Infidelity and Low Self Esteem, Ego and Neediness

Continuing my series on Confronting the Other Person:

Let’s make a couple distinctions about the types of affairs that might be helpful.

Low self esteem, ego and personal needs can be viewed differently.

Low self esteem as I use the phrase has more to do with affair #6: “I Need to Prove my Desirability.” The cheating spouse has an affair with the intention (usually unconscious) of building that self-esteem which has been lacking for as many years as s/he can remember.

Ego often refers to someone in the “I Don’t Want to Say No” affair who inflates his/her sense of self worth. This is the big “ego” that feels entitlement.

The person in the scenario below I would imagine is someone with powerful, but unrecognized, personal needs. The affair was an attempt to fill a void with those personal needs – most likely, an “I Fell out of Love…and just love being in love” type of affair.

The confrontation worked because it reigned in his personal needs, something he probably had a difficult time doing, but knew he must.

Another take away from this scenario. The confronting spouse felt badly after the confrontation because she was not whom she wanted to be. A good lesson – for any situation.

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

My husband was forced to take early retirement. His self esteem and ego must have been very low at the time, and he went into an affair which lasted for 7 months. Obviously he denied it, although his phone records proved that he was in contact with the OP at least 3 times a day whilst I was at work. He said that it was purely business. I decided not to contact the OP, but phoned her husband and told him of my suspicions.

2. What happened? What was the outcome?

After this, it was like a swarm of bees – with calls being made backwards and forwards with all parties concerned. My husband denied emphatically to the OP’s husband that nothing was going on, but they both got such a fright, that no further contact was made with each other, to my knowledge.

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

No, I wouldn’t do it differently. The only thing I regret,was that I lost my cool in the end. I just wished I had never blown my top and told the other woman what I thought of her when she started shouting at me on the phone. I was actually lowering myself to her level.

Confronting the Other Person: Check Alliances First

I’ve read several instances where it was helpful to confront the other person if first there was some level of self disclosure by the cheating spouse about the affair. In other words, the cheating spouse was perhaps beginning to shift allegiance from the other person to the spouse.

If there is no self disclosure by the cheating spouse, and none can be elicited, it’s doubtful that confronting the other person will be helpful.

This scenario points to this fact:

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

I found out my partner was having the affair with her and couldnt get any answers from him. I just had to know what was happening.

2. What happened? What was the outcome?

It did no good whatsoever and they carried on seeing each other to the point where I told him to leave. He did and has lived with her for two and a half years. It broke my heart.

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

If only there was a chance to handle it all differently. I would have not told him to leave and tried to weather it. It may have burned out by itself. I just lost control and didnt think at all and just reacted very badly and now there is no chance ever to be with him.

Confronting the Other Person: Using a Script

Scripting what you will say is vitally important in confronting the other person.

A large percentage of my infidelity coaching with individuals is just that… developing a script that will say powerfully and without reactivity (charging neutral) the truth of the situation.

And, I firmly believe that that truth will set free and unclog the channels of deception, lies and secrets.

Now, the script that one forms, what is said, is dependent on the type of affair. The script crafts articulately that which will have the most power in the intervention.

Here’s an example of what I’m talking about:

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

My purpose for confronting the other woman, after my husband’s earlier affair, was closure for myself. I had to show both her and myself that i could be the “bigger” person. I told her that what they did was wrong, extremely wounding to our family, but that I was going to stay with my husband, since he ended the affair and confessed to me, and learn what forgiveness meant. I also told her that I was going to forgive her FOR MYSELF, whether or not she deserved it.

2. What happened? What was the outcome?

I did just that, and did it well, although I must admit to feeling a little victory as I saw the surprise and a bit of fear on her face when she saw me walk into their office.

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

I learned that a script is a MUST for confrontation. (I had one.) The injured spouse’s motives for confrontation must be clear and the script must fit those motives. No attacking-that will just set the OP in his belief that you are all the bad things your betraying spouse said about you to the OP. I will not confront my husband’s current OW. He has chosen her over me, filed for divorce, and I see no use in confronting. I still have to work on forgiving them both, if only for my own sake, but there has been no expression of remorse or indication of a turn-around after two years involvement.