Then the affair settles into a second phase--routine meetings, letters, and phone
calls. In this phase there develops a growing sense that the affair is only meeting part
of life's needs. For example, a man writes, "My relationship with this young woman is
all that I've ever wanted in a relationship. Yet, if I stay with her, I will lose my
children and my friends. I'll experience rejection of my extended family--plus I'll lose
some of my business, since I am a marriage and family counselor."
The third stage of many affairs is one of heavy confusion. One part of the person says,
"I know it would be best if I would get out of this and work on other healthy
relationships--or work on my marriage." Knowing that the affair is sin begins to
weigh heavier. The dark side of the personality is being pulled, because the person feels
certain needs are being met through the affair. As the song says, the person is "torn
between two lovers, feeling like a fool."

"I have been involved in an affair for the past two years.
I know this isn't what God wants, but I've never met a man like him. Now I can't imagine
living without him."
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At this stage people say things such as, "I have been involved in an affair for
the past two years. I know this isn't what God wants, but I've never met a man like him.
No one has ever been so caring toward me. I had never intended to get so involved when I
first met him, yet somehow it just happened. Now I can't imagine living without him."
This Christian woman wants out. She feels guilty because she knows it's wrong, but she
doesn't really have the emotional support to leave the affair.
In the next stage the dissatisfaction with the affair increases. Perhaps the affair
partner starts to demand too much, or there is a realization that the affair is an
artificial relationship that will destroy much of life. The person starts to come to grips
with reality. How can you take the person you're involved with to your mother's house and
say, "Mom, I'd like you to meet my new love--we're involved in an affair"? How
do you introduce this person to your small Bible study group? And the guilt keeps grinding
emotionally and physically.
As satisfaction decreases, the person begins to realize that a "great part of
me" is lost by being involved in this affair. "I am losing more than I am
gaining." When this teeter-totter of gains and losses is recognized, often a person
then develops the courage to break from the affair.
The final stage is one of recovery and prevention where former relationships with the
mate or other friends are reestablished. It is important to build affair prevention into
those renewed relationships so that the individual will not become an easy target for
another affair.
Causes Of An Affair
We have found that people generally get involved in affairs when they are experiencing
some sort of loss in their lives. The loss could be related to career or some
relationship. Or it might come from a tragedy in the life of a close friend or family
member, or from some other loss of control over life events.
When you are experiencing loss, you want someone to understand you, care for you,
nourish you, and help restore you. If your normal circle of friends--or your marriage does
not provide that, then you may be very open to someone else's caring.

If you are married and lonely, work on marriage enrichment. If
you're single, enlarge and deepen your personal relationships with "safe"
people.
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Often both people involved in affairs are vulnerable. Both have experienced losses. In
a sense, they share each other's misery, and their losses bind them together.
Untangling The Affair
How do you get out of an affair once you are involved? First, it's important to
understand your lack of fulfillment, your losses, and your unmet needs. You must discover
what is creating the vacuum in your life. Don't ignore losses. Confront them. Take them to
God in prayer. Ask God to heal you in the depths of your personality where these losses
have made you vulnerable.
Second, ask God to forgive you and clean you. Ask Him to give you strength to say no to
temptation.
Third, compensate in legitimate ways for the losses that you're experiencing. If you
are married and lonely, work on marriage enrichment. If you're single, enlarge and deepen
your personal relationships with "safe" people. If you're feeling unfulfilled at
work, consider a career change or redirection. If you need excitement and adventure in
your life, plan fun projects, such as sailing, backpacking, or a special trip.
Fourth, try to reduce about ten percent of the stress load on your life. Prioritize
what you're doing. Then get rid of the junk at the bottom of the list.
Fifth, begin a deeper level of communication with your mate or a close friend of the
same sex. Push the barriers of honesty and accountability with that person so that you'll
have more stability when you experience future losses.
Finally, view God as a friend. Get into a daily habit of reading a small section of the
Bible. Reflect on how those ideas should be practiced in your life. Then talk frankly to
God about yourself. Ask for His deliverance and guidance.
Mates Are A Key To Help

Forgive your partner! Forgiveness
means, "I know what has happened is wrong, and I grant you
forgiveness because Christ has forgiven me."
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Mates are extremely important in the recovery process--or in affair prevention.
Ultimately, people stay married because their needs are being met. Are you helping your
mate stay happily married to you? Think about the following list.
- Ask yourself, "What are my mate's changing needs? How can I meet those needs so
that my mate is a happier, more fulfilled person?"
- Think about changing yourself. Are there things about you that irritate your mate? Are
you a growing, thinking person, stimulating to be around? Are there an extra twenty-five
or fifty pounds that you ought to shed? Are you living your life out of habit and dull
routine when a small change could bring greater marriage satisfaction?
- Become a friend to your mate, not a mother, father, or conscience!
- Help your spouse reduce stress and accomplish the goals that he or she has set for life.
- Forgive your partner! Forgiveness means, "I know what has happened is wrong, and I
grant you forgiveness because Christ has forgiven me."
- Now, resolutely leave the past behind. Apply Philippians 3:13: "Forgetting what
lies behind, reaching forward to what lies ahead." Leave the affair and all of the
misery of the past with God. Don't hold it as a club poised over your mate's head, waiting
to pound when he or she doesn't do something that you want.
We would strongly urge you to read
The Myth of the Greener Grass
which deals with causes and cures of affairs. The following books that we have written
also have chapters which deal with affairs:
Men
in Midlife Crisis,
Your
Husband's Midlife Crisis,
Women
in Midlife Crisis, and
When a
Mate Wants Out. For additional spiritual help, please see our article,
"How to Connect With God"
J. Allen Petersen in
The
Myth of the Greener Grass says, "People who have affairs have the
child's longings to be touched, caressed, held, hugged, and kissed whether they admit it
or not . . . They want a loving friend, a pal who isn't judgmental. They want someone to
convince them they're still loved, lovable, and very special."
Admit those needs to yourself, seek legitimate ways to meet your needs--and help meet
those needs in your own mate.
Getting out of an affair is hard work--but it is also a chance to grow as a person, to
get closer to God, and to develop an even stronger marriage.
For more information:
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Books that would help with
Affairs: |
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©2002 Midlife Dimensions with portions © 1995, 1998,
2000, 2002 True
World Access, Inc.