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Posted by Dr. Beverlee
on October 08, 2005 at 09:11:13:
Date: Sep 2005 Dear Dr. Beverlee, My husband left his email account open and I thought it was my own yahoo account and opened the unread email. Long story short, I've found that he was having a cyber affair with a woman he'd met on an I love my husband deeply; he's also my very best friend. I thought--and still think--we have a very strong marriage, but I'm pretty shaken up about this. I keep asking myself where this would have gone if I hadn't stumbled across the evidence and confronted him and I can't stop the movies in my head. How do I regain my sense of trust in him? Am I overreacting? Thanks, Scared
The Yin: This is a golden opportunity to begin a deeper communication with each other. Make an effort to understand each other’s needs, wants, life goals being met or unmet, changes in the relationship over time, directions each desires for now and the future, what is wonderful, what may be missing, and what would each like to see happen that isn’t. It is essential not to cast blame during your talks. All discussion is pointed in the right direction of making a wonderful marriage even more joyous and comfortable. When I did marriage counseling with clear marital infidelity as an issue, I always looked at what had happened in the relationship that may have prompted the affair. Both partners played different roles. Hopefully your talks together will be most helpful and a therapist guide unnecessary. The Yang: A wrong question…. “Where would this have gone?” A right question…. “What do we each do to satisfy the wants and needs of the other?” Trust is built over time. G can only be responsible for his acts. He took that responsibility seriously it seems. The woman at the other end sounds like a disturbed person (fatal attraction pathology). After being told to stop, she persisted very inappropriately. G may need to change his cell number, email address. A small price to pay for a poor choice of a cyberspace friend. Feel free to write again.
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