The emotional cost of infidelity...
"This wasn't the usual 'how much do you weigh" or "what color is your
hair?" " says Shafer, a social worker with the federal government.
"This was different."
As it turned out, he lived close by. After a few weeks of intense, personal
dialogue, he suggested they meet for lunch. He was married with children.
"This was the stupid part," says Shafer, her voice soft, kind, a voice that
troubled families--her clients--can trust. "I thought it would be harmless just
to meet a married man for lunch. Well, I met him."
Shafer didn't know it at the time, but she had already entered stage three of
an extramarital affair that would last 3 1/2 years, bringing her moments of bliss, hours of sorrow.
Nearly all affairs--yes, even yours--follow very specific patterns. They
generally fall into four stages, according to several family researchers:
Stage One: You develop a close emotional bond. This is the talking stage. For Shafer, it occurred on the Internet. For others, it happens at work or in the neighborhood. You get to know each other, about each other. There's a spark.
Stage Two: You keep it a secret. You don't tell your spouse or your friends that you are attracted emotionally to this person. "You know you're in deep when you decide to keep the relationship secret," says Florida psychologist Debbie Layton-Tholl. "Fantasy and secrets are very powerful. They fuel the fire."
Stage Three: You have lunch, play tennis. This is the dating phase, though you might not know it. You start seeing each other, doing things together.
You might tell yourself this is just a colleague, just a friend.
Stage Four: Well. You know.
At that point you are engaged in an intense sexual and emotional liaison.
Sometimes extramarital affairs lead to new marriages. Other times, they are
roller-coaster relationships that last only months, or a few years. And then
there are affairs that become lifelong relationships. Think of CBS correspondent Charles Kuralt, whose 30-year romance was exposed
posthumously, shocking fans of his television program, "Sunday Morning."
According to researchers and eyewitnesses, thousands of people have
life-changing affairs and use nearly identical language to describe the
passion, betrayal and pain associated with them. "No one ever made me
feel like that before." "I wanted to kill myself."
"If I had to choose one
person to live with me on a deserted island, it would be him." Or
"her."
Family therapists and affair survivors--or casualties, depending on how the
affair turns out--urge people to acknowledge the prevalence of affairs and
to start talking openly about them. Only such honesty, they believe, will help
illuminate the psychodynamics of these relationships and help people understand--and perhaps avoid--the pain that they can cause.
"Extramarital affairs are one of the most taboo subjects in our culture," says
Janis Abrahms Spring, author of "After the Affair" (HarperCollins, 1997)
and a supervisor at Yale University. They are "so extraordinarily
traumatizing," she says. "And yet we talk about them only when we are
making jokes."
The Fall
"We just slide into it," explains Baltimore psychologist Shirley Glass, who specializes
in couples and extramaritial affairs. "Often, the attraction begins at work. Women have
become more involved in previously male-dominated professions. They work closely, seeing each other at their best. A
friendship develops. If you are not careful, the friendship becomes too intimate and
eventually sexualized. The chemistry intensifies. Sparks fly."
Maybe you even fall in love.
Stage One is the innocent prelude during which the emotional connection is
formed. A former police officer in upstate New York who had an eight-month affair says he didn't see it coming. It was early in his marriage,
before he became a police officer, and he was working evenings, managing a fast-food restaurant.
"One of the workers and I just developed this friendship," he says in a
telephone interview, the sounds of his two kids, chattering in the background. He moves to a different phone and explains: "It wasn't about
hopping into bed with someone. We talked for four months before anything sexual
happened."
But inevitably, the relationship moved through the stages. One night after
closing, he and the woman were talking passionately about personal issues, as usual. She asked him to help her fix a light in the men's bathroom.
"I was in there, and suddenly the door opened and she came in and closed the door
and kissed me," he says. "I kissed her back."
Meanwhile, he kept the relationship a secret. His wife eventually found out
about it after finding a note in his pants pocket. Standard movie-script fare.
It's a common plot, a cliche scenario played out in movies, novels and
government hallways. Fumbled kisses. Groping in Nissan Altimas. Steamy Comfort Inns. Shafer, the social worker, met her lover in a hotel room for
three years. "I'm in my mid forties, and we would make out in the car like
we were 16," she says. "There's a certain high to that."
But there is the larger human element that muddies up the script, and the
very real and devastating pain that often follows. Even when the affair marks the beginning of a new, healthier, long-term relationship, it comes at a
price. Someone, somewhere in an extramarital affair, always loses.
Yet affairs often feel like love. "You get very close emotionally and
physically very quickly, but it's a fake closeness," says Shafer.
"For him, it
was out of sight, out of mind. For me, the day after was always the
hardest."
Often these relationships are stormy. Shafer broke off the
relationshp several times. One breakup lasted seven months. The final breakup came
more than three years after she connected with him on the Internet. She
reached the point where he disgusted her. The final straw came one day
after he had taken a shower. "He said, 'I think I still smell like you,' and it
just made me sick to my stomach," she recalls. "That was it. I had had
it." He left, and that was the last time she saw him.
Shafer says the deception hurt the most. "The relationship can never go
anywhere. You're making a banquet out of crumbs." She discounted the possibility that the affair would lead to marriage.
"Even if a person gets
divorced, the new relationship is still based on a lie," she says.
"I knew what I was getting into," she continues. "But I didn't get out of it
without getting hurt." Near the end, it was clear to her that he was seeing
someone new, another affair. "At times I feel like I still love him, but what
do I love?"
The Allure of the Secret
Statistics on the frequency of affairs don't add up. People lie, even in
anonymous polls. Also, general polls are often not reliable: an 18-year-old
who says he's never had an affair isn't saying much.
The percentage of those who say they have had affairs ranges from 25
percent to 75 percent of all males and 15 percent to 60 percent of women.
Pyschologist Layton-Tholl, who specializes in Internet research and has
interviewed 3,600 people who have had affairs, says the current acceptable
statistic is roughly half of all men and women--including the persons
victimized by the deception--get involved in extramarital affairs. Abrahms
Spring, who has worked with couples for more than 25 years, says affairs
affect one of every 2.7 couples.
But enough math. The point is, most people will have some exposure to
infidelity. Maybe it will be you, your spouse, a sibling, a friend, a parent (the
dreaded box of love letters in the attic) or someone admired from afar, like,
say, Kuralt. His long-term relationship came to light after his death when
the "other woman" pressed her claim for the Montana house she had shared
with him for so many years. They had spent Christmases together, gone on vacation together.
Kuralt is hardly the only one. Famous names recently in the media: Franklin
D. Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, Marion Barry, Thomas Jefferson, Prince Charles, French President Francois Mitterand (whose mistress stood beside
his wife at his funeral), Gary Hart, Frank Gifford, Bill Cosby, poet James Dickey, writer John Cheever, Martin Luther King, television evangelist Jim
Bakker (whatever happened to Tammy?) and Rep. Bob Livingston.
What is it about affairs? What is it about passion--defined literally as
"suffering"? Why do people risk everything for that stolen kiss, sweaty
palms, rapid heart rate? Why do writers dramatize the suffering in popular
mythology? Remember "Bridges of Madison County," "The English
Patient," "Gone With the Wind," and the recent Academy Award winner for Best
Picture, "Shakespeare In Love."
"It's a drug," says Shafer of Oklahoma. "It's a fix. You can't wait until the
next time. It's very addicting. You feel you can't live without it."
Florida researcher Layton-Tholl focuses specifically on the allure of secret
relationships. People who keep them report far greater arousal, passion and obsession than with nonsecret relationships. (Not unlike the very early days
of perfectly legitimate relationships, before you tell your friends and family that you are
"in love.")
The signs and symptoms are familiar. People "in love" fantasize, pine,
obsess. They lose sleep and weight. "I've talked to men who 15 years after
the affair still wonder what she's doing," says Layton-Tholl.
How interesting that they reach such romantic heights only out of context
from their daily lives. But is it love?
In "After the Affair," Abrahms Spring draws distinctions between romantic
love and mature love. "Romantic love is an intense but unwarranted attachment that you, the unfaithful partner, may feel toward your
lover," she
explains. You think the love must be real because the chemistry between you is so explosive. You are willing to sacrifice so much for this passion.
"The blind spot behind this feeling--what you fail to see," she writes,
"is that your so-called grand passion may have more to do with your unmet
childhood needs than with who this other person really is."
Love also experiences changes on a physiological level. In the throes of
romantic love, people experience a high from natural amphetamine-like
chemicals such as dopamine and norepinephrine. "In the next stage of
love,"
she writes, "the brain releases endorphines--natural painkillers that soothe and create a sense of security and
calm."
On the cognitive side, a perceptual distortion takes place.
"You idealize the
other person, assigning him or her more positive attributes than any one person could actually
possess," continues Abrahms Spring. "At the same
time, you're likely to paint your partner in equally distorted, but negative terms, as a foil for your
lover."
Personal Trauma
Falling in love is obviously not confined to infidelity. Most contemporary
marriages start out with romantic love. But, therapists say, couples have to
grow up and understand that "feelings of love are neither steady nor
constant but travel in natural cycles," as Abrahms Spring puts it.
"If your
relationship doesn't live up to your ideas about love, the problem may be not
with your relationship but with your ideas," she writes.
Falling out of love with a spouse--and in love with someone else often
rekindles that early experience of romantic love. It's why lovers say "He (or
she) made me feel young again."
But sooner or later, lovers in an extramarital affair have to confront the
dynamic nature of their relationship and move on to a deeper bond. Or
sever the connection.
Just why people have affairs has no single answer. Each case is different.
Researchers point to a combination of issues in the individual and in the
marriage. Personal issues run the gamut of pop psychology from low
self-esteem to midlife crises in which people question everything at work
and at home.
Marital problems may stem from getting married very young or having a job
that takes a spouse away from home--emotionally as well as physically.
With so many different factors, researchers resist a cookie-cutter formula
to explain infidelity. Nor do they use such labels as "bad marriage" or
"weakness of character."
"It's a mistake to think that only people with personal weaknesses have
affairs," explains Peggy Vaughan, co-author with her psychologist husband
of six books on extramarital affairs, including "The Monogamy Myth"
(Newmarket Press, 1998) and "Beyond Affairs" (out of print), in which
the Vaughans detail the husband's 17 affairs over a period of seven years and
describe how they rebuilt their marriage. "It's far more complicated than
that," she says.
Another factor involves societal attitudes not only about celebrities who
have affairs but also about sex. "As a society, we give a lot of lip service
to--but actually undermine--monogamy," says Vaughan.
"We learn at a very
early age to associate sex with deception and secrecy. By not talking to our teens about sex,
for example, we show them to keep it
secret," she says.
That sets up an expectation, she argues, that sexual fulfillment can only be attained in secret relationships.
Secrecy, many researchers maintain, is the enemy of monogamy. Abrahms
Spring notes how difficult it is even for patients to talk about infidelity and
how many of them try to hide affairs in the initial phase of therapy.
"My focus is extramarital affairs. Obviously, that's why they come to
me,"
she says, laughing softly at the irony. "But it takes them several sessions
before they can speak of it."
The Aftermath
The former police officer and his wife tried to repair the marriage, had
another baby. A few years later, the wife had a short affair with someone
she met on the Internet, then another. Eventually she left him.
"I cried for hours on the couch. I couldn't move," he says.
"My wife never
recovered from my affair. Years would go by and I wouldn't hear anything about it, then suddenly all this anger would come
out."
Affairs rock your world. Life is never the same again. All parties involved
experience a profound sense of loss and pain. The old status quo is gone.
The future is uncertain.
"After finding out, the hurt partner experiences the most basic loss of
self,"
says Abrahms Spring. "You feel alien in your own skin. Your most basic
assumptions about the order of the universe have been turned upside
down It's devastating."
The person confessing to an infidelity experiences the full gamut: guilt,
self-loathing. Often there is also relief. Leading a double life can become
increasingly difficult for people engaged in affairs. Getting the truth out
relieves them of carrying the burden of betrayal alone. To some therapists,
honesty is essential, too, if the couple is to stay married and lay down a new
framework for their relationship. Some people are glad that the affair is
over and want to reestablish their marriage. "They're just so thankful to be
with one person again in one place," explains Abrahms Spring. "They want
to forgive and move forward."
The betrayed spouse may also find relief. Even if the affair seems to come
out of the blue, the underlying causes of infidelity have probably been
present for some time. Vaughan says she experienced relief when her
husband told her the truth about his numerous affairs. "It was like a storm
that flattens everything and allows fresh air to come through," she
says "The years of knowing subconsciously that something was wrong was much
more painful that the two or so years it took us to recover."
Still the aftermath was hard. Vaughan has described how it took her almost
a decade to rebuild her sense of self even though she and her husband had successfully reestablished their marriage in a couple of years. All in all,
they've been married 43 years.
The "other" person, meanwhile, faces a whole different set of issues. How
do you rebuild your life without the affair. At first there is profound
aloneness and confusion. "She's not in the Bahamas or running around in
mink," says Florida researcher Layton-Tholl. "She's at home, waiting for him
to call, to explain himself and the promises he made."
All parties in extramarital affairs often report thoughts of suicide, according
to family therapists. As Abrahms Spring writes in her book: "What people
want to kill is not themselves but the pain."
Secrecy may be what sustains the affair while it is going on, but it also
exacerbates the pain when it is over. Suddenly, there is no one to talk to.
The loved one is gone. Unlike a death or divorce that prompts support from
family and friends, the breakup of an affair goes largely unnoticed.
Yet everyone in the triangle suffers a sense of loss - a loss of self and a loss
of love. Researchers believe the great hypocrisy in our culture is that while affairs are so prevalent,
most people remain largely unsympathetic and
closed to the complexities and pain. They slip into the stereotypes about
infidelity and offer pat advice: Leave the no-good two-timer. Or focus on
labels: Home wrecker. Or blame themselves: I wasn't sexy enough.
Cliches provide protection. "We don't want to believe that a man could have
an affair on a wife who is loving and sensual and kind," says psychologist Glass.
"That means it could happen to us."