Recovering from Infidelity Has its Moments

I was talking to a coaching client a while back and she has made tremendous progress in charging neutral, a skill I teach that is highly effective for most of the types of affairs I describe in my e-book. (It’s not as effective or desirable in the “I Don’t Want to Say No” affair and the “I Want to be Close to Someone… but can’t stand intimacy” affair.)

Anyway, charging neutral was triggering an interesting and favorable response from her husband. She was getting what she wanted. The tension was appreciably less and life seemed to be headed in a good direction.

The next time I talked to her, her world had fallen apart again.

Here’s what happened:

Initially his behavior changed in response to her change… charging neutral. He was probably curious and a little frightened.

What frightened him about an “improvement” in her behavior?

Well, she was changing the rules of the relationship. She no longer was playing along with him in ways that were familiar to him.

He no longer could count on her to be there for him in ways that, at least from his perspective, enabled him to continue the affair and his destructive behavior.

And so, what did he do?

He ramped up his old behavior as a way to get her back “playing the game,” so he could continue on the old path.

Hang in there. This too shall pass.

Infidelity: Yes, You CAN Break Free

Talk about breaking free…

Watch this video. This dog may be going through the same process as you….

Infidelity, Confrontation and Nonreactivity

What happens when you confront the other person?

How can you use it to your advantage.

In response to my survey:

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

I just wanted to know if my husband was telling the truth so I called her. Asked her if they are still seeing each other. Until now,I don’t think hubby knows that I called her.

2. What happened? What was the outcome?

Luckily,I had already read Dr. Huizenga’s Break-Free-From-The-Affair so I was charging neutral and it was a success.She confirmed what hubby said that he already ended it.

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

I learned and applied what I read from the e-book so I don’t think I’ll do it in any other way.

Coach’s comments:

Yes, charging neutral can be a powerful tool in maintaining one’s personal power in a confrontation.

Charging neutral is basically a refusal to react, internally and externally to the other person or your circumstances. You don’t flinch. You don’t react. You don’t give away your power. No one ruffles your feathers.

Easier said than done. But, when used, it often gets you exactly what you desire.