Amy
Waterman is the author of Save My Marriage Today. She
offers some advice overcoming infidelity in this
article.
Infidelity... A Sign of Our
Times?
Yesterday I spent some time
counseling a couple who are working their way through some
pretty heavy issues. Infidelity was the main cause, and for
this couple, it seemed touch-and-go if they were going to stay
together. Up until the time the affair was exposed, the
marriage had been going really well, and there was little
indication that there was anything wrong. It hadn’t been going
on for long, but the fact that it had been going on at all was
enough for the wife.
This couple had been married
for around 10 years, and did not have any children yet. They
had married young, and both were in their late twenties. I
asked the husband, the one who had committed adultery, for an
explanation of his reasons at the time to start the affair. I
was intrigued by his reply.
It wasn’t about someone
better looking. It wasn’t about someone younger. It was an
opportunity that presented itself, and offered an experience
that was a sharp contrast to the perceived monotony of the
marital relationship. The person that this man had sex with
just happened to offer it at a time when he really felt like
the thrill of something different.
And that was it. Something
different. The sex wasn’t better, or anything else. The other
person offered something and in a moment of haste it was all
over. On some level, he said, it felt good to be desired by
someone else. It was nice to know someone else found you
attractive enough to want to have sex with you.
So are our expectations of
marriage realistic? Is monogamy a myth?
It doesn’t have to be. I
would be willing to bet that the majority of men who have
experienced infidelity and their partner finding out about it
would have done things differently the second time. In many
cases, I have had men or women tell me that if they had known
the destruction and pain that resulted from infidelity, it
would have never happened. I would like to think in those cases
a lesson was learned, albeit at a very high price.
Other people expressed that
their infidelity was a result of their unhappiness in their
current marriage and that they were looking for a "connection".
So the idea I took from this was that on some level the affair
was justified by the unhappiness felt in the marriage. Is this
credible?
The answers to these themes
do not come easily, but one key idea comes through in many
sessions we do: an affair addresses a need. It can
be:
- attention
- the need to be
desired
- the need for
sex
- a need to be listened
to
- escapism from the
reality of an unhappy situation
- "the grass is greener"
syndrome
- curiosity
Marriage is about more than
just the needs of a couple. It is about fulfilling our
individual, personal needs as well. Take the time to examine
your relationship and whether your common goals are being met.
After this, examine your own personal needs and those of your
partner. How many of those needs are being met? How many of
those needs do you forego in the pursuit of making your partner
happy?
A happy marriage is a balance
of both the goals of a couple as well as the goals of the
individual. Remember this!
Do this exercise with your
partner and give your marriage a quick examination. It may save
your marriage…
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