Truth vs. Protection: How Much Should the Kids Know About Infidelity?

Mo Flava on 947 · 9 June 2026 · 11m

Speaker 1: What flavor. On nine four seven, got a message from Lannie, and we're going to Speaker 1: be focusing on Lanni's message on today's dilemma. So here's the story. Lannie says, my Speaker 1: husband wants a divorce, and honestly, I'm done fighting for a ghost. I'm cooperating, I'm Speaker 1: letting go. I'm even getting the therapy I need to heal. But here is where Speaker 1: I draw the line. We've got two beautiful teenage daughters fifteen and seventeen, and they Speaker 1: know we have problems, but we haven't told them it's officially over. So before I Speaker 1: sign a single legal document, I want us to sit down and tell the girls Speaker 1: the absolute truth, no sugar coating, no lies. And I also want us to speak Speaker 1: to his family because right now they've only heard his distorted side of the story Speaker 1: and think that I am the villain. You see, Mo, he wants a divorce, and Speaker 1: he wanted because he cheated, and he as a whole four year old, a child Speaker 1: somewhere out there that he's been secretly supporting. Somehow in his mind, his infidelity is Speaker 1: my fault. He spent our entire marriage doing everything on his terms, and now he Speaker 1: wants a quiet, clean exit on his terms so that he can look like the Speaker 1: good guy. Am I wrong to demand the truth and that it come out before Speaker 1: I sign the papers? Or should I just let him walk away with his secrets? Speaker 1: That is a story from Lani Lani. First things first, I have no idea how Speaker 1: to handle a divorce, but what I can say…

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