My Husband Has Two Side Chicks But I’m Looking For Just One Affair Partner

I used to believe that a woman’s purity was her greatest treasure. That is what my parents drilled into me from childhood, sometimes gently, sometimes violently. My father especially, he …

My Husband Has Two Side Chicks But I’m Looking For Just One Affair Partner

I used to believe that a woman’s purity was her greatest treasure. That is what my parents drilled into me from childhood, sometimes gently, sometimes violently. My father especially, he guarded me like a fragile artifact he didn’t trust the world to see. If a boy came close to me, he would appear out of nowhere, like a vigilante of chastity, ready to pounce. If I so much as greeted a man, I could expect a lecture or a slap. Friends? No. Parties? Never. The world, according to my father, was a dangerous place designed to corrupt good girls. So I grew up with no social skills, no taste of the world, and absolutely no idea who I was beyond the “good girl” they carved me into.

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By twenty-six, when I married Aboagye, I was a virgin, emotionally inexperienced, and socially handicapped. My father gave a long speech on my wedding day, the kind guests clap for without actually listening. But I listened. His words followed me like a shadow: “Don’t make friends. Don’t become what we didn’t teach you.”

So when I entered marriage, I entered it alone. And I stayed alone. Meanwhile, Aboagye lived like a man who rented his joy to the entire city. Friends everywhere. Friends who called him late at night. Friends who could make him laugh until he gasped for air. Friends who dropped by unannounced to play video games and eat my food. Friends for drinking, for outings, for advice, for business—friends for every chapter of his day and night.

And then there was me, his wife, sitting quietly at home, crocheting my loneliness into something tolerable. At first, I admired him. His social energy. His laughter. His ability to pick the world up and shake fun out of it. But admiration slowly turned into envy. And envy quietly curdled into suspicion. Why was he always on the phone at odd hours? Who were these people who could keep my husband awake and smiling at 1AM?

One night, after months of observing his fingers dance across his screen, I finally cracked his password. I should have been scared. But all I felt was relief. Relief that I could finally understand the man I married. After going through his phone, my entire worldview shattered like a cheap glass cup. He wasn’t just talking to friends. He was entertaining women. Women he called “sweetheart,” “my sunshine,” “my peace.” Two of them were his girlfriends. Actual girlfriends. With dates, outings, hotels, places he had never taken me to, places I didn’t even know he knew.

Scrolling further, I found a voice note he sent a friend: “Bro, I’m home with Madam BB.” Madam BB? I read further to understand what BB meant. “Madam Boring Beauty.” I read it twice. Three times. Four times. BB. Just like that, my entire life story was summarized into two alphabets. Imagine your husband calling you beautiful and boring in the same breath.

I didn’t cry. I wasn’t disappointed. The sadness came later. But what hit me first was clarity. A sharp, painful clarity. Like someone turned on all the lights in a room where I had been stumbling in the dark for years. I saw my life for what it was: a cage. A miserable, lonely cage built with my father’s rules and sealed with my own ignorance.

I wasn’t even angry at Aboagye. I was angry at myself. Angry at how small my world had been. Angry that at twenty-six, I entered marriage without ever tasting life. Angry that my entire identity had been built around being a “good woman” while my husband was out there living like a man who owed nobody loyalty. A thought whispered to me, soft at first, but soon becoming a roar: You’re still young. You’re still in your twenties. You have no child. You can still live.”

For the first time in my life, I believed it. What had I been doing? Waiting for a cheating man to become faithful? Chasing women out of my husband’s life when he would simply replace them like changing TV channels? Reading stories here has taught me something. That cheating men don’t reform. They just upgrade their cheating techniques.

So I made a decision. A firm one. Next year, Sandra will live. Not the timid Sandra my father built. Not the shadow of a wife waiting for crumbs of affection. Not the lonely woman sitting in a room praying for her husband’s attention. No. I will build my own life. I will make friends. Yes, actual friends. A squad. People who will laugh with me, drag me out to try new things, show me joy I never tasted, teach me the world my father hid from me.

I will go places I’ve only seen on Instagram. Visit lounges, beaches, restaurants. Take trips. Laugh loudly. Dance badly. Wear clothes I’ve always been scared to wear. And if push comes to shove. If loneliness dares me, I might even get myself a boyfriend. Someone who will show me everything I missed while I was busy being the perfect woman for a man who didn’t know how to be a husband.

Life is short. Youth is shorter. I refuse to waste it. Where do I start? How do I build friendships from scratch when I’m practically a newborn in social life? I guess that’s the question I’m asking the world now. Where does a woman like me begin when she’s finally ready to live? Because I am ready. Ready to step out of the cage. Ready to taste the world. Ready to learn who Sandra actually is, beyond chastity, beyond obedience, beyond being “Madam Boring Beauty.”

Next year, my life begins.

—Sandra

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