Archives for June 2009

Questions for Confronting the Other Person

Beware what you wish for when confronting the other person.

Do you (really!) want to know the details?
Are you hoping the OP will share the details with you?
And, if the OP is willing to share details with you, what kind of details do you suppose s/he will share?
And, as well, how can you trust that his/her perceptions of the details are accurate?
Or, what if the OP has has hidden motives in sharing his/her perception of the details?

If you want to meet the op with the intent of boosting your self-esteem (hey, I really am OK), do you suppose there are better ways of doing that than through confronting the op?
And, what if confronting the op leads to more questions than answers and leaves your self-esteem in a less precarious position?

Consider these questions as you read this case study:

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

The purpose though embarrassing was to find out how good she was in her talk,whether she was brilliant or had a great sense of humor and to wriggle out the truth from her which I did..

2. What happened? What was the outcome?

It was the most painful conversations that Ive ever had in my life and I
still don t know who s speaking the truth.Painful becoz all the gory details of their sexual encounters came tumbling out ,just becoz she wanted to avenge him for so called letting her down and coming back to me and the children.Apparently she had persuaded him long and hard to give me a divorce ,take the children away from me to her and that she would not have children of her own,etc,etc,which my idiotic husband believed and got ready to leave..The thought still is so frightening and shocking..

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

I really don t know becoz it s been almost 2 years, but the pain is as new as if has happened yesterday and the one good lesson I seem to have learned is that one can only believe in oneself and nobody else.Investing time ,energy and love in another person comes with no guarantees at all as most men as I’VE EXPERIENCED ARE UNDEPENDABLE…

Healing From Infidelity

What defines the moments when healing, shifts and changes take place in the healing process for infidelity?

My readers often give clues.

Read what these readers say as they move through the healing process of infidelity:

****Everything you said NOT to do (in my Killer Mistakes E-course), I did, or worst, my adult children did. It had the negative effects you said it would. When emotions come out they don’t make much sense at first. Now, we are breaking the ice a little. Real feelings have come out and honesty at last. I told him that I don’t want him to lose his children, grandchildren and I don’t want to lose him as a person. He wants that too. My son sent him a very long email that was so beautiful that it finally moved him to see others’ feelings. When you are having an affair, apparently you can only think of yourself and what you think you have lost in life. Maybe he can start to see that no one would have been this hurt if they didn’t have a lot of love. I think that forest was always there but the trees failed to embrace him.

****It’s (Ecourse) helped me realize that there wasn’t anything I have done wrong, I had a healthy self esteem, but my husband is a repeat offender who doesn’t seem to have the will to stop, so I know it isn’t all in my head.

*****(Ecourse) Made me realize I wasn’t crazy! Also helped me move to a point where I think that whilst I would prefer to stay in my marriage if that would work I can also quite happily make a life on my own which I never felt before. It has helped me enormously in stopping feeling a victim and at somehow guilty of causing the affair.

Resentment, Rage and Coping with the Abuse and Blame

Coping with abuse and blame is often evident in the “My Marriage Made Me Do It ” type of affair, although it tends to be fairly subdued. Abuse and blame is often more pronounced in the “I Want to Get Back at Him/Her affair, if the resentment borders on rage.

It is important in those types of affairs to learn how to deal effectively with the blame criticism and possible physical abuse.

Here are some case studies:

1. What in the way of disrespect, blame, criticism and/or abuse are you facing?

Blames me for staying with him, not leaving when I’ve had the chances, maybe I seek out abusive relationships, I’m the only one that has a problem with his “need” and when he lies and I discover it, he says I snoop, distrustful, play detective when in reality its my intuition telling me and I’ve done nothing to snoop around. In the past I was too needy, clingy, too emotional or I don’t meet all his needs so he needs to have them met by outside encounters.

2. What has worked best for you in stopping or tolerating less and less of these destructive behaviors?

No longer take any blame and do this by flat out, in a calm manner, tell him that I am not perfect but I am not to blame for……. and add what ever it is he is blaming me for. I also give him his space, don’t nag, don’t beg or plead with him.

1. What in the way of disrespect, blame, criticism and/or abuse are you facing?

disrespect – by not listening to me and treating me as just a ‘wife’, not a person treats my vocal ability as ‘nagging’. – conducting his affair in our home, on our bed with family pictures around. – having sex with another woman wearing his wedding ring, forgetting what that ring signifies. – talking on the phone to me pretending everything was normal after having sex with another woman in her presence. – not considering for one moment what it really meant for me, our children, our families and friends by having an affair. blame – he blamed me for putting him in a situation that caused an affair to take place. – He blamed me for abandoning him when I chose to live apart temporarily due to work commitments.

2. What has worked best for you in stopping or tolerating less and less of these destructive behaviors?

being strong enough to stand up and let him know I will not tolerate any nonsense from him – making him aware I am prepared to call it quits – being strong and assertive –

1. What in the way of disrespect, blame, criticism and/or abuse are you facing?

Yelling and crusing at me in front of people when he gets upset.

2. What has worked best for you in stopping or tolerating less and less of these destructive behaviors?

Taking a step back and saying “I know you aren’t talking to me that way” or just not fighting back and showing that he is the one acting like a fool and I’m the one that should walk away from this type of verbal abuse.