Times Standard (Eureka)

Couple recovering from infidelity faces setback

- Amy Dickinson

DEAR AMY >> A couple I know has been married for decades. Seven years ago, the husband had an affair. The wife found out about it when the other woman contacted her to complain about the husband stalking her.

The husband swore it was over and would never happen again.

A few years later, the wife discovered intimate, affectiona­te text messages between the husband and the other woman. She also learned about clandestin­e dinners they shared.

After saying yet again that the affair was over, the husband claimed it wasn’t cheating because there was no sex involved.

The husband was eventually able to understand that emotional infidelity is just as egregious as physical infidelity. In order to move forward the wife demanded the husband have no further contact with the other woman.

He promised that if the other woman ever attempted to contact him he would do two things: not engage in any way with the other woman, and immediatel­y inform the wife.

Fast-forward another two years, and the wife learned that the other woman contacted the husband.

The husband proceeded to engage the other woman in a brief conversati­on and did not inform the wife. Upon learning of this (months later), the wife was furious and felt betrayed.

The husband thinks this incident is no big deal. He explained that he didn’t hang up on the other woman because he didn’t want to be rude.

He feels she should trust him regarding any future contact with the other woman.

The wife thinks that in order to put this behind them and move forward to address fundamenta­l issues in the marriage, the other woman needs to be completely expunged from his life and never return. She believes he needs to earn her trust back because he broke his promise and was dishonest.

What is your take? — Asking For a Friend

DEAR ASKING >> Many times over the years, I have recommende­d that couples seeking to understand and recover from infidelity should read the groundbrea­king research of Shirley Glass, illuminate­d in her important book “Not ‘Just Friends’: Rebuilding Trust and Recovering Your Sanity After Infidelity” (co-written with Jean Coppock Staeheli and published by Atria in 2004). Almost 20 years after its first publicatio­n, this book remains a “recovery bible” for many couples in crisis.

The husband in this scenario no doubt believes that he is moving in the right direction — from sexual affair, to emotional affair, to politeness on the telephone.

But what he refuses to acknowledg­e is that each time he has any contact with his affair partner, this returns his wife to square one — reminded of the infidelity, afraid of renewed infidelity, and unable/unwilling to trust her husband.

Transparen­cy is the way back to intimacy. And yes, he should refuse all contact with the affair partner.

This is the tough slog back to trust; talking with a couples counselor would help both parties.

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