DEAR MISS MANNERS: For the last 10 years, three couples and I have been close friends. We travel together, have our own annual traditions, share game nights, brunches, bonfires — we even got matching tattoos.
Then I learned that one couple was separated and planned to divorce. I was the last to learn of it, by over a month, and only found out because other members of the group said that the wife (a good friend of mine) should be the one to tell me.
Even so, I was eager to support both parties. A month later, I learned of another coupleโs plans to divorce. Again, I was very supportive of both parties.
But now, the remaining couple, as well as the husband from the first divorce and the wife from the second, make plans that do not include me.
Itโs becoming increasingly apparent that the husband from the first divorce and the wife from the second are living together. If this is the case, I do wish them the best if theyโve found happiness. But as I am still feeling the sting of being the last to know about the first divorce, is it better to ask outright or keep pretending Iโm clueless?
I feel that the longer I act oblivious, the more it undermines my friendship with this new couple. I think they assume my โallianceโ is with the first divorced wife, but Iโve said multiple times that thatโs not true.
What guidance can you provide?
GENTLE READER: Both of your goals — staying friends with the remainder of the group and being up on the latest gossip — are achievable, but require different approaches.
To accomplish the first, organize events with the now-smaller group without any questions or discussion about who is going home with whom. This will convince them that you still wish to be friends far more effectively than prodding into their new alliances.
The second goal will happen without prompting when you take the wife of the second couple out for lunches. Miss Manners recommends against asking out the discarded husband unless you are willing to…
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