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Is Your Marriage Ripe for an Affair?  
Five surprising warning signs


Why Spouses Stray

Quick, answer this question with the first thing
that comes to mind: If you were worried that your
spouse might stray, what would you do to prevent
it? Maybe your knee-jerk response is: "I'd lose
20 pounds and upgrade my wardrobe." Or, "I would
shower my spouse with expensive gifts." Or, "I
would be extra attentive to my spouse so she
would realize how good she has it." If your
answer resembled any of those above, bad news:
you're on the wrong track. According to Los
Angeles-based psychotherapist Morrie Shechtman,
you've bought into a common misconception about
what causes affairs in the first place.

"Most people assume that people have affairs with
someone more attractive, sexier, or richer than
their spouse," says Shechtman, coauthor along
with his wife and business partner, Arleah, of
Love in the Present Tense: How to Have a High
Intimacy, Low Maintenance Marriage (Bull
Publishing Company, 2004). "Despite the cliches
-- the midlife crisis situation where the husband
runs off with his much younger secretary, for
instance -- that's not what infidelity is about.
People who cheat generally choose someone busier
and more goal-oriented than their current
partner. Someone more interesting, in other
words."

"You have to keep reminding him how lucky he is
to have you," says Sherry Argov, author of Why
Men Love Bitches: From Doormat to Dreamgirl: A
Woman's Guide to Holding Her Own in a
Relationship (Adams Media Corporation, 2002).
"All the propaganda in the world tells us 'keep
your man,' 'hold on to your man,' 'jump through
hoops for your man,' but your attitude should be
'If you want to go, I'll help you pack'...Healthy
mutual respect is the best immune system in a
relationship."

"That's right," adds Shechtman. He says that the
harsh truth is that when one spouse strays, it's
probably because the other spouse has become,
well...boring. So, focusing on your appearance or
attempting to please your partner completely
misses the point.

5 Warning Signs

Shechtman offers the following warning signs that
your marriage may be ripe for an affair:

1. You don't challenge each other. Unconditional
acceptance is a myth. Healthy marriages require a
mutual willingness to challenge and be
challenged. An "Oh, I'll let the little woman do
whatever makes her happy" attitude can be
condescending and harmful. If your partner
lounges around in her bathrobe watching TV every
day and you say nothing, then you're not invested
in her well-being. Maybe she's depressed. Maybe
she's sick. Maybe she's succumbing to laziness.
Regardless, the message that she gets loud and
clear from your silence is that you don't care.
Not only do you have the right to make reasonable
demands on your partner, you have the obligation
to do so. 

2. You and your partner have become an amoeba.
Getting married does not mean morphing into a
single person with the same interests, hobbies,
and friends. If you and your spouse do everything
together, something's wrong. "If your partner is
not allowed to have a life of her own, she will
eventually become resentful," says Shechtman.
"Similarly, if you're over-interested in her
life, wanting to know or be involved in every
detail, she will feel intruded upon and
smothered. True intimacy requires two people
having independent lives, not two people living
through each other. The best marriages are
low-maintenance marriages."

3. One person selflessly lives for the other.
Shechtman likes to tell the story of Bernard, a
heart surgeon, and Stacy, the wife who selflessly
devoted herself to him. She supported him through
medical school. She stayed home and raised his
kids. She prepared gourmet meals for him, often
complete with heart-shaped ice cubes. And one day
Bernard left Stacy for a disheveled
photojournalist, two years his senior, who
chastised him for stealing a cab she'd just
hailed. Why? Because the photojournalist was
interesting. "Selfless devotion is boring," says
Shechtman. "Bernard could have hired a
housekeeper and a caterer. Gratitude for services
rendered is no replacement for a stimulating
partner. And by failing to cultivate a life of
her own, Stacy deprived Bernard of that."

"Having a life of your own is important," says
Argov. "When you have your own sense of income
and independence, and feel that you can be with
or without him, he will smell it and he'll treat
you differently."

4. Everything centers on your children. It's easy
to succumb to the temptation to make your kids
the center of the universe. Don't. For too many
parents, running kids to and from soccer
practice, dance lessons, and weekend parties
becomes an insidious dance of intimacy avoidance.

"Even with young kids, a couple must take private
time for themselves," says Pepper Schwartz, PhD,
author of five books on love and relationships,
and professor of sociology at the University of
Washington. "Make a rule that you don't talk
about the kids until you download your adult
issues and experiences for the day together. Keep
kid talk out of the bedroom."

5. You don't have meaningful conversations with
your spouse. Does the question, "How was your
day?" unleash a monologue, a laundry list of
activities, or a cacophony of complaints from you
or your partner? If so, you're missing the point
of communication.

"Talk to him in a playful way," says Argov.
"Banter with him. Be a little sassy and keep it
short and sweet. Save the emotional talk for
things that are very important to you, and let
the rest go -- because when you do raise hell, he
has to believe there's merit to it."

Quality communication is the heart of intimacy.
(And you thought it was sex!) If you're confused
about what constitutes a high-intimacy dialogue,
here's a clue: it centers on feelings, not
information. "Instead of merely reporting to your
partner what happened to you that day, tell her
how it made you feel," says Shechtman. "Even if
you have only 10 minutes a day to talk to her,
make those 10 minutes count."

Affair-Proof Your Marriage

Most of these warning signs are variations on a
common theme: abandonment. If you don't care
enough to become an interesting partner, if you
don't challenge your spouse to be all he or she
can be, if you fail to connect with your partner
emotionally, you might as well be an uninterested
roommate. Abandoning your spouse is the first
step to checking out of the relationship.

So what can you do to affair-proof your marriage?
The answer can be summed up in three little
words, says Shechtman: Get a life.

"Have your own friends," says Dr. Schwartz. "Have
a job and hobbies you really care about. Don't
cancel everything on the spot just because your
partner wants you for something -- show that you
have boundaries, commitments, and don't just
exist for him. Read, read, read! And then talk
about books, articles, movies, and news together.
Develop an adventurous relationship based on
trips, projects, and hobbies."

"Set goals and work toward them," Shechtman
urges. "Immerse yourself in a career or activity
that interests you. Don't just hop from one
random activity to another. Have a vision of what
you want your life to be and do something every
day in pursuit of that vision. Take some risks.
And challenge your spouse to do the same. Even if
it causes some temporary discomfort, remember
that a healthy marriage isn't about comfort zones
and status quos. If you settle for comfort, your
marriage will die."

"This is not the '50s anymore," says Argov. "Men
tend to view women who don't have goals and
objectives as being deadbeat. When they're going
to work everyday and pulling all the weight in
the relationship, they really begin to resent it
when you don't make a contribution."

"There's one other point I would make," Shechtman
adds. "Create a rich, rewarding life for yourself
and if your spouse did have an affair and
ultimately leave you, you would be well-equipped
to cope. Interesting people just have more
resources, be they money, social connections, or
potential new romantic partners. There are no
guarantees in marriage. The only person you can
count on to always be there is you. Being
abandoned by a spouse is far preferable to
abandoning yourself." 

--Additional reporting by Chandni Jhunjhunwala

http://women.msn.com/886301.armx?GT1=5809



                
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