One of the biggest sticking points for me is that she wrestled with herself about many individual things as the A went on, but she didn't end it. I guess I wonder what did he do, or what was the moment that she felt whatever it was that made all hesitation and second thoughts dissipate.
I could definitely describe the same thing. Different points that I thought I needed to get out of it. There many moments I wrestled with myself.
However, I don’t think it was him doing something to get her hesitation to stop. It was her. It was whatever narrative that was driving the bus here. I don’t think the AP had any special power of persuasion. I think the affair feelings likely did.
And you might say aren’t the affair feelings because of him?
I do t think so. I think the affair feelings are a hefty cocktail of adrenaline and dopamine. It’s keeping that feeling, that dependency.
But most ws (outside of very few exceptions) that I have spoken with privately or even publicly describe their cognitive dissonance, the state of holding two or more beliefs at once. It turns into mental gymnastics because part of us doesn’t like what we are doing. The other part can’t resist what we are doing. And again, I think it’s not because the ap is great, more desirable, more charming, funnier, more clever, etc it because the affair feelings are euphoric. There are all these mini negotiations just to prolong it a bit longer.
The irony is if you look into this deeper, you will learn that it’s considered the predictable psychological response to the instability of the situation. The more the two people having the affair have these times when they are pulling away or trying to end it makes the upswing of giving in to the escapism higher. And this high low pendulum creates an addiction because it becomes more and more painful to think of giving it up but you know you want to give it up. This is where that constant negotiation and justification to self begins.
"Well my husband is ——, remember that time (never mind this happened 10 years ago) when he ——-, see he really doesn’t love me"
"This is a person I can’t seem to put down they must be my soul mate. This must have been meant to be"
"Just one more week…"
I can remember crying after the first sexual conversation. But the next day I was up and back at it all again.
And I mean there is no denying we chose this path, but it’s difficult I explain how that path kind of gains a momentum that you grow reliant on. That’s why I think the point of no return often happens in the initial stages of the affair. This is when you are thinking most clearly and least effected by the predictable psychological response.
I am not blaming it on that response either. I don’t think you ever lose track of what your are doing is wrong. But most give in to the highs coming from the instability and they chase them just like someone chases nicotine or gambling or whatever. I am not saying that I had no control over the situation, just illustrating that there is a huge draw to that chemical cocktail that at the time you are attributing to this other person.
But clearly most of the time, by my own experience and hearing countless stories on this site, the other person isn’t great. A normal dating situation I don’t even think he would have been on my radar. He was 20 years older than me but in some ways looked to be 30 more. I knew him to be a serial cheater, we had different sensibilities, religious backgrounds, and in reality there were times he didn’t treat me very well - his veil would slip and show me I meant nothing to him. Still I would find ways to convince myself that this was something special enough to throw my life away.
So I guess I am saying this- affairs are not logical, and when you try and look at it from a lens of what it’s like to be single and date, there are dynamics at play that are hard to relate to. When you date someone and there isn’t all this risk and instability, there isn’t the same chemical cocktail. Sure, often you are infatuated with one another, but it’s because you really like them.
In an affair you like how it feels, and I would contend it has more to do with seeing yourself a certain way than taking a good look at the AP. Having that surge of adrenaline and dopamine made me feel invincible, vibrant, young, sexy. I think affairs are more self adulation than they are about having a real relationship with that other person. Most of the qualities I attributed to him were entirely made up. When the therpist asked me months later what he was like and then how did he show that - I was baffled to discover he didn’t. And she helped me see I needed to see him like that to validate the feelings I was having about myself. If he wasn’t great then maybe I wasn’t younger, sexier, more vibrant.
I don’t like a lot of what Esther pearl says about affairs but I do agree that most people have them to experience a different version of themselves.
[This message edited by hikingout at 4:08 PM, Sunday, August 4th]