How Don Forgave a Cheating Wife and Saved His MarriageA Story by Andre Anthony MooreTwo Lovers Can Overcome Infidelity by Learning to Show Each Other Who They Really Are.The first time I met Don and Sarah, they were on the verge of a painful divorce that neither of them really wanted. He’d just learned from one of their closest friends that she’d been having an affair for almost a year. “How could you do this to me?” he cried out to her. “You were always my dream girl.” Sarah shook her head in tears. “You don’t have a clue,” she murmured. “He’s out of shape, not buff like you, or strong or dependable. And he doesn’t have his life together. I never once thought of leaving you for him. But what I got from him and never get from you is he’s curious about me. He asks me stuff, about me!” Don and Sarah met in college eight years earlier at a party hosted by his fraternity. Don had to work up the courage to ask her to dance. “You’re the hottest, blue-eyed blond I’ve ever met,” he told her. She frowned and asked him how many hot blue-eyed blonds he’d ever met, let alone had. “Not many,” he answered, with an embarrassed grin. They danced and drank and spent the rest of the night together. She let him take her back to his dorm room, excited by the prospect of playing the hot blue-eyed blond. But he didn’t come on to her. He undressed her gently and helped her into his bed under the covers. As she watched him take off his clothes, she noticed his growing erection; then burst out laughing when she realized he was too shy to remove his jockey shorts. “You smell so good,” he whispered as he held her and kissed the nape of her neck. She couldn’t resist telling him she was wearing Cashmere Mist. But after he’d fallen asleep, she looked at his face a long while. He's like a sweet little boy, she thought, as she snuggled up to him. They were
inseparable after that. They dated three times a week, slept in each
others dorms and she cheered for him at football games. Don was a pretty
good quarterback, a fast runner and a strong thrower, but whenever he
fumbled, Sarah saw the humiliation in his eyes. She knew how badly he
felt and it saddened her that he could never talk to her about it. They soon met each others families. Their parents, who live in the Hudson Valley only 10 miles apart from each other, were ecstatic. “You’re the perfect couple,” they rhapsodized like a church choir. Don’s father once confided to Sarah, “You’re so patient and gentle with him, just what the boy needs.” And Sarah’s mother, in tears, once took Don aside and told him, “It’s a joy to see how devoted you are to her, how you’ve put her up on a pedestal.” Don is the only child of a solid, conservative family. His mother and father have been married for almost 40 years. As he grew up, his mother was the dominant emotional force in the family. She made incessant demands on his father who always gave into her with humor and unending patience. A former school teacher, Don’s mother micro managed his early education. “I remember her putting a lot of pressure on me to get good grades,” he told me. “And when I did, it was never enough. An A should always have been an A+ and I felt like s**t whenever she found out I got a B.” It got worse for Don in high school when his mother started dictating who he should and shouldn’t be hanging out with and tried to hold him to a curfew. When I asked Don how he handled this, he told me it was the easiest thing in the world. “I just tuned her out like my father did, then I did whatever I wanted. In college it was easier because I escaped to the dorm and did pretty good as a quarterback. But even then, seeing mom cheering for me at games, I could never shake the feeling I could have done better. Sometimes I’d fumble the ball thinking about her watching me from the stands. On really bad days, after I screwed up a pass, I always got more support from my father.” Don’s idealizing Sarah was a powerful way of keeping her from getting close to him as he’d done with his well meaning mother. But why hadn’t Sarah ever jumped down from her pedestal and confronted her anxious quarterback on the line of scrimmage? Sarah is also the only child of a solid, conservative family. Her mother and father have been married for over 30 years and are devoted to each other. Sarah describes her mother as a bit shy and introverted and her father as charming in a little boy way that reminds her of Don. Although she’s always adored her father, now Sarah feels a lot closer to her mother. She was able to tell her about cheating on Don long before she could tell her father and Don found out about it. In grade school and through most of high school, Sarah had severe psoriasis and acne. In those years, she remembers that, although her mother cared for her conscientiously, she always had a gnawing feeling that her mother was ashamed of the daughter with the pockmarked face. When she was very small, Sarah remembers being very close to her father. She idolized him. But in those years he was working hard to build a food distribution business. He traveled a lot and was gone for weeks at a time. Sarah remembers resenting him for being gone so often and always gave him the cold shoulder when he came home. When Sarah got to college, her skin problems had cleared up and guys started coming on to her. When I asked her how she felt about getting more attention, after years of struggling with the acne and psoriasis, she answered, “It’s sort of weird. I knew they were hot for me and it excited me but I never felt close to any of them, not like I felt when I first fell in love with Don.” In her relationships with Don and every other guy who'd shown interest in her before him, Sarah was still hiding the pain and humiliation of the little girl with the pockmarked face who had caused her mother to be ashamed of her. When Don put her up on a pedestal and kept her there all through their courtship and marriage, she plunged more deeply into hiding. At one point Sarah told me, “It’s so lonely up there on that pedestal he’s put me on.” She dealt with it by cutting Don off emotionally, as she’d done years earlier with her father. The most important thing I did for Don and Sarah was help them see how their struggle with shame and vulnerability in their earlier lives with their families was being played out in their married life and blocking them from truly knowing - and being known - by each other. I started by having them watch a 20 minute video: Brene Brown on the power of vulnerability. I emphasized two crucial things that Brown had learned from her past work. First, that life is all about connection which is wired into us from birth. We all have to feel connected, that we belong to something bigger than ourselves, or we’ll shrivel up and die inside. Second, the thing that unravels connection is shame, the excruciatingly painful feeling that I’m not worthy or good enough and have to hide who I really am. Brown calls this the Swampland of the Soul. Another thing she learned from her research, which had a profound impact on Don and Sarah, is that shame is experienced differently by women and men. For women it’s about: Do it all. Do it perfectly and never let them see you sweat; about unattainable, conflicting, expectations of who women are supposed to be. Cultural norms dictate that they always strive to be nice, thin, modest and use all available resources for appearance. For Sarah, among other things, this meant having to play the perfect blue-eyed blond who could never let Don know who she is or how she really smells under the Cashmere Mist. For men it’s all about getting up on a white horse and never showing weakness. Cultural norms dictate that men must show emotional control, value the primacy of work, focus obsessively on the pursuit of status and applaud violence. For Don, this lead to a deep-seated belief that all women, beginning with his mother and continuing with Sarah, would rather see him die on the line of scrimmage than benched like a p***y. And it was never about being pressured by his father, the coach or the other guys on the team (he always got more understanding from his father than he ever got from his mother). For Don, it’s all the women in his life, including Sarah, who are the hardest on him. I also gave Don and Sarah definitions of embarrassment, humiliation, guilt and shame based on Brene Brown’s book, I Thought It Was Just ME (but it isn’t), and encouraged them to find examples of each in their own lives, both before and after they became lovers. I
started with embarrassment, the least powerful of the four. “It’s
fleeting, often funny and very normal,” I told them. “Oh, like when mom
caught you picking your nose on a family picnic last summer,” Don told
Sarah. “Yep,” she answered, “and that time we were having sex and
you farted.” “Next, there’s
humiliation,” I told them, “the angry feeling you get when you’ve
screwed up and someone points it out to you unfairly.” “Guilt is the one that’s most often confused with shame,” I went on. Guilt is I did something wrong, feel bad about it and want to do better. Shame is I am wrong and feel absolutely worthless. Guilt isn’t a very pleasant feeling but it’s basically healthy.” I saw them a few days later and asked them how they felt about what happened in our last session.“I couldn’t talk to her after we left,” Don said, “and I’ve been sleeping on the couch.” "And Sarah?" “I just zoned out. I’ve gone to work, done the shopping, cleaned the apartment; but it’s like I’m walking around outside of myself.” "Here’s what I think is happening,” I told them.“You’re both dealing with shame, differently. There are three possible ways we all have of dealing with shame. First,
we move away, disappear in our own lives, go off the grid where nobody
can find us. This is what you’ve been doing with Don all along,” I told
Sarah, “long before he found out about the affair.” Before
Sarah could answer, I told Don, “This brings us to the second way a lot
of us have of dealing with shame. We move toward people, hover around
them, bust our a*s’s to please them as you learned to do way back with
your mother, continued doing with Sarah, with every woman you’ve been
with.” I asked them if they were ready for the third one and they both nodded. “Guess what it is,” I said to Sarah. I saw them for a few more sessions and encouraged them to tell each
other stories of how they had gone into hiding in their earlier lives
with their families and almost done the same thing in the present. Taking my cue from Brene Brown, I told
them that speaking shame, calling it what it is, often feels like the worst thing to do when we’re feeling it. And we can only talk about it to
people who’ve earned the right to hear it; people who love us despite
your vulnerabilities. There aren't many people in the world we can do this with. We're lucky if we've only got one or two of them. Andre Moore, Director of Marriage Couples Counseling and Life Coaching in New York City © 2013 Andre Anthony Moore |
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Added on May 12, 2013 Last Updated on May 16, 2013 Tags: marriage counseling, relationship counseling, infideltiy AuthorAndre Anthony MooreNew YorkAboutAndre Anthony Moore is a marriage and couples counselor and life coach in private practice in New York City. more..Writing
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