When you first find out about an affair, you are often not sure if you want to even to listen to what your spouse has to say, much less to save your marriage. Coming to the decision to stay and to try to work things out is not always an easy decision. Because most of us know that in order to heal, there are going to be difficult conversations and vulnerable moments when we are trying to restore the trust. In fact, many feel that it is emotionally Eharmony.com Reviews easier to walk away because then you are able to avoid all of the hard work that goes into saving your marriage. Many times in order to get through, you will tell yourself that you will give it a certain period of time and then reevaluate to see if things have gotten better. But when this milestone passes and you see few (if any) improvements, then it can be very frustrating and discouraging.
I sometimes hear comments like:
"my husband begged me to give him six months to make things up to me after
he had an affair. This was not an easy decision for me. My inclination was
honestly to leave him and to never look back. But then I asked myself what
would it hurt to give him six months? And so I did. After the six months were
up, I was disappointed that we hadn't made more progress. And I told my husband
as much. Once again, he begged me not to leave him. He said that we Eharmony had made
progress and that if we were patient, we would make even more. So I thought
'what is six more months?' And I agreed. Well, we have just passed the one year
anniversary of the affair. And I am so disappointed. In my own head, I thought
that having a year to heal was going to make a huge amount of difference. I
honestly thought that I would have a sound marriage again in that amount of
time. But I don't. Things are still very awkward and tense between us. I feel
like my husband wants our marriage back. But at the same time, he isn't doing
anything concrete to make that happen. I feel like wanting to make your
marriage work after an affair and actually having it work are two different
things. I'm tired of waiting for improvement. And I feel like I have wasted a
year. Does it ever get better?"
Why The Effectiveness Of The Effort
That You BOTH Put In Truly Matters: It is my experience that it absolutely does
get better. However, I don't believe that you can count on it to magically get
better without a lot of the right kind of effort. While it is true that the
anger and shock Eharmony.com will
naturally fade without your having to work too hard, the actual healing and
rehabilitation does take hard work. And it does not magically happen.
With this said, waiting for it to
happen is very common. And for good reason. Typically, neither the husband or
the wife are mental health counselors. So they don't have first hand or expert
knowledge about how to dig themselves out of this. And they may think that if
they truly love their spouse and if they are patient, then time is going to
heal the wounds.
Unfortunately, it's my experience
that time alone is not enough. You have to be very proactive. Y ou have to very
actively look at what was wrong and you have to be tireless in fixing it. The
cheating spouse must have the goal of understanding the anger and the faithful
spouse must have the goal of working through it. I wish I could tell you that
it just magically happens. But it doesn't. It takes a good deal of continuous
effort and then re-evaluating to see what is actually working and what isn't.
And when things don't work, you have the option to either keep trying along the
same path or to get off that path and try something new.
Consider What You Haven't Yet
Tried: I'd suggest that if it has been a year and you're not seeing a good deal
of improvement, then it might be time to try something new. This could include
counseling, self help, educating yourself, trying different things on an
individual basis. That is not to say that all marriages that are damaged by an
affair are going to be perfect after a year's time. There is often maintenance
that lasts for the lifetime of the marriage. But many will see very noticeable
progress.
Understanding Rumination: I will
tell you one thing that really helped me to get unstuck. I was talking about
this issue with a counselor once and she told me that I was ruminating. I had
her repeat herself because although I knew what ruminating meant, I wasn't sure
how it applied to me. And so she explained it. In psychological terms,
ruminating means reliving the event over and over again in your own mind so that
you continue to be injured by it. Rather than going over it to try to determine
where you go from here, you are going over it and thinking once again about how
unfair it was, how hurtful it was, and how awful it was. When this was
explained to me, I had my doubts that it applied. But then I went home and
looked at my past journals. And I found that every single entry was focused on
why my husband had dealt me this most cruel blow. Every entry talked about how
horrible the whole situation was.
Now, everything in my journal was
true. And I had a right to feel what I was feeling. And yet, I couldn't deny
that every day I was almost ensuring that when I left my journal, I felt badly.
Why? Because with each session, I was reliving it. My entries never focused on
what I was going to do to move past it. They only relived it. So I vowed to
myself that my journal entries were going to change. I started to focus on what
I could do to feel better. I started talking about progress and stopped
ruminating so much. And do you know what I found? When my journaling changed,
so did my thought process.
I can't possibly know whether you
too are ruminating, but I find that it is very common, especially if a lot of
time has gone by and you still seem stuck. I'd suggest making a conscious
effort to begin to focus on movement rather than on what has happened. Then,
I'd suggest looking at what you have already tried to determine what is serving
you and what is not. There is no harm in trying something new. And sometimes,
you have to keep trying until you find what works. But the key is that each and
every day, you want to focus on what makes you feel better and what moves you
forward. You want to think about the negative aspects of this less and the
moving forward more.
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