My Wife Is Torturing My Life Because I Had An Affair That Brought Twins

I am a man in my early forties, married for fifteen years, alive by breathing but dead in every other way. Some days I walk through Accra traffic like a …

My Wife Is Torturing My Life Because I Had An Affair That Brought Twins
Why the Hen Does Not Have Teeth Story Book

WHY THE HEN DOES NOT HAVE TEETH STORY BOOK

It’s an amazing story, composed out of imagination and rich with lessons. You’ll learn how to be morally upright, avoid immoral things, and understand how words can make or destroy peace and harmony.

Click the image to get your copy!

Why the Hen Does Not Have Teeth Story Book

WHY THE HEN DOES NOT HAVE TEETH STORY BOOK

It’s an amazing story, composed out of imagination and rich with lessons. You’ll learn how to be morally upright, avoid immoral things, and understand how words can make or destroy peace and harmony.

Click the image to get your copy!

Why the Hen Does Not Have Teeth Story Book

WHY THE HEN DOES NOT HAVE TEETH STORY BOOK

It’s an amazing story, composed out of imagination and rich with lessons. You’ll learn how to be morally upright, avoid immoral things, and understand how words can make or destroy peace and harmony.

Click the image to get your copy!

I am a man in my early forties, married for fifteen years, alive by breathing but dead in every other way. Some days I walk through Accra traffic like a ghost—seen, unseen, existing, but not living. My emotions are frozen and my spirit worn thin by years of waiting for a love that no longer answers me.

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I did not come into marriage as a careless man. I came into it wounded. I lost my parents early and grew up learning survival before joy. Love, for me, was something I had to build from scratch. When I met my wife, she felt like home. She felt like the family I never really had. I gave her everything I didn’t receive growing up: affection, loyalty, protection, sacrifice. I wanted to love deeply, and I wanted to be loved back with the same intensity.

Our marriage was never perfect. We had arguments, misunderstandings, seasons of silence. But I stayed. I apologized even when I felt wronged. I bent because I believed marriage was not about winning, but about holding the home together. I believed endurance was love.

I supported my wife through university and then her master’s degree because I wanted her to rise. I wanted her to stand tall in the world, to be respected, to never feel limited because of marriage. Today, she is a senior manager, flying across borders, attending meetings in cities I only hear about afterward. Sometimes she leaves Ghana without telling me. I find out from my children when I go to visit them. That is how distant we have become. A husband and wife reduced to strangers sharing history.

When she lived with me, the home often felt empty even when she was present. This is a woman who wouldn’t cook and wouldn’t do anything at home, and I had to hold the fort for her because of her busy schedule. Even intimacy at times was a challenge. I complained, spoke to her, had heart-to-heart talks with her, but she wouldn’t change. Everything felt like a negotiation or a burden to her. I held the fort alone, emotionally and practically, telling myself that love means patience.

Then I made the mistake that changed everything.

I had an affair. Not out of pride or rebellion, but out of weakness and loneliness I didn’t know how to name. That affair produced twins. I did not hide it. I confessed. I was remorseful. At first, she seemed calm and understanding. I thought my sins had been forgiven. I was wrong.

What followed felt like war. She left our matrimonial home with our four children, then aged 13, 11, 8, and 6, and moved to her parents’ house. Families intervened. Pastors came. Counselors spoke. Elders pleaded. Even her own family was shocked when she refused every attempt at reconciliation and drove everyone away. That was five years ago.

Five good years have elapsed.

Five years of sleeping alone. Five years of calling a woman I still call my wife and waiting weeks for a reply to a simple “good morning.” Five years of watching my children grow from a distance. Five years of carrying guilt, shame, longing, and hope all at once. Five years of being judged silently while trying to hold myself together.

I have begged. I have apologized until my pride disappeared. I have accepted blame without excuses. I have asked for peace, not even perfection. But she will not come back. She will not sit down to talk. She will not forgive.

What hurts most is that I am judged by one mistake, while all the times I swallowed pain for the sake of peace are forgotten. I am treated as if my entire identity is that failure, as if fifteen years of commitment, provision, and love never happened. I am still providing. I am still a present father as much as I’m allowed to be. I am still standing.

Loneliness is not just being alone. It is being married and abandoned. It is loving someone who refuses to see you. It is waking up every day hoping today might be different, and every day realizing it is not. I have not touched another woman in five years. Desire is not my problem. My heart is. All I want is my wife. All I want is my family back.

I have seen counselors. I have prayed prayers that dried up in my mouth. I have asked God questions that echo without answers. Some days, the thought of giving up whispers to me, not loudly, but persistently. It tells me rest might be easier than waiting. It tells me maybe my children would forget. But deep down, I know that voice is lying. I know ending my life would only transfer my pain to the people I love most.

I ask myself questions that have no clear answers. Can one mistake define a man forever? Can love exist without forgiveness? At what point does waiting become self-destruction?

I am a very caring dad and always providing for my family. I want my family back, but this woman is just tormenting me. This was someone who was really desperate for marriage when we met, and I gave her my all. I am not a happy person. At times, I get suicidal, and it’s not funny. I have built all my happiness and love around her, and it’s difficult to move on.

I am not asking to be excused. I am not perfect. I failed. But I am also a man who loved deeply, sacrificed willingly, and stayed when leaving would have been easier. I am a man who still believes in marriage, even when it has broken him.

I am still here, still waiting for the day all this will end. I don’t know how much longer my heart can hold on. All I can do is do my best for the kids and hope she comes home one day.

—Steve

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