Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Don’t set this one thing Stop Your Recovery

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

Hi Erin,

Do you know the most significant obstacle to recovery?
I’ll tell you in a moment, but first I’ve got something to share…

I don’t know about you, guys, but as a boy monsters
lived under my bed and in my closet. Those pesky
creatures scared me to death each time I had to go to bed.

To read more go to …
http://www.AffairRecovery.com/newsletter/founders/2010-03-monsters

Don’t forget that the long awaited enrollment period for
911 Marriage opens Thursday  March 18th at 12 noon CST.
911 Marriage is a  three month online program assisting
couples in working though a betrayal. To learn more and
a chance to win a free course go to:
http://www.911MarriageOnline.com/win-911marriage and sign up. .

In addition,  the next Emergency Marital Seminar (EMS)
is March 19-21. It’s not too late to sign up, so if you,
or anyone you know needs help dealing with the crisis
created by a betrayal then register for this time tested
approach for helping couples.

Don’t miss this opportunity to come to a new understanding
of what’s happened and to start the path of healing.

To register go to… http://www.AffairRecovery.com/EMS

To healing,

Rick

P.S. Don’t miss out on the 911 Marriage bonus
program. Go to:
http://www.911MarriageOnline.com
and take advantage of our enrollment celebration.

Congratulations Robert!

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

Congratulations to Robert, the author of our 22nd comment. Robert and his wife can enroll in 911 Marriage for free. If you’d like to see his comment or any of the other entries see this page. For the record, we took our any duplicate entries.

Thank you Stephanie for 26 years of recovery!

Friday, March 12th, 2010

26 years ago (March 12th 1984) God did a tap dance on my soul and revealed how much he loved me in spite my being totally jacked up. That was the first time I was able to recognize the magnitude of God’s love and love’s unconditional nature. The second time I experienced that love was when Stephanie choose to stay with me in spite of my betrayal. For 26 years I’ve had the blessing of experiencing that love both from God and from my wife. What joy!

Thank you Stephanie for choosing to follow God and for loving me. Can you believe it was 26 years ago?

To healing,

Rick

Win 911Marriage for free

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Would you be interested in winning a free spot for the next 911 Marriage course?

Well….. Let’s help each other out. I need help. I need market research to help with our product development and some of you may need a free course. I (more…)

To tell or not to tell: the dilemma of an unfaithful spouse

Friday, February 26th, 2010

Share your opinion: Should the unfaithful spouse tell? Comments section Enrollment for 911 Marriage opens: March 18, 2010 at noon cst

See our main page at The Affair Recovery Center

“Why should I tell?” is one of the questions most frequently asked by the unfaithful mate and, for them, this question presents a frightening dilemma. The arguments are universal: Why should my mate be hurt because of my bad behavior? What they don’t know won’t hurt them. They’ll never be able to handle the truth. It would be the end of my marriage. How could I do that to the other party and their marriage? Why should I dump my stuff on them just to get rid of my guilt? And the list goes on. At first glance, these arguments seem logical but they fail to address the larger issues.

Infidelity isn’t the problem. The problem lies in our inability to know what to do about the infidelity and how to respond to infidelity. Most arguments against telling are self-serving and don’t address the best interest of one’s mate or the best interest of a healthy relationship. Maybe a better question would be, “Would my mate want to know?” The vast majority of the time, the primary motivation for not telling is fear. We’re afraid of what would happen if our mate were to find out. How will they react? What will it cost me? Telling all is about surrendering a secret life as well as choosing truth instead of deceitful lies and health over pathology. It is about surrender not control, about letting go rather than hanging on.

Recovery is not about maintaining the status quo and it is not about business as usual. Rather, it is about a changed life, a new beginning, and true intimacy. When describing the perfect relationship the author of Genesis states: “And the two were naked and not ashamed.” This doesn’t mean that they had their own little nudist colony; rather, it means they were able to fully share their lives, to be fully known, including all of their secrets, fears, dreams, failures, and successes. Nothing was hidden from the eyes of their mate and at the same time they felt totally accepted. That state is a far cry from the condition of those trapped in a secret life. In fact, those individuals find themselves hidden and ashamed. Recovery is about new beginnings and the old baggage needs to be discarded.

To do that, the truth has to be removed from its hiding places and exposed to the light. Infidelity is the keeping of secrets and intimacy is about a willingness to be fully known and a willingness to fully know another. The problem with infidelity is it inhibits a couple’s ability to be fully intimate.

Admittedly sharing information for the sake of relieving guilt is self-centered. Sharing with no willingness to help the other person heal from the wound of the betrayal is heartless. It comes down to your goal. Are you seeking a meaningful relationship based on honesty and intimacy or a relationship based on victimization where both live in the shallow disconnectedness of silent despair?

The most disturbing aspect about not sharing the whole truth and nothing but the truth with our mate is the control and manipulation. Information is control and the unwillingness to share the truth robs one’s mate of being able to make an informed decision. It ruins the unfaithful mate’s opportunity to truly be chosen. Living a facade is no way to experience love You can never be loved unconditionally if you only conditionally allow your mate to know who you are.

Decisions regarding “telling” don’t need to be based upon what a spouse has stated regarding what they will do if their mate betrays them. No one knows how their spouse will respond. In the majority of couples we’ve treated, the hurt spouse has previously made threats that if their mate ever cheats on them, then they’re gone, but they can never know how they’re going to react before they actually find themselves in that situation. Our experience shows that God frequently gives the grace to the betrayed spouse to give the relationship a chance as long as their mate is broken and grieved over what they’ve done to their mate.

Some of you may be saying at this point, “You don’t know my spouse” and you’d be right, but at the same time, maybe you don’t know how they’ll respond. In the past 25 years of working with marriages impacted by unfaithfulness, I can only think of a handful of cases where I didn’t believe it best to tell the truth. If you didn’t want to hurt them then you shouldn’t have done the deed. To keep them in the dark is almost always in your short-term best interest and not in theirs.

In many ways the most important issue of recovery isn’t about the behavior. If all we try to do is stop bad and hurtful behavior, then all we will have done is swept cobwebs. In my mind, we need to kill the spider and that work can never be done in secret. It requires eliminating shame, which is done by revealing our dark side and receiving the grace of God. It’s learning how to embrace what’s done and to take personal responsibility to address the problem. This sort of work can never be done for one’s mate, it can only be done out of my own desperation to become a loving human being. It’s facing the consequences rather than avoiding them through dishonesty. It’s about growing up.

What are your experiences? Hurt spouses: If you had a choice, would you prefer to not know? Unfaithful spouses: If you could do it again, would you tell or try to keep it a secret?