| |
|
|
How To Survive Your Spouse S
AffairIn order to restore a
relationship after your spouse has had an affair you may
try the ploy:
"But I've changed, I'm a different person."
And your behavior may have actually changed - some of the
time.
You mistakenly may continue to accommodate in different ways or
change your behavior to fit your perception of what he/she
wants.
Here are some problems with this strategy:
You, most likely, have not changed at all but, rather, are in
a
reactive mode by responding to your difficult situation by
"grabbing at straws." There is nothing really wrong with this.
However, these changes usually lack staying power because they
are born out of
reactivity.
You and your spouse both know it. Chances are that you will
regress to your usual patterns as soon as the heat's off; your
spouse intuitively knows this. He/she, most likely, thinks:
"This will never last;" then becomes very suspicious.
Also, your changes may be seen by your spouse as your attempt
to manipulate him/her. He/she may perceive your changes as a
Sneaky strategy to get him/her to re-commit.
Your spouse may start feeling "cornered" and will most likely
resent them, even though they are what he/she has been
demanding throughout your marriage. Then even more alienation
may emerge.
In this scenario you will lose respect and your spouse will not
believe you or even know what to believe ABOUT you. By this
time, s/he is very confused about what s/he wants and by trying
on altered behaviors, you only add to that confused feeling.
You become CONFUSING.
People don't want others trying to placate them. And if that is
not true of your spouse as well, you may have to re-evaluate
his/her fitness to be a mate.
Generally, spouses don't respect the placation strategy because
there doesn't appear to be any "backbone." There doesn't appear
to be any core self.
That is not very attractive.
The spouse often says something like: If you really can change
so
easily now, why didn't you change when I wanted you to years
ago?
I'm afraid it's too late now.
Sadness or resentment often emerges at this point when s/he
encounters
your new behavior, thinking about what might have been, but
is no longer "possible." Also, spouses having affairs often
blame them on the betrayed spouse and/or bad marriage ... don't
buy into it. Where circumstances and others can influence what
we do, they don't control it. Both spouses must take
responsibility for their own behavior, right or wrong!
The best approach is to calmly re-commit yourselves to staying
married within a framework of both of you assuming a fair share
of your own responsibility for the problems and the solution.
If that cannot be done independently it should be done through
marriage counseling.
Copyright, Shery, 2006
|
Please report any
broken links to: info@endlessrelationships.com
|
|
|