So… I (34F) recently found out my husband (36M) was on a dating app. I wasn’t snooping—one of my friends matched with him and sent me screenshots. Instead of blowing up right away, I decided to play a little game.
I made a fake profile using someone else’s pictures (don’t worry, I had permission—she’s a friend who was more than happy to help me pull this off). Within hours, guess who swiped right? Yep. My husband.

We started chatting, and honestly, I felt sick. He introduced himself as a “divorced man” whose “ex-wife” (me) had left him ages ago. He painted himself as this wholesome guy with no bad habits, just looking for love and a happy family. Reading his words made my blood boil.
But I didn’t let it show. I played along, sweet and flirty, and eventually “I” suggested we meet up. We agreed on a little night out of town, nothing too suspicious but far enough away that it would take effort. He was all in—like a teenager planning a first date.
Fast forward to the night of our “date.” He told me he had been urgently called into work and needed to leave. I smiled, told him to be safe, and let him walk right out the door. He thought he was being slick.

Hours passed. At 5:00 AM, the front door slammed. He stumbled in, furious, exhausted, and reeking of cab fare. Turns out he’d spent two hours traveling each way and dropped a small fortune just to sit alone in a strange town waiting for a woman who never showed up.
He ranted about “women wasting his time” and “fake profiles ruining everything.” I just sat there calmly, sipping my coffee. Then I motioned toward the hallway—where a packed suitcase was waiting by the door.
“Funny you should say that,” I told him. “Because the fake profile you’ve been whining about? That was me.”
The look on his face was priceless. Anger, shock, realization—all mixed into one. I didn’t yell. I didn’t cry. I just told him straight: We’re done. Papers are already in the works.

That’s it. No dramatic screaming match. No second chances. Just the end of a marriage with a man who couldn’t even respect me enough to be honest.
I’m not asking for advice or sympathy—I already know what I want. Divorce. Freedom. A fresh start.
He thought he was clever, but all he did was hand me the cleanest exit strategy I could’ve hoped for.