Close calls are virtually all alike. They begin with an attraction to somebody other than your spouse that causes you to think about your time with this individual simply for the pleasure that it provides you. Maybe you’re having regular meetings with someone of the opposite sex for business, shared interests, or volunteer opportunities.
Somewhere in this phase, a mere friendship ceases and a close call starts. Now you’re saving topics of conversation for this person. Your conversations progress from topics related to your mutual interest to far-ranging ones—and soon into personal issues. You scheme and plan on how to be together more often, for more time, without raising anyone’s suspicions.
These types of relationships easily become close calls. As time goes on, there is mutual admiration and a growing number of shared secrets.
At this point, many folks go into denial about how much the relationship is beginning to mean to them and may get to the final phase before recognizing how close he or she really came to having an affair.
Interestingly, there are five types of extramarital affairs. Counselors find that these descriptions help them portray for their clients more clearly how an affair developed and ended.
Knowing the details about these types of affairs will help you see just where there might be risk of falling into an affair. The stories that illustrate each affair will show you how real people can so easily get swept up to the point of being unfaithful.
This type of affair is usually unplanned. It often involves partners who didn’t even know each other prior to the affair. It is done in utmost secrecy, and it often, though not always, results from alcohol consumption. This type of affair is self-serving and contains no emotional involvement or desire to perpetuate closeness. It has all the components of a “first love” type of sexual experience. Our sexually saturated culture feeds especially into this type of affair, and it is the one-night stand that usually results in immediate and intense remorse.
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This type of affair develops gradually. The emotional involvement is intense; perhaps there are family-of-origin deficits that contribute to the emotional need that has been fed by this more complex relationship. Such an affair might last for a year or even two. Sexual activity is not immediate, as in a one-night stand, but occurs only later in the relationship, after a friendship is clearly established.
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This behavior is not really an affair. There is no relationship involved. This is a sex-only experience and it is never satisfying. This behavior often starts in childhood or early adolescence with inappropriate sexual exposure. It eventually develops into a ritualistic pattern of acting out. It is not about emotional attachment, and it would have happened no matter whom the addict might have married. It is always about the addict’s history and never about the spouse providing enough sexual activity.
This behavior is an attempt to self-medicate shame, anxiety, and depression. When women experience these feelings, they tend to eat. When men do so, they act out sexually. Sex is the best antidepressant medication known to males, at least initially. Like alcohol, which feels initially like an antidepressant but with use becomes a depressant, so does compulsive sex.
Being freed from sexual addiction usually requires professional and/or intensive therapy to sort through all of the contributions, followed by an ongoing maintenance group such as a twelve-step model. Couples counseling will not be the best option until the addict has a stable sobriety and is able to engage emotionally with the spouse. A betrayed spouse will never move emotionally toward the addict until he or she is convinced that they will not be hurt like this again.
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This affair occurs to satisfy a specific void. It develops when an individual shares an emotionally satisfying experience with an acquaintance because their spouse has no interest in participating in this activity. This experience is initially platonic, developing within a hiking club, worship team, or other shared ministry or common leisure pursuit. Because participants in this kind of affair generally do not meet outside of the experience they find so satisfying, they consider the other a friend rather than a lover. They don’t contact or meet at any time other than the shared activity. They don’t have lunches, and they don’t check up on each other. They have no intention of leaving their spouses and family, and often feel they have done nothing wrong. Whatever erotic activity occurs is often infrequent and dissatisfying to one partner, but is provided out of obligation or for the purpose of maintaining the friendship. Invariably, however, in addition to the affair, these relationships rob the marriage of emotional content.
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Class 5 says very little about the state of the marriage. It starts innocently enough, “I wonder what ever happened to . . .” Even when the marriage is close, it is normal to wonder about what happened to those old girlfriends and boyfriends from adolescent years. Many of them were “first loves.” Many more of them broke hearts. And even when things are good between you and your spouse, social makes it appealing and easy to try and find them!
Why the extreme danger? That earlier time period was fueled by hormones and sexual attraction, parking and making out, and often encompassed one’s first erotic experiences. It contained all the freedom with little or no responsibility. No wonder culture has encouraged efforts to prolong adolescence, now viewed as extending through the mid-twenties! Who wouldn’t be enticed to go back?
Time creates this nostalgia that only intensifies infatuation. Some individuals will even search for first loves from their elementary-age days. Don’t laugh! First affections are rarely forgotten. Contrasted with family ruts, busy schedules, relentless responsibility, tight finances, and seemingly unending chores, it’s no wonder that—even when someone loves their spouse—they can be tempted to go back to find “better times.”
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In the past, this desire was often put on hold due to the difficulty of finding and interacting with old flames. Reunions, years apart, were often the only option. Now, within minutes of wondering and searching, you can be emailing, texting, and on FaceTime or Skype with each other, all while commuting, cooking dinner in the kitchen, or sitting in the stands at your daughter’s soccer game.
In Class 5, you don’t have to create a relationship; you have an old familiar one stored in your brain, just waiting to be rekindled. Within the first thirty days of contact, you will begin to think that maybe you married the wrong person. Your spouse certainly doesn’t generate this kind of excitement. In fact, they hardly notice you at times.
If you stay in touch with that individual for an additional thirty days, you will be looking for ways to meet and become more intimate with each other.
Many people who have a close call—or a close call that leads to an affair—are looking for the excitement that has faded from their marriage. Their marriages and daily lives have become routine, predictable, and boring.
So how does a couple begin to redevelop these special kinds of experiences? Well, one key is thinking back on how the two of you started your relationship. For most couples that meant cheap dates. It meant finding ways to have fun even when you didn’t have that much money.
The next exercise will help you identify some of those experiences, as well as others in the marriage that are highlights in your relationship. These are the grand events that convinced you that you were made for each other. They don’t have to be dramatic dates, just great memories. But don’t list anything that has to do with your children, other couples, or your wedding day (the honeymoon, however, is an option).
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Thinking through the "Eight Greats"
Each of you is to list what you consider to be the top eight great experiences in your relationship. Divide your list into three columns: the experience, the season of the year, and the location. Some of your experiences will undoubtedly be influenced by where you were at the time and the season of the year in which you had this experience, so those are important components.
After you have written out the eight greats for yourself, sit back and take a look at these highlights. How do you feel looking at this list? How long has it been since you had an “eight great” experience? It’s not too late to recapture the feeling, so the next step is to merge your two lists. After you have written down the matching items, the wife chooses the next one, the husband chooses the next, and so forth, until you have your merged list. The excitement these kinds of experiences generate is often the kinds of things people will look for outside their marriage if they don’t find them with their spouse.
Get started adding excitement back to your relationship with your significant other! Redo what you do best! It doesn’t matter what it costs; enhancing and protecting your marriage is worth it!
About the Author:
DAVE CARDER serves as Pastor of Counseling Ministries at First Evangelical Free Church of Fullerton, CA.
His specialty is Adultery Recovery and Prevention for which he has appeared on numerous outlets including The Oprah Winfrey Network, Discovery Health, and The Learning Channel, The Tony Robbins Passion Project, Ladies Home Journal, USA Today, The Counseling Connection, and various other magazines and journals.
He is the author or co-author of Torn Asunder: Recovering from an Extramarital Affair, Close Calls: What Adulterers Want You to Know About Protecting Your Marriage, and Unlocking Your Family Patterns: Finding Freedom from a Hurtful Past. He holds the Michigan Limited License for Psychology and the California Marital and Family Therapy license, and has graduate degrees in Biblical Literature and Counseling Psychology.
Dave and his wife, Ronnie, have been married for 49 years, and have four adult children and eight grandchildren. More info is available at www.DaveCarder.com.
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