Katlego Sekhu

Anonymous and her husband met at church. After eight months of dating, he proposed, paid lobola, and they built what everyone around them saw as the perfect marriage.
Last year, while on vacation, her husband told her something she never expected. He told her he is gay.
Suddenly, the distance she had felt for four years made sense. Now he has told her he does not want a divorce. Instead, he wants them to remain husband and wife in public, free to be with other people privately, on the condition that nobody ever finds out.
Reaching out to The Best T in the City with Tbose, Anonymous wants to know if there are any blind spots she might be missing and whether agreeing to this arrangement would mean preserving her marriage or quietly putting her own life on hold to protect everyone else’s.
“Uncle T, last year, while we were on vacation, my husband made a confession that completely changed my life. We met at church. After eight months of dating, he proposed, paid lobola, and we built what everyone saw as the perfect marriage. Even other young couples in our church looked up to us.
“Then he told me something I never expected. He said that after more than ten years of struggling with his identity, he could no longer live a lie. He told me he is gay. Suddenly, so many things made sense. The intimacy struggles. The emotional distance. The way work and other distractions always seemed to come before us. For 4 years of marriage, I questioned myself and wondered what I was doing wrong. Now he was telling me it had never really been about me. What shocked me even more was that he does not want a divorce.
“Instead, he wants us to stay married for appearances. He says our families, our church, and our community see us as a model couple, and he doesn’t want to destroy that image. His proposal is that we remain husband and wife in public, while privately I am free to date men and he is free to be with men. The only condition is that nobody can know. I feel so lost. This marriage has been a huge part of my identity. We are still young, and I never imagined I would have to choose between truth and appearance, between living authentically and protecting the image everyone else believes is real.
“Part of me understands the fear he must be carrying. But another part of me feels deeply betrayed. If he has known this about himself for years, why did he marry me? Why was I given a role in a story that was never fully true? And now I find myself facing an even bigger question. If I agree to this arrangement, am I preserving a marriage or volunteering to become a supporting character in someone else’s life while putting my own on hold? At what pöint protecting other people’s comfort becomes a betrayal of yourself? And what if my biggest blind spot is believing that staying would save the marriage, when in reality the marriage I thought I had may have ended the day he finally told the truth?”
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