her in a heartbeat,” Keith would say, grinning like he’d just delivered the punchline of the century.

Natalie would freeze. I would smile through clenched teeth. And Keith would add, “Relax. It’s just a joke. Don’t be so sensitive.”

He said it at dinner parties.
“Man, Natalie, if you ever get tired of your boyfriend, I’m available. You just have to get rid of my wife first.”

He said it when she helped us move.
“Natalie’s so helpful—unlike some people.”

He even said it at my birthday party.
“Thirty-five looks better on Natalie than on you, babe. If she’d have me, I’d already be gone.”

People laughed nervously. Someone would cough. Keith would pat my shoulder like I was a child who didn’t understand humor.

“You know I love you,” he’d say.

But he didn’t stop.

Sometimes he said it when Natalie wasn’t even around.

“Saw Natalie at the store today. Still gorgeous. Still would leave you for her.”

At Thanksgiving—with my parents sitting right there—he announced, “You know who should’ve married into this family? Natalie. She’s basically perfect. Too bad she met me second.”

My mother looked horrified.
My father cleared his throat.
My sister asked if Keith had been drinking.

Keith laughed. “Can’t a man appreciate beauty?”

“I’m sitting right here,” I said quietly.

“Yeah,” he replied, smirking, “but Natalie’s not. Unfortunately.”

I tried talking to him privately.

“It makes me uncomfortable,” I told him. “And it makes Natalie uncomfortable too. She literally told me she doesn’t want to come over anymore.”

Keith rolled his eyes. “She loves the attention. All women do.”

“She doesn’t,” I said. “She thinks you’re creepy.”

“I’m not creepy. I’m honest. If honesty bothers you, that’s your problem.”

The final straw came a week later.

Natalie was at our apartment helping me prepare for a work presentation. Keith came home early. Too early.

“Well, well,” he said, leaning against the doorway. “My two favorite women.”

Natalie stiffened.

“Natalie,” he continued, “have you reconsidered my offer?”

“What offer?” she asked, confused.

“To run away together,” he said lightly. “Leave all this behind. Start fresh. Just you and me.”

She looked at me—panicked.

That’s when something inside me finally snapped.

“You know what, Keith?” I said, standing up. “Let’s do it.”

He laughed nervously. “What?”

“You keep saying you’d leave me for Natalie if you had the chance,” I said. “Here it is.”

He blinked. “I’m kidding.”

“No,” I replied calmly. “You’ve said it forty-three times in six months. I’ve been counting.”

Then I walked into our bedroom and started packing his suitcase.

“What are you doing?” he shouted.

“Giving you your chance.”

I threw in his clothes, his toiletries, his charger—fast, messy, final.

I dragged the suitcase into the living room and placed it between him and Natalie.

“Here you go,” I said. “He’s all yours.”

Natalie stood up immediately. “Keith, I have a boyfriend. I’ve told you this a hundred times. I’m not interested. Never have been.”

“But you love the attention,” he muttered.

She stared at him. “Is that what you think? That I enjoy you humiliating your wife and harassing me?”

He had no answer.

Natalie pulled out her phone. “Should I call Tom? Tell him you’ve been asking me for coffee. Again. Texting me. Showing up at my gym.”

Keith went pale.

She grabbed her coat and stopped next to me. “I’m sorry,” she whispered.

“This isn’t your fault,” I told her.

When the door closed behind her, the apartment felt painfully quiet.

Keith tried to smile. “Okay… that got out of hand.”

“No,” I said. “This was a pattern.”

When he tried to dismiss it again, I said quietly, “You need to leave tonight.”

He argued. He minimized. He apologized.

But something fundamental had broken.

And for the first time, I didn’t laugh at his joke.

News in the same category

News Post