Archives for December 2008

Disaster Confronting the Other Woman

Timing and one’s source of strength are crucial in confronting the other woman. Bad time and reactivity spells and mistake and DISASTER.

Read this case study and my comments below:

1. What was your purpose for confronting the OP and what did you say/do?

I couldn’t really believe it was happening and wanted to hear from her mouth the truth (which I didn’t). Then I wanted to tell her she was evil to destroy a family. I wanted to hurt her. I wanted to make her go away. I thought I was strong and powerful enough to do this.

2. What happened? What was the outcome?

She said lots of hurtful things to me right back! Basically, that it was my own fault. I collapsed on the floor sobbing in front of my husband. I did not then get the response and help I wanted desperately from him either; I felt and experienced to my horror that he seemed to be on her side. It was an unmitigated disaster from all angles. Probably one of the top 2 or 3 worst experiences of my life.

3. If you were to do it again, would you do it differently? What did you learn?

It was a mistake to confront her in anger, it just made things worse–and I had not thought things could get worse. But it is so hard when you are confronted with infidelity in someone you love and trust and have built up a life with over so many years! I think the only time it might be right to confront the other person when your spouse has fallen madly in love with them is when one has been able to calm down, and would not be confronttional, but I think in this situation it is a losing battle. They are a team, they are together. I was out. I was confronted with this ugly reality. I think its better just to confront the spouse, which keeps the focus and the power on whatever is left of your relationship. Bringing in the other person gives them power. And all this being said, I still have fantasies of telling her what I think of her! In some ways I am glad I did, but if she ends up marrying my husband and is step mother to my young child, then having her and myself hating eachother is also not a good outcome, which a confrontation in a passionate affair will engender (at least it did in mine).

Coach’s Comments:

1. The first 7 words written by this person are key: “I couldn’t really believe it was happenning.” It appears she was in a state of shock and disbelief. This is NOT a good time to confront the other person. The feelings are raw and unexplored. There is no center from which to operate and stand firm.

2. As well, the anger and rage have not subsided which makes the confrontation very raw. Strong and powerful are not to be confused with angry and “I’ll let her have a piece of my mind.” In reality, approaching from an position of rage and revenge is a position of weakness.

3. Preparation for the confrontation is vital. Exploring every possible scenario and a brutally honest evaluation of whether one is ready to handle what s/he might discover is crucial.

4. This person’s timing was obviously off. Perhaps after a couple of months of moving through the shock, anger and rage she might be more ready.

Affairs and Confronting the Other Woman: Truth Search

Case study of confronting the other woman:

1. What was your purpose for confronting the OP and what did you say/do?

To expose my husband’s lies (he told her that our marriage was over & he was no longer intimate with me) and discover the truth about their affair. Also to to try to convince her to leave my husband and appeal to her that she was damaging our family and hurting my daughter.

2. What happened? What was the outcome?

The other woman was more than happy to share the details of the affair and the lies my husband told her, asked me many questions, and tried to find out why he would lie to her while continuing to tell me he wanted to save our marriage. The affair continued no matter how many times I talked to her over a period of at least 2 years. I believe the affair continues to this day, though my husband and I are now separated.

3. If you were to do it again, would you do it differently? What did you learn?

I don’t know. I learned a great deal about the truth of what had been going on from the other woman, and I wanted the truth but was only getting lies from my husband. However, contacting the other woman did not end the affair in each of the three times that we talked. The other woman is aware that my husband has lied to her since their affair began, but that does not seem to be enough to break her addiction.

Coach’s Comments:

1. Contacting the other person may be a legitimate way to discover the truth that you want. In essence you are setting the other person against your spouse. From that the truth – the extent of the affair, the nature of the relationship, etc – may emerge. It may mean you must read between the lines since personal distortions often exist in infidelity.

2. Sounds like the other woman was very willing to share the details. I wonder what’s with that?? What does that say about her?
The only way to achieve clarity on that would be to pursue a relationship with her. But then, that most likely would be a disaster.

3. Appealing to the goodness of the other person to end the affair is usually a losing proposition. Extramarital affairs and those who engage in them, at that point in their lives, at least, have little regard for what is appropriate or the welfare of others.

Infidelity Recovery Turning Points

When does the pain and agony of infidelity and extramarital affairs begin to turn around? When does recovery and healing the marriage after infidelity begin?

I posed this question to my readers. Here are some responses:

The turning point in my recovery was after 2 years when a personal tragedy struck our family and my husband was supportive and wonderful and I could truly trust that he had made a mistake (we all do) and that he was a good person and worth the chance to forgive and go on with our lives.

Turning point was that once I recovered from the shock I was able to sever the relationship as for me there was no respect left. Your materials provided some insight into infidelity issues and even though there are many reasons for infidelity men and women must realize that wanting to ‘have your cake and eating it too’ will inevitably cause some serious digestive problems!!!

The initial turning point for me was finding your book. I felt so lost and so alone. My mind raced constantly searching for answers. I just wanted to stop thinking…that’s it I wanted my mind to rest. It didn’t until I found your book. I feared that my feelings were not justified. The feeling of loss, the loss of the life that I once knew. The checking up on him so many, many things. I first found your book roughly 3 years ago. I kept my husbands affair to myself. I had no one that I wanted to share it with as I felt shame. Shame in the fact that I decided to stay with my husband. The book and your newsletter were a sense of relief for me and confirmation of my feelings that others before me had felt. I didn’t feel as alone anymore. I could consult, confidentially it lessened my pain so I could begin healing.