I think most people don't see this as fraud. She's your wife and should have access to those accounts and what you are sharing with others about your marriage. For the record, I don't believe she should be out making you the topic of conversation to her friends either.... especially not a male friend.
As for getting past your own feeling of violation and hurt, please read below and you'll understand my answer at the end.
Sorry it's so long. I can't get anything out in a short post. <img src="/ubbt/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />
I'm not going to downgrade the status of someone important in my life because I've made a commitment to my wife.
When you made a commitment to your wife and got married you lowered the status of EVERYONE else. Or rather you elevated her status above everyone else. There should be no other relationship more important than this one. If it is not more important you need to ask yourself why.
There is nothing in our vows or contract that state I am no longer allowed to have best friends. That's just bull
I disagree with this. You probably promised to "love, honor and cherish". How do you honor or cherish if you continue to have such an intimate (not meaning sexual) relationship that makes your wife uncomfortable or uneasy? It seems to me (and I could be totally off base here, I'm only going by the tone and wording in your post) that you cherish your friendship more than your marriage. There is also that "forsaking all others" part of most vows. That doesn't just mean not sleeping with others. You promised to forsake all others that are not a friend to your marriage. That marriage is made up of two people.
and to make the distinction between best male friends and best female friends is just discriminatory and sexist.
Maybe so. The fact of the matter is though that you're much less likely to develop an inappropriate relationship with a man. Period. No one plans on an affair. No one plans on falling for their 'best friend' or their spouses 'best friend'. It happens all the time though. And regardless of whether or not an inappropriate relationship will ever develop between you and your best friend, it makes your wife uncomfortable. How can you honor and cherish when you are deliberately acting in a way that causes your wife to feel unsafe?
And there is nothing in my relationship with my best friend that is preventing me from being a good husband and partner to my wife
You are not being a partner when acting in direct opposition to what makes her feel safe.
...nor is there anything in my marriage that is preventing me from being a good friend to my best friend.
No. But there should be...the fact that the relationship causes tension and division in your marriage.
The only reason these two relationships could not co-exist is because of selfish jealousy, and I'm not about to cater to that.
This is a harsh statement and one that you need to look at, IMO. What is causing the jealousy? I too would feel that way if my spouse felt that his relationship with ANYONE... male or female... was more important than protecting me, making me feel safe, guarding our marriage. If he ever made the statement that if he couldn't be friends with the man that was our best man that he would rather not be married, I would be hurt and jealous. Now, if was a woman he said it about I would be devestated and doubly jealous. I would certainly not feel loved, honored or cherished to know that our marriage was that disposable to him.
I refuse to believe that I cannot have two people occupying different parts of my life and different parts of my heart...it's selfish for either one of them to expect to occupy the entirety of either, and my best friend is the only one currently not suggesting I go that route.
Do you not see the danger in this statement. You have a place in your life and heart that does not only not include, but actively EXCLUDES, your wife. And there is another woman in that place. Yeah...I'd have to say that is an absolute boundary I would have too.
I left my girlfriend for my current wife because she had put me in a "me or her" situation...anyone that puts me in that situation is going to lose, I don't care who it is.
"Do you want to be right or do you want to be married?" What is more important to you. Now, I personally don't think you're right... but you do. We're all different. That's okay. But realize that you are putting your marriage in last place here.
I know my wife isn't making an ultimatum like that, but it sure sounds like people see this as a "me or her" deal...
I don't see it that way. I see your wife being uncomfortable because she is clearly not the priority. She doesn't feel safe. Maybe she would feel differently if she was more important than the friendship. She SHOULD be the most important woman and person in your life.
The two of you are on such different places on this because you have both taken such a defensive stance. How about safe, honest discussion? What about listening to what her concerns are instead of dismissing them as selfish and juvenile? I wouldn't feel comfortable in opening up my heart and soul to get to the nitty gritty of my feelings either if I feared that would be the result. I'm a pretty open person when it comes to talks like that but I don't know if I could put myself out there like that if I didn't feel honored and cherished enough to know my husband was going to listen to my fears, accept them and protect me.
If society isn't keeping up with my ideals of equality, that's no reason for me to compromise my ideals...maybe I'm just ahead of the times in my thinking...but I'll be damned if I sacrifice a friendship for a marriage...the only path that can lead to is resentment.
Ouch. I know I said those exact same words at one time in my life. I know I said them out loud to more than one person I dated.
I honestly know where you are coming from here and that's why I'm writing to you.
I am married to a man who is NOT comfortable with my having good friends of the opposite sex. I know that and therefore do not maintain close friendships that would make him uncomfortable. Why? Because he is the most important person in my life. None of those friendships are worth making him feel uncomfortable or unsafe.
He is my partner. When I married him I chose him above all others - male or female. This relationship is first and foremost in my life.
No friend, no family, no activity comes before him.
I'm no doormat. I have a very successful career, friends, family, activities I love and enjoy. I'm fiesty and insist on equal respect and dedication from him.
I didn't come to understand this "no opposite sex friends" thing easily. I picked it apart, I looked at his motivation behind that belief and my motivation and reasons for believing it should be okay. After all, I had been married for 11 years before and had opposite sex friends, as had my X, and there was never any problem with my friends.
In the end I saw that while those friends were important to me and I would miss the close friendships, I couldn't make the lifelong commitment to honor and cherish my husband AND at the same time engage in something that made him uncomfortable. Marriage and the commitment to him changed both of our lives and neither of our lives would be the same or uniquely our own.
That's a big (and difficult) reality. Marriage isn't easy or without sacrafice. It shouldn't be easy or without sacrafice.
I haven't totally lost contact with some of those friends. But the CLOSE relationship was halted. When I do have contact with those male friends my husband knows. I do not go anywhere with one without him. I never confide intimate details of my marriage and NEVER EVER go to a male with complaints or problems about my marriage.
I would suggest reading the information on Policy of Joint Agreement. I would also suggest possibly finding someone who can facilitate a safe and honest dialoge with both of you. I get the feeling you don't find your wife's feeling to be valid and she isn't being honest with you about the depth of her feelings about your friendship.
When you both start talking honestly about those feelings I believe you will get to the bottom of her looking into your myspace writings. I also think you will be better able to deal with your own sense of violation from her looking at it. Both of your feelings here are valid and real. You need to be able to communicate it though.
JMO - Sorry this is so long but this is something I too fought long and hard through. It wasn't until I did my "deep overthinking" that I was able to see that my husbands beliefs weren't about control or jealously or selfishness and was able to really listen to what he was saying. It wasn't until then that I realized that my insistance he was "selfish and jealous" came from my own need for control and independance. When I felt that was challenged I automatically went on the defense and dug my heels in deeper.
Just something to consider from someone who has been through it.
FIM