Bad Marriages and Affairs
“If he had just paid attention to me, I would not have had to find it somewhere else. He spends more time on the golf course than he does at home.”
“My wife’s nagging is the main reason I became unhappy and started my affair.”
Do affairs cause bad marriages … or do bad marriages cause affairs?
All affairs can cause bad marriages but not all bad marriages cause affairs. In fact, an affair may even happen in a good marriage. Having an affair, cheating on your spouse, is no way to solve problems in a marriage.
While it certainly can be true that problems in a marriage can lead to loneliness, unhappiness and sadness, making a decision to have an affair is the responsibility of the person who makes the choice to cheat.
There are many reasons why people have affairs.
There are many reasons why people have affairs. Some reasons do have to do with the relationship while others are more about the person who is having the affair.
When couples have difficulty resolving conflict or problems between them, have a fear of intimacy or do not nurture and tend to the relationship, then feelings of loneliness and isolation grow and the ground becomes fertile for friendships to bleed over into more than a friendship with someone that you see frequently like a colleague, neighbor or friend.
Click here to read the rest of the article.
8 Ways to Affair-Proof Your Marriage
Couples who experience an affair in their marriage often feel as if their very foundation was destroyed. The revelation of an affair is a traumatic event and healing takes a long time.
Can you really “affair-proof” your marriage? Yes, and I want to share some tips for how you and your partner can do that together.
I have seen many couples in my practice and, while most of these couples do have difficulties, many find ways to work through their problems while also remaining faithful. Here are some of the ways that they make it happen.
1. Start with the attitude of being certain that you will not stray.
Begin with the belief that you will guard against any relationship with another person that could lead to an affair, either an emotional one or a sexual affair.
Recognize that there are many people who are attractive and might be quite attractive to or attracted by you. That’s human nature.
In order to affair-proof your marriage, shake hands with this idea but also make sure that the door is not open to exploring or taking it any further than noticing it … because you KNOW that you will not follow up on any inappropriate relationship outside of your marriage.
2. Establish clear boundaries with your partner. Avoid Temptation.
Limit your contact with people of the opposite sex or, if you are attracted to those of the same sex, be careful.
Click here to read the rest of the tips on Healing-from-Affairs.com.
Research Results About the Impact of Affairs on Marriage
Peggy Vaughn, a leading author (“The Monogomy Myth) and speaker about affairs, has just released a free e-book based on her research with over 1,000 couples impacted by an affair.
Some of her findings were:
- The deception is often harder to recover from than the sexual act.
- 76% of couples who experience affairs remain together.
- It is essential to answer questions about the details of the affair or affairs in order to rebuild trust.
- For the majority of the time, when an affair is discovered, it is not the first affair. This is sort of like a speeding ticket. You rarely receive one the first time that you exceed the speed limit.
- Affairs have a lasting impact on the betrayed partner and, even after getting to the point of forgiveness, there are lasting scars.
- It is quite rare for the person having the affair to divorce a spouse and marry an affair partner.
- Many couples experiencing an affair saw more than one therapist. The best results were achieved when the therapist dealt directly with the affair and helped the couple to openly talk about the affair rather than putting it in the past.
Want to read this e-book? It is geared toward therapists but has stories and comments from several couples who experienced an affair or affairs in their marriage. Click here to download this free e-book.
Should or Can There Be Forgiveness After An Affair?
Can there be forgiveness after an affair? Are spouses or betrayed partners really able to let go of resentment, anger and fear of more betrayals?
The simple answer is “yes” although the process to get there is not an easy one. Forgiveness is tough. Most wonder how they can be expected to forgive one of the most painful experiences of their lives.
True forgiveness, however, brings about an inner peace in your heart and in your mind. It allows you to be different than the events in your life. You no longer define yourself by your injuries.
Forgiveness should not come quickly and best comes with dialogue and work with and by both partners.
Even if the person who has had the affair is not willing to work; however, and the marriage may not be saved, it is still an important step toward health for the one who was betrayed to find a way to forgive.
Let’s talk for a minute about the idea of forgiveness, what it is … and what it isn’t.
Forgiveness isn’t:
Forgetting. The affair (or affairs) happened and affected your life. Shake hands with that experience but develop a richer and fuller story about yourself, about who you are and what your life is about. You might be a betrayed spouse but that is not all that defines you as a person. Remember the much bigger story about you.
Click here to read the rest of the article.
Healing from Affairs
Check out our new resource and online counseling website, Healing from Affairs.
We decided to develop this website because we have so many couples that we meet who have been impacted by an affair. Healing is never easy but, if couples move through it with thoughtfulness and respect for each other, most marriages do recover and can even grow stronger.
Yes, there are many painful thoughts and feelings that this engenders in couples … certainly for the one betrayed but also for the one who betrayed. We hope that this can become an opportunity for learning and sharing issues, concerns and even successes.
Tiger Woods and Affairs
We have been talking around our office about Tiger Woods, his wife and family and their situation. Affairs are always painful and working through the many issues that recovery involves is hard and takes a lot of time and work.
Our recommendation for Tiger right now is to start off by “coming clean” with his wife. Answer her basic questions openly and honestly.
This is not a time for Tiger to get into defending himself, blaming the marriage or blaming his wife. Nor is it a time to talk about the “gory” details. It is the time to just answer the basic questions of who, what, when and where.
We would be interested in your comments. What do you think about our advice?
Affairs and Marriages
We have been thinking and talking even more about affairs lately with our clients and with each other. The governor of South Carolina is bringing this issue once more into the press and therefore into thoughts and conversations.
Some of the questions we hear are:
- Does everyone do this?
- Why does his wife stay with him?
- How can he ever be trusted again, particularly as news of other liaisons emerge?
There are no formulas for why people have affairs. Some happen as a result of problems in a marriage while others happen because of problems within the person who has been unfaithful.
Many people have remarked that they feel very sorry for Jenny Sanford as her husband talks about his “soul mate” and states that he “will try to fall back in love with his wife”. Clearly, Governor Sanford is nowhere near where he needs to be to work on his marriage and it will probably take him a while to get there, if he ever does. Multiple affairs and a lack of accepting responsibility for his behavior do not bode well for the marriage.
We have several articles about affairs on our website and invite you to read them. Meanwhile, we welcome a discussion about this here.
CounselingRelationshipsOnline.com
CouplesCounselingofLouisville.com
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