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SHATTERED VOWS
& INFEDELITY
SHATTERED VOWS
& INFEDELITY
By Glass,
Shirley
Hold
on to your wedding ring. It's difficult, but possible, to repair
the damage caused by infidelity. Increasingly, that's what couples
want. But let go of assumptions. In an interview with Editor at
Large Hara Estroff Marano, a leading expert challenges everything
you think you know about the most explosive subject of the
year.
Infidelity appears to be the topic of the year. What has struck
you most about the reaction to what may or may not be some kind of
infidelity in high places?
Whatever horror or dismay people have about it, they're able to
separate the way the President is performing in office and the way
he appears to be performing in his marriage. That's especially
interesting because it seems to reflect the split in his life. We
don't know for sure, but he apparently is very much involved in his
family life. He's not an absentee father or husband. Whatever it is
that they share--and they share a lot, publicly and privately--he
has a compartment in which he is attracted to young women, and it
is separate from his primary relationships.
Is this compartmentalizing
characteristic of people who get into affairs?
It's
much more characteristic of men. Most women believe that if you
love your partner, you wouldn't even be interested in an affair;
therefore, if someone has an affair, it means that they don't love
their partner and they do love the person they had the affair with.
But my research shows there are many men who do love their
partners, who enjoy good sex at home, who nevertheless never turn
down an opportunity for extramarital sex. In fact, 56% of the men I
sampled who had extramarital intercourse said that their marriages
were happy, versus 34% of the women.
That's how I got into this.
Because?
Being a woman, I believed that if a man had an affair, it meant
that he had a terrible marriage, and that he probably wasn't
getting it at home--the old
keep-your-husband-happy-so-he-won't-stray idea. That puts too much
of a burden on the woman. I found that she could be everything
wonderful, and he might still stray, if that's in his value system,
his family background, or his psychodynamic structure.
I
was in graduate school when I heard that a man I knew, married for
over 40 years, had recently died and his wife was so bereaved
because they had had the most wonderful marriage. He had been her
lover, her friend, her support system. She missed him immensely. I
thought that was a beautiful story. When I told my husband about
it, he got a funny look that made me ask, What do you know? He
proceeded to tell me that one night when he took the kids out for
dinner to an out-of-the-way restaurant, that very man walked in
with a young blonde woman. When he saw my husband, he walked
out.
How did that influence you?
I
wondered what that meant. Did he fool his wife all those years and
really not love her? How is it possible to be married for over 40
years and think you have a good marriage? It occurred to me that an
affair could mean something different than I believed.
Another belief that was an early casualty was the hydraulic
pump theory --that you only have so much energy for something. By
this belief, if your partner is getting sex outside, you would know
it, because your partner wouldn't be wanting sex at home. However,
some people are even more passionate at home when they are having
extramarital sex. I was stunned to hear a man tell me that when he
left his affair partner and came home he found himself desiring his
wife more than he had in a long time, because he was so sexually
aroused by his affair. That made me question the pump
theory.
Many
of our beliefs about the behavior of others come from how we see
things for ourselves. A man who associates sneaking around with
having sex will, if his wife is sneaking around, find it very hard
to believe that she could be emotionally involved without being
sexually involved. On the other hand, a woman usually cannot
believe that her husband could be sexually involved and not be
emotionally involved. We put the same meaning on it for our e,
partner that it would have for us. I call that the error of assumed
similarity.
What infidelity research have you
done?
My
first research study was actually based on a sex questionnaire in
Psychology Today in the '70s. I analyzed the data, looking at the
effect of extra-marital sex, length of marriage, and gender
difference on marital satisfaction and romanticism. I found
enormous gender differences.
Men
in long-term marriages who had affairs had very high marital
satisfaction--and women in long-term marriages having affairs had
the lowest satisfaction of all. Everybody's marital satisfaction
went down the longer they were married, except the men who had
affairs. But in early marriages, men who had affairs were
significantly less happy. An affair is more serious if it happens
earlier in the marriage.
Explaining these gender differences was the basis of my
dissertation. I theorized that men were having sexual affairs and
women emotional affairs.

Break
Free from An
Affair
How
To Catch a Cheating Spouse
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