“He has a girlfriend”: When I unknowingly became the ‘other woman’

He took advantage of me when I was vulnerable. The next thought I had was that I have to tell her.

My friend sent me his profile but I couldn’t open it. He had blocked me so I couldn’t find out. PHOTO: PEXELS

We met at a friend’s party. I knew everyone there, so I was curious when a new person walked through the door. All of us talked, hung out and drank. He asked for my number so he could ‘make sure I got home safe’. He sent me a text the next day. That’s when we started talking. It was just friendly at first, and then started to get flirty. He was nice, studying medicine in the Caribbean, funny; it was all going well.

We hung out a few times and it started to become something more than just friendship. I knew he was going back to the Caribbean in a week, so I didn’t think anything of it. We hung out one last time before he left, and I assumed that would be the last I hear from him.

It wasn’t.

We spoke every single day after he left. He sent me pictures of the sunset, I sent pictures of my puppies at work. He asked me to visit him in the Caribbean. He told me he wanted me to visit him and that he had wished he met me earlier.

Then one day when I was speaking with a friend, he asked me about my love life, and I mentioned this new person I was talking to. When I said his name, my friend’s face dropped. Then my heart dropped.
“He has a girlfriend.”

I couldn’t move. I had asked him and he had told me his last relationship was two years ago before he started med school. He had told me about other girls he dated in the Caribbean. I felt sick.

I called my friend who hosted the party and told him what I had just discovered. My friend said,
“Let me check his Instagram.”

The guy had told me he was taking a social media break to focus on school, and that made sense to me. A lot of my friends had done the same. My friend sent me his profile but I couldn’t open it. He had blocked me so I couldn’t find out. My friend sent me a screenshot of his most recent post with a caption about his girlfriend.


I felt so disgusted and violated. I couldn’t breathe.

I had been lied to by someone with whom I had shared a lot of myself. I had spoken to him about my past and about my struggles with my mental health. He took advantage of me when I was vulnerable. The next thought I had was that I have to tell her.

For years, I’d seen examples of how when a man cheats it’s always the ‘other woman’s’ fault. Women have been raised to see each other as competition and have been pit against each other for so long. I was terrified that she was going to think I did this on purpose. I was worried about what other people would think of me, but I couldn’t keep quiet about it.

It was probably the scariest thing I’ve ever had to do. I found her contact information and wrote and re-wrote the message 15 times. How do you tell someone that the person they love has been lying to them and cheating on them? There was no easy way to say it other than just telling the whole truth.

I sent her a message and waited; my heart in my throat. She answered. We got on the phone and talked through what had happened. We were both at either end of an awful situation. Neither of us had done anything wrong. We just put our trust in someone who took advantage of it.

They had been together for nine years, and I couldn’t imagine what she was going through.

What he did was awful. I don’t even want to discuss him. What I want to talk about is how this incredible woman handled the situation. She didn’t yell at me. She never called me a single name or lashed out at me. She listened and handled the situation with such grace. At the end of the call, she told me,
“Thank you, not a lot of people would have spoken up.”

Someone else’s actions are not a reflection of you. How you handle the situation and how you choose to act, that is the only thing in your control. It’s hard to come out of a situation like this and not be jaded and closed off, but it is not your fault.

This post was originally published on BrownGirlMagazine and republished with permission.
WRITTEN BY: Jessie Brar
The author is a chocolate lover, Bollywood dancer, bhangra enthusiast and a mental health advocate. She studied psychology at Queen’s University and now works in youth mental health promotion with Jack.org in Toronto, Canada.

The views expressed by the writer and the reader comments do not necassarily reflect the views and policies of the Express Tribune.