Man Pretends Not To Recognize Ex-Girlfriend At Work After Decade Of Painful Silence

A man froze during his routine workday shift when a ghost from his past appeared right in front of him. This woman had once been his closest friend since third grade, his on-and-off high school romance, and the girlfriend waiting back home when he deployed with the military at nineteen. Their story ended in heartbreak when she cheated during his service and delivered the crushing Dear John letter that shattered their years-long bond.

Ten years on, he deliberately acted as if she were a total stranger despite her repeated attempts to spark conversation. The encounter left him questioning his own cold response while highlighting deep unresolved wounds from the betrayal that still lingered strongly.

Redditor denies recognizing his cheating military ex at work.

Man Pretends Not To Recognize Ex-Girlfriend At Work After Decade Of Painful Silence
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for "not recognizing" my first ex?'

I was at work today and I saw someone who I thought I would never see again.

Some back story, this girl was my best friend from 3rd grade all the way up to Senior year in high school.

We dated off and on in HS and we were still together when I left for the military(this was 2009 and I was 19).

About 6 months into my time she was working as a flight attendant and I started noticing some dude posting stuff onto her Myspace wall like

"I can't wait to see you again, we had so much fun last night, etc,etc".

I am not a jealous guy so I politely inquire wtf all this stuff he was posting was

and she said that she had reconnected with a friend and they had been hanging out but that nothing was going on.

Then two days later I got the "Dear John" email and she admitted to have been cheating on me since the day I left.

Fast forward to this day some 10 years later, and I was working and I see her face.

I make like I didn't recognize her right off the bat and kept working, she then calls my name,

I acted like I didn't hear her and she just called it louder so I turned and faced her.

She greeted me and then said "Do you remember me?" and I said "I am so sorry but I don't".

She looked really hurt and tried to continue the conversation but I said that I needed to get back to work (which I did I was trying to finish a...

My coworkers said that I was cold hearted, but being cheated on is up there on my "relationship mortal sins" and frankly I had no desire to reconnect. so Am...

The Redditor opted for feigned ignorance rather than awkward small talk or confrontation at his workplace. His coworkers called it cold-hearted, but many online sided with him, arguing he owed her nothing after the cheating.

From the OP’s perspective, the pain of discovering the infidelity via MySpace posts and the subsequent breakup email left a deep scar. Cheating often ranks high on personal “mortal sins” lists because it shatters trust built over years. In this story, from childhood friendship through high school romance.

His choice to “not recognize” her allowed him to maintain professional boundaries and avoid reopening old wounds during work hours. Opposing views might see it as unnecessarily petty, suggesting a brief, civil acknowledgment could have sufficed.

Yet, when someone feels ambushed in their workspace by a person who caused significant hurt, prioritizing self-preservation makes sense.

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This situation highlights broader family and relationship dynamics around unresolved betrayal. Infidelity affects roughly 20-25% of marriages, with military relationships facing elevated risks due to deployments and separations. Being cheated on can lead to lasting psychological effects, including symptoms similar to post-traumatic stress, increased anxiety, depression, and even long-term chronic health issues.

Clinical psychologist Elisabeth Shaw, CEO of Relationships Australia NSW, explains the challenges: “The relationship may not have been in any obvious difficulty before the betrayal, but afterwards is never the same.”

This resonates here. The Redditor had clearly moved on after a decade, but the sudden encounter tested whether old pain required a performance of politeness. Her insight underscores that betrayals reshape interactions permanently, validating boundaries even years later.

Divorce and relationship coach Dr. Karen Finn adds powerful perspective on the betrayed partner’s experience: “Infidelity is mentally, emotionally, and physically painful to the betrayed spouse. Be gentle with yourself as you heal.”

In the OP’s shoes, pretending not to remember served as a shield, allowing him to stay focused on his project rather than reliving teenage heartbreak on the clock. This neutral approach, neither explosive confrontation nor forced reconnection, offered a middle path.

Ultimately, solutions lie in clear personal boundaries and self-compassion. Not everyone processes betrayal the same way; some choose forgiveness and closure through conversation, while others, like this Redditor, prefer distance. Therapy or journaling can help process lingering emotions without pressuring real-time performances. What matters most is honoring one’s emotional reality without harming others unnecessarily.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Some people believe the author is NTA because he does not owe a cheating ex any recognition.

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SirBiggsy − NTA dude she cheated on you, I feel “not recognizing” her is an undersized thing to do, definitely not the a__hole.

mvp2680 − NTA. Your coworkers should keep their judgements to themselves about your relationship experiences.

You don’t owe anything to someone who you haven’t talked to in years, especially if they cheated on you.

dogbotherer4 − NTA People change, a lot of people I knew when I was younger and have checked out on Facebook look vastly different

so she can't really be mad at you not recognising her, lying or no. You don't owe a cheating ex anything.

avast2006 − NTA - no recognition, no drama. No opportunities for either apologies or reminiscing that would need to be fended off.

For someone who cheated on you remorselessly, that was actually considerably more polite than she deserved.

What was she expecting, to be greeted with open arms? She’s lucky you didn’t spit in her eye.

Other users argue that feigning ignorance was a reasonable way to avoid pointless drama or a fruitless confrontation.

georgiagilligan − NTA. You didn’t want to talk her that’s fair enough. Little petty but no problems here

zaitheguy − Nta. Why humor her? It’d either be s__tty small talk or a fruitless confrontation.

Why cheat on someone, dumps them when they go on tour, then walks up to them to talk like nothing happened? While you were at work no less. Pretty callous...

You’re at work so you’re kinda held hostage to play polite in the case that you did choose to talk to her.

every1has1 − NTA - Ever hear of the expression “she’s dead to me? ” If she wanted to reconnect or apologize she had plenty of time to do so.

And no reasonable person would expect you to be gracious on command when your cheating ex shows up out of the blue at your workplace.

LABARATI − It’s ten years and you’ve moved on. You shouldn’t be expected to remember her

A few users suggest that the response was justified given the severity of the past betrayal and hurt.

Wikidess − NTA - not sure what she was expecting... She greeted me and then said "Do you remember me?"

"yeah, aren't you the b__ch that cheated on me while I was in the military? How the f__k are ya?"

forannie − NTA she hurt you bad, you haven't got over it, and your workmates don't know the backstory.

In the end, this Redditor’s workplace encounter with his cheating ex stirred up old military heartbreak but reinforced his boundaries. Do you think denying recognition was fair after such a painful history, or should he have been more gracious? How would you handle a surprise run-in with someone who broke your trust? Share your hot takes below!

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