Your
partner cheated on you—does it have to end your relationship? Can it actually
benefit it? No it doesn’t have to end your relationship and yes, it can even
help it… sometimes, but that doesn’t make it right.
It
may be hard to wrap your head around the idea, but Perel makes some convincing
arguments for thinking differently about cheating in her new book, The State of Affairs: Rethinking
Infidelity.
Why
should we be rethinking infidelity? Because there’s a lot of cheating going on,
and it’s not just guys—both men and women are seeing a rise in
cheating. While it’s hard to pin down exact numbers (some say as high
as 60 or 70 percent) the numbers really don’t matter; all that
matters is, will it happen to you?
You
may be thinking it could never happen to you and that you and your spouse are
very happy. But love and happiness aren’t always the most important factors
when it comes to determining whether someone will or won’t cheat.
In our
interview study, explained that the men who cheated on their partners
all said they loved them and didn’t want to lose them. They start off thinking
they want monogamy, but after being in a relationship for months or years, they
start missing sex with others. But by this point, they don’t want to break up
with their partners because they have long-standing love. So instead of
talking about it with their partner, they cheat—a choice they feel its
rational, though it probably won’t feel all that rational to
their partner.
“Our
model of romantic love assumes that if a union is healthy, there is no need to
go elsewhere,” Perel, a relationship expert says. “People stray for a multitude
of reasons… but one theme comes up repeatedly: affairs are a form of
self-discovery, a quest for a new (or lost) identity. For these seekers,
infidelity is less likely to be a symptom of a problem, and is more often
described as an expansive experience that involves growth, exploration, and
transformation.”
The
most important thing a couple can do is talk about monogamy—are we choosing it,
are we good at it, do we like it, would we prefer something else—and to
continue to discuss it throughout their relationship. First, though, they
should define monogamy and not assume they both are defining it the same way.
And then they should define cheating because there are many ways to be
unfaithful beside having sexual intercourse; it can be reconnecting with
an old flame on Facebook, sending flirty texts to a friend, kissing a coworker
at the company holiday party, getting or giving oral sex, watching porn alone,
masturbating, going to a strip club—the list goes on and on.
A
flirty text or even a one-night stand on a business trip may be a lot easier to
forgive and move on from than a long-time, emotional affair.
So
can a couple survive an affair? Can an affair bring a couple closer together?
Maybe.
After
an affair, couples will, have to create a whole new monogamy contract in order
to clear away the implicit, unspoken expectations that led to the betrayal and
hurt that may have contributed to the cheating in the first place, This new
vision of the relationship can lead to a new beginning, one in which many
couples say is a fresh start and also a more mature, more connected, and many
times more intimate experience of marriage. There is no more naiveté, no
implicitly agreeing to things they don’t want. Some couples even end up saying
about their new marriage, ‘maybe this is the best thing that could have
happened to our relationship.
“Some
couples can integrate the contradictions of love and desire, but first we have
to acknowledge that we’ll never eliminate the dilemma,” says Perel.
“Reconciling the erotic and the domestic is not a problem to solve; it is a
paradox to manage.”
Which
is why trying to affair-proof a relationship by surveillance and self-policing
won’t solve anything. Rather than insulate ourselves with the false notion that
it could never happen to me, we must learn to live with the uncertainties, the
allures, the attractions, the fantasies—both our own and our partners.
Perel writes, “Couples who feel free to talk
honestly about their desires, even when they are not directed at each other,
paradoxically become closer.”
And isn’t that what we ultimately want?
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