I Discovered My Husband’s Sick ‘Game’ With His Coworkers, And I Can’t Even Look At Him

My husband, Mark, went out with his work buddies last night. He came home late, in a strangely giddy mood, laughing about how he “won the pot.” I assumed it was some silly poker game and didn’t think twice about it.

This morning, I was making coffee when I got a message from a woman named Lisa, who’s married to one of Mark’s coworkers. Her text was hesitant. “Hey, I’m so sorry to bother you, but did you know about the game the guys played last night?” I told her I had no idea what she was talking about.

A moment later, a screenshot appeared on my phone. It was from a group chat. In it was a picture of my husband, holding up a pair of my favorite silk underwear, grinning like an idiot. Below the photo were comments from his friends, rating them, with crude jokes. Lisa explained they have a contest every time they go out: whoever brings the “best” pair of their wife’s underwear wins a round of drinks.

I felt like the air had been sucked out of the room. I walked on trembling legs to our bedroom and opened my underwear drawer. The pair from the photo was missing. Just then, Mark walked in, wrapping his arms around my waist from behind. “Morning, beautiful,” he said, kissing my neck. I didn’t move. I just held up my phone so he could see the screen in the reflection of the mirror.

His smile froze as he read it. His hands dropped from my waist like I was on fire. “It’s not what it looks like,” he said quickly.

“Then tell me what it is,” I said, keeping my voice steady even though my heart felt like it was crumbling.

He stammered something about “just a joke” and “everyone does it,” as if that made it okay. I stared at him, still holding the phone. “So you thought it was funny to sneak into my drawer, steal something personal, parade it in front of your coworkers, and let them make disgusting comments about it?”

He didn’t answer. He just stood there like a kid caught with his hand in the cookie jar.

I turned away, walked to the dresser, and picked up a small laundry bag. “Get out,” I said quietly. “Go stay with one of your little buddies. Or maybe Lisa’s husband—he seemed to enjoy the show too.”

He tried to argue, but I didn’t want to hear it. I shut the bedroom door behind him and locked it.

That day, I called in sick to work. I spent the next few hours sitting on the floor of our walk-in closet, surrounded by everything I used to feel comfortable and safe in—my sweaters, my pajamas, even my old college hoodie. Now, all of it felt exposed. Violated.

Lisa texted again. “I’m so sorry. I thought you knew. I only said something because I was horrified when my husband showed me the thread.”

I thanked her, even though I felt numb. Part of me wanted to scream. Another part just wanted to disappear.

That evening, Mark texted from his friend Derek’s place. “I messed up. Please talk to me. It was stupid. I didn’t mean to hurt you.”

But he did hurt me. It wasn’t just about the underwear. It was about trust. About disrespect. About reducing our marriage to a locker room joke.

The next morning, I packed a bag and drove to my sister’s house two hours away. Claire greeted me at the door in her slippers and robe, her mouth opening when she saw my red eyes.

“I’m not ready to talk,” I said. “Can I just stay a few days?”

She nodded and pulled me into a hug.

Over the next couple days, I told her everything. Claire was the first person who didn’t say “boys will be boys” or try to downplay it. She looked furious on my behalf.

“Marriages aren’t perfect,” she said, “but there’s a difference between making a mistake and treating your partner like a trophy in some disgusting frat game.”

That night, while Claire put her kids to bed, I scrolled through old photos on my phone. Pictures of Mark and me on vacations, at weddings, at random Tuesday dinners. I used to think we were solid. Real. But now, every smile he gave me in those photos looked different—less like love and more like performance.

A few days later, I returned home. I didn’t tell Mark I was coming. When I opened the door, the house smelled like takeout and sadness.

He was sitting on the couch in the same clothes I’d last seen him in. When he saw me, he stood up too fast and knocked over his drink. “Thank God,” he said. “I was so scared I’d lost you.”

I stayed near the door. “You did lose me. At least the version of me who trusted you.”

We sat down and talked for two hours. He cried. I cried. He admitted he’d done it before—twice. He said it started as a joke, and then it became something “expected” when the guys went out.

“They all did it,” he said again. “It was just… stupid guy stuff.”

“Stop saying that,” I snapped. “You’re not a teenager. You’re my husband.”

He said he wanted to go to couples therapy. He was willing to do whatever it took to rebuild what he broke. I told him I needed time.

The next day, I took a personal day and visited Lisa.

She welcomed me with a warm hug and a strong cup of tea. We sat on her back porch while her toddler napped upstairs.

“I honestly thought you knew,” she said again. “When I found out, I tore into my husband. He tried to laugh it off, but I told him it was divorce territory if he ever pulled something like that again.”

We talked for hours, and it became clear that this “game” had been going on longer than I thought. Several wives had no idea. A few knew but stayed silent to avoid conflict. Some just rolled their eyes and hoped it would pass.

That’s when an idea formed.

With Lisa’s help, I created a private group chat and reached out to the other wives and girlfriends. Some were shocked. A few were defensive at first. But over time, the truth poured out.

One woman, Trina, said she once found her underwear missing but thought she misplaced it. Another, Jen, admitted her husband bragged about winning “three weeks in a row.”

Together, we decided enough was enough.

We organized a dinner at a local restaurant under the guise of a “partners’ night.” The men arrived smug and unaware. Mark kept glancing at me, confused by my calm demeanor.

Midway through dinner, Lisa stood up and tapped her glass.

“Ladies, it’s time.”

One by one, we pulled out envelopes and dropped them in front of our husbands and boyfriends. Inside were printed screenshots of the group chat, with highlighted comments and dates.

There was silence.

Then, murmurs. Then red faces. Then excuses.

Some tried to laugh it off. Others looked genuinely ashamed.

Mark didn’t say a word. He stared at the envelope like it might explode.

Then I stood up.

“I want each of you to understand how humiliating, hurtful, and disgusting this game is. We’re not trophies. We’re not props. And we’re certainly not party favors to win drinks over.”

I looked around the table. “We are your partners. Your equals. And if you can’t treat us with respect, maybe you don’t deserve us at all.”

With that, half the women walked out. Some went home. Some went to their sister’s house. Some, like me, had already packed a bag.

Mark followed me out to the parking lot.

“I didn’t know they’d react like that,” he said quietly. “I didn’t think it would go this far.”

“That’s the problem,” I said. “You never thought at all.”

He didn’t try to stop me from driving away.

For the next month, we lived separately. He attended therapy on his own and started writing me letters—real letters, not texts—where he explained his thought process, his regrets, and the ways he was trying to change.

I read them all. I didn’t respond.

I wanted to be sure his change wasn’t about winning me back—but about becoming better.

Eventually, I agreed to therapy. Together, we sat with a counselor and picked apart everything—his choices, my pain, our communication, our future.

Healing didn’t happen overnight.

But it did happen.

Slowly, Mark earned back parts of my trust. Not through grand gestures, but small things: open conversations, respect for boundaries, consistent accountability.

I moved back home three months later—not because I forgot what he did, but because he finally understood why it was wrong.

It’s been a year now. The guys’ group chat no longer exists. Some of those marriages didn’t survive. Others, like ours, became stronger—but only because the truth was dragged into the light.

Sometimes, the ugliest things force you to grow the most.

And sometimes, love means starting over—with better eyes, clearer hearts, and stronger boundaries.

If you’re ever in a situation where something doesn’t feel right—don’t stay silent.

Speak up. Because silence only protects the ones doing harm.

Have you ever discovered a secret that changed everything in your relationship? Share this post if it resonated, and let’s talk about it. You’re not alone.