
Coming Out Stories: When People Realized They're LGBTQ+
On the subreddit r/AskLGBT, Reddit user u/hottaxidermy shared their experience about their daughter coming out:
"Six months ago, my 9-year-old daughter came out and told me she likes girls! It was hard for her because she wasn't sure how I would respond. She cried as she told me, and it broke my heart, but I was so happy to be her source of comfort in that moment, to validate her, to hold her, hug her, and love her. I know a lot of people, children, teens or adults, still don't get the acceptance and respect they deserve in those moment and forever, so I wanted to make sure she understood that she has me, and an army of people who will be there for her, and love her because she's her, not because of who she likes. She lives with me, her stepdad, and younger sister full time, and we all accept it, but she frequently goes to her dad's a few weekends out of the month..."
"They haven't given her a safe space to open up and feel comfortable about her sexuality, and it breaks my heart to see her come back from there defeated after hearing comments like 'do you have a boyfriend?' 'Are there cute boys in your class?' Etc. She used to correct them, and now she just lets it happen and brushes it off."
After sharing their story, Reddit user u/hottaxidermy went on to ask: "At what age, did you know you weren't straight?" Here are some of the honest and very supportive responses:
"While my sexuality has changed a lot over the years, I've known I was sapphic since I was 7 and had my first crush, a girl."
"I knew I liked girls long before I knew what sex is. I was drawn to girls. It wasn't about sex or even kissing. It took me a very long time to accept that I liked girls romantically, but that's because of all the religious and conservative indoctrination. It had nothing to do with not knowing how I felt."
"When I was 18, I was just playing Xbox when in my head: 'Y'know what? Yep, very f*ckin certain I'm bisexual.' Continues to play Xbox like I didn't just learn a major plot point in my life."
"I think I was about 8-9 when I knew for sure. Her name was Stephanie, and I was obsessed."
"I knew I was bisexual before I had ever thought about sex. Before I knew the word bisexual. I just knew I could fall in love with girls and with boys."
"I wish we had more parents like you who can just accept their kids and not question everything about them just because they're young. I realized I liked girls when I was 14 or 15. Even then, I was told I couldn't possibly know that since I didn't have a lot of dating experience. Surprise, surprise, almost 10 years later, and I'm still attracted to women. I'm a lesbian."
"Not until I was 19 or 20, because I had to unlearn all my internalized anti-gay rhetoric, but I'd always been fascinated by beautiful, powerful women and said I wanted to be them."
"I was 13 (and still figuring things out at 38). What bothers me about the people outside of you and the rest of her immediate family is them assuming that just because she's young, she can't be queer. Kids her age are constantly talking about crushes, whether that's appropriate or not. At least I was, and like I said, that was 30 years ago. Are these people telling all the presumably straight kids that they're too young to know who they like? If we believe validating someone's feelings is sexualizing, this should apply to all kids, not just kids who have kiddie crushes on kids of the same gender."
"Probably around 15 years old. I realized that I found some of the other girls attractive in the locker room for example, and not only did I feel like an absolute creep (I didnt oogle them, I just noticed and quickly looked away), but I tried very hard to fight those feelings because my dad was, unfortunately, very anti-LGBTQ at the time. I was worried about being disowned and that he'd hate me forever. Now, I'm 42, engaged to a trans man, OPENLY with this man, and my dad accepts him, respects his pronouns, and adores him. I never thought he would become this progressive, but I'm thrilled he has."
"I knew at about 8 because I was super fascinated by all of the shirtless men in the action movies my dads would watch, lol."
"I think from age 8, I noticed boys. Nothing sexual, just child crushes."
"When The Little Mermaid (the OG one) came out, and I realized that I didn't want to BE Ariel and Ursula, I wanted to DATE them."
"I knew after I had a gay crush in kindergarten, and I'm pretty sure every adult had clocked me, but I properly came out at 12."
"I was in second grade when I knew. So, 6 or 7? I thought I liked both, but as I aged, I liked men less and less. I never 'came out.' My family is chill on my dad's side, and I knew they wouldn't care. I recently attended family events with my female partner. My mom didn't care about my sexuality necessarily, but she was mad I told her when I was a kid or a teen. I didn't have any serious girlfriends as a teen, so it didn't matter to me to say anything. I know I'm unique in the fact that I didn't feel a need to come out, and my family was accepting. I know coming out is really important to many people, and your daughter was fearless to do so, especially at such a young age. I pray that the other side of the family comes around because it's so hurtful to hear stuff like that. I truly feel for her little heart."
"I always had crushes on guys and girls growing up. I have diary entries dating back to early school (at least 6 or 7 years old), discussing my crushes and who I thought was cute, cool, etc. I didn't know there was a distinction between people who were straight, gay, or bisexual until I was 11 years old, when I told a (same sex, at the time) friend that I liked them and asked if they wanted to go on a date. They asked if I was gay, and I said I wasn't sure, so they asked if I was bisexual and explained what it meant, and it was like...yeah, that's how I've always felt my whole life, pretty much. So as long as I can remember, definitely at least 7. But I didn't know that there was a word for it or that it wasn't the norm until I was 11."
"I was gay literally my entire life. In middle school, I was confused about why I was being called slurs and what the word 'gay' was. It wasn't until I was in about sixth or seventh grade that I finally learned what LGBTQ+ was. Saying someone is too young is a myth and a lie. If she figures out she's something else in the future, that is completely fine. I was pansexual my entire life. Now I'm omnisexual with a preference for boys."
"When I started crushing on emo guys when I was 13, lmao. Turns out I just wasn't attracted to masculinity. The gender is irrelevant."
"I had a crush on a girl in elementary and middle school, but I didn't understand until I was 14 that I was gay. I tried to deny it, so she for sure can know at that age and have crushes on girls her age!"
"I knew when I was 12, almost 13, personally. I knew that gay, lesbian, and bi people existed from a young age, and I was open to the idea of finding girls attractive when I was closer to your daughter's age, but I hadn't had many crushes at that point yet. In retrospect, there were some other signs, like when I watched a straight couple kiss in a movie when I was around 7 and thought that kissing could be fun, but I'd rather be the guy kissing the woman than the other way around."
"I wonder how my life might be different if I had known at a younger age. I had crushes on girls in second grade, but ignored them and focused only on my crushes on boys."
"I knew I wasn't like other girls when they had crushes on NSYNC, and I liked Britney Spears instead. So I was around 6?"
"I knew when I was 9. After we played 'doctors and nurses' and the 'boys vs. girls' stigma, nothing's been the same since. I didn't really know until my mid-teens that I was different. It wasn't until my 20s that I started realizing not only am I bisexual, but asexual, aromantic, and aegosexual, among other things."
"Personally, I was in kindergarten, so 5-6. I don't remember much from elementary school BUT I remember having the thought a lot of young gay kids have, 'I wish I was a boy so I could date girl best friend's name.' So, even though I didn't KNOW I was gay until second grade, I absolutely was gay. I was in love with that girl for like six years."
"I had gay tendencies and was very into Tommy the Green Power Ranger...but I was always sensitive and a diva as a kid."
"For me, it was more like when I realised everyone else wasn't gay. I was an avid reader and writer from a young age, and I would always envision myself in the male role and with a female love interest. I'm a cis-masc lesbian, so I didn't think this was unusual at all. I didn't realize this was not the norm until high school."
"I think I always knew, I just didn't have a concept of it yet. I had crushes on a lot of my friends that I didn't realize were crushes until I was told what being gay was. Then, it was kind of like finding the missing piece to a puzzle. Everything clicked, and I finally had a word to describe what I was feeling. So I don't think your daughter is too young, and like you said, even if her sexuality does change in the future, that doesn't make her feelings now invalid."
"I realized when I was 14, but I probably would have figured it out sooner if anyone in my life had told me that queer people existed. When I was 10, I wrote a love poem about a girl in my class (I claimed I was 'writing it from the perspective of a boy'). When I was in kindergarten, I spent a lot of time thinking about how cool and how pretty the first grade girls were."
"I knew when I was about 10/11? Tbh, I hadn't really thought about it much up to that point because, well, my uncle was gay, so it was pretty normal, and my home life and us moving across the country were pretty unstable and chaotic. However, I knew I was trans by the time I was 9, though I didn't have the vocabulary for it."
"I was probably right around her age, 8 or 9. I started seeing a couple of women in movies or on TV, and couldn't figure out if I wanted to be them or be with them when I grew up. It was confirmed in early middle school.
At what age did you realize you weren't straight? If you're comfortable sharing your story with me, comment below!
Looking for more LGBTQ+ or Pride content? Then check out all of BuzzFeed's posts celebrating Pride 2025.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Women Are Sharing The Things Men Don't Realize Are A Complete Turn Off, And Honestly, Facts
For some reason, people always talk about their dating 'turn-ons,' but not nearly as much about their 'turn-offs.' If you're curious about the latter, it's your lucky day. In one Reddit thread, women shared the things men do that turn them off, and I've compiled them for you here. Ahead, I've rounded up 19 different perspectives. (Some of these are wayyy too accurate.) 1."When they start bragging about other women. I think they think it makes them seem desirable, but it turns me off." –PurpleNightSkies 2."NOT ASKING QUESTIONS! Seriously, even replying consistently with a 'what about you' is unreliable with most men." –Saltyforever 3."Talking about crypto." –UselessAndUnloveable 4."Bragging about their intelligence and looking down on and/or refusing to interact with anyone who has a different viewpoint because they deem them as 'unintelligent' or 'simple-minded.'" "One guy I knew called people he saw as dumb as 'subhuman.' That, and constantly trying to look like the smartest person in the room by finding something to debate or correct you on." –OkJournalist2816 5."In partnerships, expecting her to tell you what to do when it comes to household management and family relationships. She's not your mom. You're a grown ass adult, you should be able to figure out how to prioritize chores and how to do tasks." "If a woman starts to feel that she has to mother her partner and teach, demonstrate, or supervise every chore because her partner doesn't do a good job or forgets how every time, she will be resentful, exhausted, and she won't want to have sex with you any more, because she feels like your mother. It's very unsexy to feel like somebody's mother." –BalladofBadBeard Related: Sorry, But It's Actually Physically, Mentally, And Emotionally Impossible Not To Smile At Any Of These Pictures 6."Spitting in public. I swear that every time I'm out somewhere and see a dude and think, 'gee, that's a good-looking guy,' then he turns his head and hocks a loogie. Wtf, you guys? Stop it." –amsterdamyankee 7."Entitlement. You're not entitled to any woman's time, attention, body, kindness, or support." –totallytotallytotes 8."Dirty fingernails. I love a good set of strong man hands, but oh my god, clean your nails." –Jollybosom 9."Calling yourself an 'Alpha Male.' Please stop – it's cringey as hell, and it makes you look stupid." –Silver-Virus-8683 Related: Here Are 18 "Red Flags" That Made Women Break Up With Their Long-Term Partners, And I COMPLETELY Understand Why Marriage Rates Are Declining 10."A big truck – unless you actually use it for hauling things or work. I don't know why so many men feel like they NEED a truck." –FollowingNew4641 11."Asking for pictures early in the talking stage." –Arial_3 12."Being a bad driver or having road rage." –Lostbyway 13."Calling women 'females.' For me, that's an immediate no." –ImATattooedGhost 14."PROJECTING INSECURITIES. I had so many guys who had nothing wrong with them, absolutely projecting their insecurities on me. There's nothing wrong with your height or your face. Just go to therapy." –Gettingjiggywithet 15."Talking to me only if they think I'm single. I value friendship as the most important pillar in my life. If you can't be my friend first, I don't want to see you naked." –Aleena_Arena 16."Negging. The very millisecond a man attempts this, I will flee. 95% of men who neg aren't clever enough to make it charming, or they just out themselves as being an actually bad person." –toomanyusernames300 17."Being mean to staff or service workers. Being mean in general." –ayy_the_dank_lord 18."Complaining about 'golddiggers' and how you're never wasting money on a diamond ring – buddy, if you'd ask a question, you'd know I have a good job and bought my own damn ring with my first bonus." –Future_Usual_8698 finally, "When they don't like cats." –Traditional-Way-1302 Do you have any turnoffs that belong on this list? Let me know in the comments. Or if you'd rather remain anonymous, you can leave a response on the form below! Also in Internet Finds: "I Have Never Told My Mom That I Know": 47 Massive Secrets People Uncovered About Their Families That Left Them Shocked Also in Internet Finds: People With ADHD Are Sharing Their Weirdest Productivity Hacks — And As Someone With ADHD, I Think These May Actually Change My Life Also in Internet Finds: People In HR Revealed Truly Unhinged Reasons Employees Got Fired, And My Jaw Is On The Floor
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Women Are Sharing The Things Men Don't Realize Are A Complete Turn Off, And Honestly, Facts
For some reason, people always talk about their dating 'turn-ons,' but not nearly as much about their 'turn-offs.' If you're curious about the latter, it's your lucky day. In one Reddit thread, women shared the things men do that turn them off, and I've compiled them for you here. Ahead, I've rounded up 19 different perspectives. (Some of these are wayyy too accurate.) 1."When they start bragging about other women. I think they think it makes them seem desirable, but it turns me off." –PurpleNightSkies 2."NOT ASKING QUESTIONS! Seriously, even replying consistently with a 'what about you' is unreliable with most men." –Saltyforever 3."Talking about crypto." –UselessAndUnloveable 4."Bragging about their intelligence and looking down on and/or refusing to interact with anyone who has a different viewpoint because they deem them as 'unintelligent' or 'simple-minded.'" "One guy I knew called people he saw as dumb as 'subhuman.' That, and constantly trying to look like the smartest person in the room by finding something to debate or correct you on." –OkJournalist2816 5."In partnerships, expecting her to tell you what to do when it comes to household management and family relationships. She's not your mom. You're a grown ass adult, you should be able to figure out how to prioritize chores and how to do tasks." "If a woman starts to feel that she has to mother her partner and teach, demonstrate, or supervise every chore because her partner doesn't do a good job or forgets how every time, she will be resentful, exhausted, and she won't want to have sex with you any more, because she feels like your mother. It's very unsexy to feel like somebody's mother." –BalladofBadBeard Related: Sorry, But It's Actually Physically, Mentally, And Emotionally Impossible Not To Smile At Any Of These Pictures 6."Spitting in public. I swear that every time I'm out somewhere and see a dude and think, 'gee, that's a good-looking guy,' then he turns his head and hocks a loogie. Wtf, you guys? Stop it." –amsterdamyankee 7."Entitlement. You're not entitled to any woman's time, attention, body, kindness, or support." –totallytotallytotes 8."Dirty fingernails. I love a good set of strong man hands, but oh my god, clean your nails." –Jollybosom 9."Calling yourself an 'Alpha Male.' Please stop – it's cringey as hell, and it makes you look stupid." –Silver-Virus-8683 Related: Here Are 18 "Red Flags" That Made Women Break Up With Their Long-Term Partners, And I COMPLETELY Understand Why Marriage Rates Are Declining 10."A big truck – unless you actually use it for hauling things or work. I don't know why so many men feel like they NEED a truck." –FollowingNew4641 11."Asking for pictures early in the talking stage." –Arial_3 12."Being a bad driver or having road rage." –Lostbyway 13."Calling women 'females.' For me, that's an immediate no." –ImATattooedGhost 14."PROJECTING INSECURITIES. I had so many guys who had nothing wrong with them, absolutely projecting their insecurities on me. There's nothing wrong with your height or your face. Just go to therapy." –Gettingjiggywithet 15."Talking to me only if they think I'm single. I value friendship as the most important pillar in my life. If you can't be my friend first, I don't want to see you naked." –Aleena_Arena 16."Negging. The very millisecond a man attempts this, I will flee. 95% of men who neg aren't clever enough to make it charming, or they just out themselves as being an actually bad person." –toomanyusernames300 17."Being mean to staff or service workers. Being mean in general." –ayy_the_dank_lord 18."Complaining about 'golddiggers' and how you're never wasting money on a diamond ring – buddy, if you'd ask a question, you'd know I have a good job and bought my own damn ring with my first bonus." –Future_Usual_8698 finally, "When they don't like cats." –Traditional-Way-1302 Do you have any turnoffs that belong on this list? Let me know in the comments. Or if you'd rather remain anonymous, you can leave a response on the form below! Also in Internet Finds: "I Have Never Told My Mom That I Know": 47 Massive Secrets People Uncovered About Their Families That Left Them Shocked Also in Internet Finds: People With ADHD Are Sharing Their Weirdest Productivity Hacks — And As Someone With ADHD, I Think These May Actually Change My Life Also in Internet Finds: People In HR Revealed Truly Unhinged Reasons Employees Got Fired, And My Jaw Is On The Floor
Yahoo
10 hours ago
- Yahoo
People Who Found Out About Their Spouses' Sinister Secrets After Marrying Them Are Sharing What Happened, And It's Really Frightening
We recently covered a Reddit thread that asked users who discovered major secrets about their spouses after marriage to share their stories. This inspired members of the BuzzFeed Community who have endured similar revelations to open up about their experiences. Here's what people shared: 1."My ex-husband neglected to tell me that he was more interested in men than women. When I did find out, I was pregnant and not working due to severe morning sickness. I wanted to run, but I felt trapped. More of his lies came out, and we divorced a couple of years later. I found out during the divorce that he was soliciting men on Craigslist and inviting them to the house while he was taking care of my daughter." —Anonymous 2."After working to get my husband through medical school and putting off finishing my college career until he graduated, he had an affair with his assistant, and she had his baby while we were still married. I finished my Master's and divorced him." —Anonymous 3."This guy was pursuing me to no end, even sending flowers to my job. I finally agreed to marry him. I never loved him, really. But I was willing to learn to love him. Then, he started acting strange when we picked out a house to buy. I had a VA loan and discovered his name couldn't be on the deed because of a foreclosure. His ex-wife still lived in the home and refused to pay mortgage payments. So, once I purchased our home on my own, he was infuriated that he'd have to sign a disclosure agreement and that he'd have no rights to the property. That didn't stop him from getting a restraining order against me a year later and trying to have me forced from the home when I filed for divorce. He was a true loser." —Anonymous 4."My husband didn't tell me he still owned a condo with his ex and was still close with her and her current husband. I found an email in which he complained to her about how rude my children were. He invited his ex and her husband to visit us, but he didn't tell me until they arrived, and we were scheduled to join them for dinner." —Anonymous 5."My husband didn't tell me he was already married to another man. At first, I was horrified, but it turns out they are both bi and very into me. I'm now enjoying two husbands." —Anonymous 6."He told me he didn't want to buy me an engagement ring because he'd rather use the money for a down payment on a house. I found out after we were married that there was no money. He said he had a BS in Sociology when he was actually five classes shy of his degree. I found this out after being married for 18 years. He told me he never used any drugs, but I found out when we were divorcing that he was getting high with our kids as a bonding experience and that when he was younger, he used to get so drunk/high that he'd crawl out to his car from bars. He was a Boy Scout leader for our son's troop, and I found out he was forging signatures on badges, so my son's scouting career was false. It took me 24 years to be rid of him." —Anonymous 7."He told me he was divorced. Then, a week before our wedding, he had to go to court to get his divorce finalized. I would never have dated a married man. Then, he had an affair and told his new woman that he and I were already divorced. Pathological liar." —Anonymous 8."My ex-husband of 20 years told me after we were married and moved to another state that he had a little girl. The little girl is six months younger than my son. My son was born in July; she was born in December of the same year. We also got married in March of that year. He claims it was before we were married, but we were engaged and had set plans to fly to Miami to get married. I never had another child by him." —Anonymous 9."My ex didn't tell me he had a problem with being on the internet. I found out after six years of marriage that he had a secret Facebook account with only women on it, saying he liked to get down and dirty. I also found out he was doing live porn on the internet with other people posting his privates all over the internet. Needless to say, I divorced him." —Anonymous 10."Before marriage, he pretended to be kind, helpful, a good father, and employed with a steady job. He later admitted to stealing all of my money and all of the kids' money from their savings accounts, as well as spending tens of thousands of dollars on sex workers during work hours as a children's social worker. We're divorced." 11."Lying is integral to my soon-to-be ex's negative value system. He said he loved me; he didn't. He said his grandparents had a small bank account in our name; they didn't. He said he had kidney cancer; he didn't. He said he didn't get money from his brother's estate; he did. He said he'd take me to Hawaii when I finished my thesis; he didn't. I had no idea when I married the loser that everything he said was a lie." —Anonymous 12."This happened in the late 1990s. About a year or so into our marriage, my then/first wife showed me a final collection notice on unpaid college loans. She was visibly upset, insisting that she never got any prior notices in the mail. It got me mad. I cashed out an investment and paid it off to make the debt collector disappear. A couple years later, she asked for a divorce and moved out. In the summer of 1999, I was going through my house, clearing out her excess stuff, when I opened up a storage bin and found — surprise, surprise — all the prior collection notices she had hidden away. That was the least of the eye-opening discoveries I learned about her. We divorced in March 2000. Exactly a year later, I met a sweet woman and married her two years later. We've been happily married for 21 years. Oh yeah, and we both pay our bills on time." —Anonymous 13."Three years after we were married, I found out that my husband is sexually attracted to men. I found a questionable male picture on his computer while restoring it from a virus, and I made it his desktop image, hoping he would object to it somehow. Instead, he didn't bat an eye. When I confronted him, he said, 'I'm working on that.' We obviously are not together anymore." —Anonymous 14."Wooh! Where do these folks come from?!? First, it was his age (older than he stated), then a story about being in the military. Now, the icing on the cake: his baby momma was in labor with twins on our wedding day! All his guests knew what was up. I had no clue and was pregnant really soon after the wedding. Now it makes sense why he wasn't thrilled we were pregnant." —Anonymous 15."I only found out that my husband had previously been married when I went to register my child's birth at the embassy. To top it off, he was still married to that person in another country. He did not think it counted since he permanently left that country. Needless to say, he had to pay legal fees in two countries and travel there to get a divorce. I only believed him when I saw the legal documents translated and submitted to our local courts." —Anonymous 16."My then-boyfriend, now husband, always brought me little gifts and cards. I was young and he was 10 years older. I thought it was so sweet and thoughtful. It definitely was a big reason I fell for him. It wasn't until years later that I realized his mom and sister were buying the cards and gifts. It wasn't his thoughtfulness at all." —Anonymous 17."I am a physician, and he is a teacher. Years after we were married, he basically told me that I was not good enough and that he would never have married me if he had been a physician or lawyer. I am his third wife. We are in the process of getting divorced." —Anonymous 18."My ex-husband went into great detail about his yellow truck at home in California (I'm in CT) and said he had broken off an engagement. At our wedding, his mother told me that she had to break up with his ex-fiancée for him when she came over for her regular dinner time when the family was preparing to come for the wedding. Also, he never owned a vehicle. I had been driving him everywhere. He never let me talk to his mom. He cheated on me, so we are not together anymore." "My other ex-husband, as it turned out, had never been with another woman before me. That would be fine, but he told me he had been with three. Two didn't have names, but one was named Zoe, and he made up her backstory. It all came crashing down when he said he had gone to Machu Pichu with her and didn't know what country it was in. I was with him for eight years, and so many wild stories about him exist. I've been divorced for quite a while." —awkwardlamp47 19."I was working with a dental office shortly after graduating from high school, but before I started design school at the Pasadena School of Design. This character supposedly was a dental student at USC, and I was naïve enough to believe him. Two years later, married to this delusional liar and pregnant with our first child, I was still unaware that he wasn't a dentist but just a guy making false teeth for patients. It got worse. He became physically abusive, but my two children and I were able to escape his lies and abuse. I recently got a friend request from him on Facebook. No way in hell would I befriend him." —Anonymous 20."We got engaged after 10 glorious days. A year and a half later, we married. Then, he casually told me everything he told me when we got together was all lies. He didn't know or want me, much less love me. He just wanted to 'do' me but knew I wanted to wait for marriage. Also, he was homeless because his ex left, and he couldn't pay the rent. Many years and kids later, I still feel used. People think we are so happy, but I feel empty inside. Our children, who are on their own and doing well, know their dad is only here because I pay all the bills." —Anonymous 21."My dad was 12 years older than my mom, so he lied about being 40 since he didn't think she would be interested at 28. He had always looked young, so it was easy to pull off. The day she found out his real age was at the courthouse when they were signing the marriage license. He thought she would be so mad, but she laughed it off since she was so in love at that point and didn't care how old he was. She would always lovingly retell the story while he looked on embarrassed." —cute-as-ducks419 22."He only married me for a green card. He was dating other women the whole time we were married. One of his dates called and clued me in. Hello, divorce lawyer!" —Anonymous 23."When I met my future husband, we were making small talk at a Saturday night gathering for single people. I was in my early 20s. He was 10 years older than me, incredibly handsome, and seemed kind. I asked him if he had plans for the upcoming week. He said his friend was having a baby, and he was going to see them sometime that week. It sounded normal enough. I innocently assumed he meant a guy friend, and the friend's wife was having a baby, and my dude was being supportive. Two years later, we were engaged. After we were married, he told me the 'friend' he had mentioned the night we met was actually his ex-girlfriend." "They were going through a breakup when I met him; the baby was his. That pregnancy had ended due to a stillbirth the week we met. I was amazed that he thought he couldn't tell me the truth about that situation at some reasonable point before we married. I would not have married him if they'd had a baby, but I chalked it all up to 'live and learn.' I was trying to do the 'right thing' and honor my marriage vows by forgiving him and putting that in the past. I divorced him 24 years later when I gradually found out he had racked up many thousands of dollars in debt over the years without telling me and had hidden that from me by eventually taking over the financial 'management' of our shared bank account, a task I had openly done for us for years. He had also invested his pension from early retirement, which was a substantial sum of money that could have sustained a humble but secure lifestyle for us for the rest of our lives, into a business venture with an acquaintance against my adamant disagreement. The acquaintance turned out to be a crook who had convinced my ex to allow him to 'manage the finances' since they were business partners. The guy stole all of my ex's (our) money and disappeared with all of the equipment, files, and computers from the business. The acquaintance was operating under an alias and wanted in another state for doing the same thing to somebody else. I am so relieved to be out of that tough marriage. I am much poorer, wiser, and not impressed with the quality of men my age I've met. The bar now is so incredibly low. I don't know if I want to be with anyone again." —Anonymous "My first husband told me right after we were married that he wasn't in love with me yet, but he said he would learn to love me over time. We lasted 20 years and had three kids before his dysfunctional behavior finally made me realize I couldn't fix what started broken." —Anonymous Gosh, how devastating and unsettling. It's incredible how some people can hide their true colors from even those closest to them. Scary stuff. If you also married someone who hid major parts of themselves from you, what happened? Tell us in the comments or submit anonymously using this form. Note: Submissions have been edited for length and/or clarity.