Guys, thanks a lot on that insight.
There's so much to process these days, some easy mistakes get by and cannot see the forest for the trees. Every day has some new challenges in our relationship/separation thing.
A couple of issues here. First, your wife wanted to go with her student on her own but to avoid the shame of having discussed this with you and then changing her plans, she lied about space on the bus. The problem is not that she wanted to go on her own- that is OK. She's her own person and can do things with friends. The lying about it is due to her own difficulty with direct communication.
Of course. She could just say "hey I'd really want to go alone or with X", I wouldn't complain at all.
It's a context thing. About a month ago I planned to go hiking with the same club. W was doing her thing. She asked me to spend that day with her and our D. I said I couldn't, I'd go hiking. She was angry - oh why didn't you say that in advance, what were you hiding etc. Probably abandonment issue hit her.
I said alright - I see your point. I didn't hide anything, you were busy doing your thing, we separated anyway, I signed up for this alone. But to better our poor communication, let's tell each other in advance about our plans and events we both love and ask each other, no strings attached? She agreed.
So after our agreement for better communication, came this one. I fully understand now that she wanted to go alone. But it felt worse for me, as I got scolded for going by myself before, yet she lied after I asked her to go together on the same trip, to cut me out, as her friend asked her as well. She didn't think that I also wanted to go on that trip, even though I announced that weeks ago.
It's not a big deal, we can learn from this. I understand her viewpoint, it wasn't mean by nature. But this made the communication needlessly complicated and somewhat dishonest. Our agreement wasn't set in stone, just being more open could do wonders.
And what @maxsterling said, I'll try to not engage next time, regardless of who's right or wrong.
Where I think you crossed the line is that you then signed up for the trip. Your wife didn't ask you to come with them. She didn't go about it in the way you would have wanted to but she did express that she was going with her student and she did not include you. You then included yourself. That crossed a line.
Fair enough. I'm glad I made good decision for cancelling.
There's some issue with boundaries here. First on the part of your wife. I don't know what kind of relationship she has with a "student" or how old that student is but personal outings with a student are not usually appropriate. It also makes a difference if that student is male or female. Had she chosen to go hiking with a male and exclude you, that would raise my eyebrows.
Oh yes.
Luckily, it's not a male friend. W has been her private online language teacher for over a year, they made friends and sometimes go together, it's not against the rules of online school. And I have nothing against that, whatsoever.
Another response could have been to say " I wish we had done this together as I enjoy hiking with you. How about we plan a hike together sometime soon too?"
Thanks. Yes that sentence could mean openness in the future.
I think you did the right thing to cancel and step out of it. You can still take a nice hiking trip with your wife. Find another day that works for you and ask her to join you. Then you call the bus, or drive and make plans for the day. If you enjoy hiking together- great- because her going on this trip doesn't exclude a nice day of hiking for you- you can still go another time and have your nice day together.
So much to learn from this. Thanks!