Feb 4, 2007 Getting Past the Affair Part Two By Douglas K. Snyder
Read Part One "I can't just wipe the slate clean," he said in an individual therapy session. "It just doesn't feel right to me somehow, as if the affair never happened." Trent struggled with conflicting beliefs about forgiveness that were rooted in part in his religious upbringing. "I know we're supposed to forgive," he said. "But I also believe that on some level, even after we make confession and pledge to be different, we still carry the marks of our sins with us." Then he added, "I think I also relate ?wiping the slate clean' to ?forgetting it happened,' and I'm afraid that forgetting what happened could make us each more likely to slip back into the ways we interacted before Lila's affair that didn't work for us." Lila's remorse was evident to Trent, as were numerous ways in which she had worked to improve their marriage. Trent wrestled with his attitudes about forgiveness and read some books that helped him reflect more deeply on his religious beliefs. In a subsequent session he declared, "I think I've come to a decision about how to do this better. I can't wipe the slate clean; the affair happened and it can't be undone. But I can set that slate aside and start a new slate. The old slate won't just disappear, but I don't have to keep it out in the middle of our home anymore. I want us to write a new slate together ? that's what a fresh beginning means to me. Setting the old slate aside means we're removing it from being at the center of our lives and making the new slate our center." Reconciliation. Recovery from an affair doesn't necessarily mean reconciling or staying in your marriage. Forgiveness doesn't require staying in an unhealthy relationship. In the next chapter, we're going to help you draw on everything you've learned and worked on to reach an explicit decision about how to move forward ? either in this relationship or separately. But for some couples who work through the recovery process together ? particularly those who follow a process similar to the one we've outlined in this book ? reconciliation results from going through the previous steps we've described for moving on. Jeremy and Marlene spent several months examining the emotional distance that had grown between them in recent years. Both partners worked outside the home, and any free time had been devoted to their two daughters. Both also had substantial caretaking responsibilities for aging parents. Jeremy had never been good at recognizing or talking about his feelings with anyone, and this contributed to the gulf that had developed between him and Marlene. Although clear from the beginning that they wanted to save their marriage, it was six months before Marlene was able to move beyond her deep hurt and Jeremy beyond his own equally deep guilt to become comfortable with each other and re create an intimacy between them that had been missing for several years. They decided to go away for a weekend without their daughters to one of their favorite places in the mountains, where they renewed their vows of commitment to one another. The ritual that Jeremy and Marlene created symbolized their reconciliation and the promise of their new beginning.
Taken from Getting Past the Affair by Douglas K. Snyder, Donald H. Baucom, and Kristina Coop Gordon. Copyright © 2007 Douglas K. Snyder, Donald H. Baucom, and Kristina Coop Gordon, published by Guilford Press. All rights reserved. Used by permission Read more at www.growthtrac.com | ||||||||