My husband is not gay. I want to be emphatically clear about that. Our physical intimacy is warm, our family life is stable, and he loves me with a gentle, dutiful affection that I have never doubted. But Craig? Craig is his boyfriend. Not in the sexual sense, but in every other sense that governs the heart. Craig is the person Mark calls first with good news. Craig is the one who knows about the dream Mark gave up in his twenties. Craig is the witness to Mark’s unvarnished self—the version of my husband who complains, who cries at sad movies, who gets irrationally angry about traffic. I get the polished, responsible husband. Craig gets the real person.
The first time I heard the phrase “emotional affair,” I dismissed it as modern psychobabble—a way to medicalize the ordinary disappointments of marriage. My husband, Mark, wasn’t having secret lunches with a female coworker. He was going fishing with Craig. He wasn’t texting someone “good morning” before I woke up; he was sending Craig a meme about lawn care at 6:00 AM. It took me years to realize that betrayal doesn’t always wear a familiar face. Sometimes, it looks like two men in a pickup truck, comfortable in silence, sharing a history I will never fully access. Title- My Husband-s Not Gay...But His Boyfriend...
The difficulty is that our culture has no script for this. We have words for “mistress” and “homewrecker.” We have a thousand novels about the other woman. But what do you call the other man who isn’t a lover? There is no scandal to expose, no incriminating text to screenshot. The betrayal is not one of broken vows, but of displaced priority. I have learned to live with the quiet humiliation of being second. When Mark is stressed, he doesn’t decompress with me over a glass of wine; he drives to Craig’s garage, where they will sit in mismatched lawn chairs and solve nothing. When we fight, I know he isn’t replaying my words—he is replaying Craig’s advice. My husband is not gay
I have tried to befriend Craig. I have tried to see him as a benign extension of our family, the “fun uncle” to our children. And he is kind. He brings soup when we are sick and remembers our anniversary. That is what makes this so disorienting. I cannot hate him, because he isn’t stealing my husband’s body. He is stealing something far more precious: his inner life. A marriage, I have learned, requires three forms of intimacy: physical, domestic, and secret. The secret intimacy—the private jokes, the unguarded thoughts, the small confessions—is the glue. And I no longer have that with Mark. He has given it to Craig. But Craig
People tell me I am lucky. “At least you don’t have to worry about another woman,” they say. “At least he comes home.” But home is just a building. I am the woman who shares his bed, his bills, and his last name. Craig is the man who shares his soul. And so I live in the strange, unclassifiable ache of the wife whose husband is faithful, present, and absent all at once. My husband is not gay. But his boyfriend is the other man I will never be able to compete with, because you cannot compete with someone who isn’t trying to take your place—only to occupy the space you didn’t realize you were supposed to fill.