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DEAR DEIDRE

My husband spent £7k of our savings on a cam girl but claims he didn’t cheat

DEAR DEIDRE: MY husband has come clean after falling for  a webcam woman who scammed him out of £7,000 of our life  savings. 

But he still claims he was not cheating — because he never met her in real life.

I don’t know what I’m most upset about — the money or the sexual and emotional infidelity.

My husband is 47 and I’m 43.

We’ve been married for seven years after meeting online a decade ago.

We’ve always been so close but now it feels like I’m married to a complete stranger. 

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I knew there was something amiss. He had stopped talking to me and wanted to stay up much later than me.

But when I saw £7,000 had been taken out of our savings account, I  knew immediately that there was another woman involved. 

I looked at his tablet history and could see he’d been regularly visiting a webcam site and entering into private chats with one woman in particular.

I was utterly devastated and as soon as he walked in from work, I confronted him with everything I knew.

He says they never met in person but she “bewitched” him, and I don’t know whether to be appalled or relieved.

He admitted he started to feel sorry for her as she spun him a tale about being on the verge of eviction from her flat.

But once he transferred the money she disappeared.

He’s admitted he feels like a fool and has apologised, but he insists we simply need to put it behind us and move on.

I’m doing my best but I feel so stuck. 

I am still really hurt. I  don’t want to lose my husband so how do we get past this?

MORE FROM DEAR DEIDRE

DEIDRE SAYS: I’m sure your husband would like to move on and forget everything, but that would not be addressing the fact he has cheated.

Anything that takes the focus away from a relationship and behaviour that hurts the other partner constitutes infidelity. 

He needs to acknowledge how much he has hurt you.

He has betrayed you sexually, emotionally and financially. 

It is a start that he has apologised, but he now needs to start talking  to you about why he was tempted to stray. 

I would strongly recommend you both talk to a relationship therapist who can help you to decide if it  is possible to recover from this betrayal. 

Please contact Tavistock (), who can put you in touch with a reputable counsellor.

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