Ask someone why they
had, or are having an affair and you may hear something like this:
“I have a lousy marriage. My marriage is dead. There
is no intimacy, no sex, and no excitement. The love is gone. We’ve
grown apart. I can’t stand the marriage. There was nothing
happening in the
marriage and the affair just happened.”
These statements are
rationalizations and fail to “get at” the underlying issues.
Key points:
1. It’s as if a
marriage is an animal gone bad. A marriage does not have a life of
it’s own. In reality, there is no such thing as a “marriage.”
One is “married” as a result of making some promises and signing
a paper at one point. After the paper is signed, two people continue
communicating and acting toward one another in particular ways that
they hope will help them get what they individually want. Just as
there is no “marriage,” there is no such thing as a
“relationship.” There are, however, ways of relating for which
each person is responsible. Remember the comedian Flip Wilson (that
dates me) and his “The devil made me do it” skit?
2. We idealize
“marriage” or “romantic relationships” with the expectation
we will get what we want, without much effort to boot. The movies,
popular public press and romance novels/stories don’t help much
here. A “marriage” is behind the eight ball from the word go.
“IT” can’t win.
3. From day one most
of us don’t have a clue about how to get, build, nurture and
maintain healthy and intimate ways of relating. We need ‘love
101’ and it’s not there. We rely upon experimentation or bad
models.
4. If the
“marriage” is dead, why in the world would one choose to have an
affair? Talk about jumping from the frying pan into the fire. It
really is stupid. You add a whole layer of deceit and shame that
eventually will result in consequences more dire than approaching
your spouse and
saying, “I’m really unhappy. What I’m doing with you obviously
is not working. I want out.” Oh well, maybe some people need more
problems and suffering.
5. If the
“marriage” is bad, obviously, I don’t have to look at me. I
can blame “it” or the other. Some of us find it difficult to
look at me. Some of us don’t know how to look at me. Some of us
never think of looking at me.
Tip: If your
partner/spouse is having and affair and blames it on the
“marriage,” don’t buy into it. The “marriage” is not the
problem. You are
not the problem. Your spouse/partner chose the affair out of
ignorance,
fear or inadequacy.
The “My Marriage
Made Me Do It” is just one of 7 affairs outlined in my E-book,
“Break Free From the Affair.” For more information on the issues
behind the other kinds of affairs and tips for dealing with them,
visit my site.
Dr. Robert Huizenga,
The Infidelity Coach, has helped hundreds of couples over the past
two decades heal from the agony of extramarital affairs and survive
infidelity. Visit his website at: http://www.break-free-from-the-affair.com