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Your spouse had an affair — can that benefit your marriage? According to renowned therapist Esther Perel’s new book The State of Affairs: Rethinking Infidelity, maybe.

Perel explores a lot in her book — much more than I can address here — but I was particularly drawn to her exploration of why more women are cheating nowadays, and we are.

Why? When women had few choices, we played it safer. Now that we are often financially secure on our own and expect a lot more from our marriage, we struggle with what domesticity and motherhood does to us — what Perel calls the muting of eros. Hubby thinks that his wife isn’t interested in sex — she keeps rejecting him, after all, or when they finally get around to having sex, she’s hoping it’s over soon — and so he’s stunned when he discovers she’s been having a torrid love affair. What the heck is going on?

Ceasing to feel like women

As Perel writes,

Home, marriage and motherhood have forever been the pursuit of many women, but also the place where women cease to feel like women.

Sound familiar? It does to me. We go from being a desired being to a domestic one.

Perel mentions the work of researcher Marta Meana on the enigma of female desire (Meana’s work is also referenced in Daniel Bergner’s book, What Do Women Want? and if you haven’t read it, put it on your list — now):

She challenges the common assumption that women’s sexuality is primarily dependent on relational connectedness — love, commitment and security. … Meana suggests that women are not just “touchy-feely” but also “saucy-sexy” — in fact, “women may be just as turned on as men by the novel, the illicit, the raw, the anonymous, but the arousal value of these may not be important enough to women to trade in things they value more (i.e., emotional connectedness). … We interpret the lack of sexual interest as proof that women’s sexual drive is inherently less strong. Perhaps it would be more accurate to think that it is a drive that needs to be stoked more intensely and more imaginatively — and first and foremost by her, not only by her partner.

And therein lies part of the problem — the stuff of domestic life doesn’t always make us feel all that sexy. So, even if we have a hubby who is romantic, cooks and cleans and adores us, we need to connect with our erotic self, too, otherwise …

From selfishness to selflessness

She quotes psychotherapist Dalma Heyn in describing the “deadening of pleasure and vitality” that happens to some women after they wed:

“A woman’s sexuality depends on her authenticity and self-nurturance,” she writes. Yet marriage and motherhood demand a level of selflessness that is at odds with the inherent selfishness of desire. Being responsible for others makes it harder for women to focus on their own needs, to feel spontaneous, sexually expressive and carefree. For many, finding at home the kind of self-absorption that is essential to erotic pleasure proves a challenge. The burdens of caretaking are indeed a power anti-aphrodisiac.

Monogamy just may not be a woman’s thing, as I’ve written before, and perhaps marriage and even intimacy — what we’re constantly told we need to have and maintain in a romantic partnership — isn’t working well for us either.

In again quoting Meana’s work, Perel writes there are three themes that work against women:

First, the institutionalization of the relationship — a passage from freedom and independence to commitment and responsibility. Second, the overfamiliarity that develops when intimacy and closeness replace individuality and mystery. And lastly, the desexualizing nature of certain roles — mother, wife and house manager all promote the de-eroticization of the self.

Managing love and desire

Yep, yep and yep. It sounds bleak, right? But as Perel notes, some couples can integrate the contradictions of love and desire, but first we have to acknowledge that we’ll never eliminate the dilemma — it’s not a “problem to solve; it is a paradox to manage.”

And for the ones who can’t? Is an affair the only way to recharge our erotic selves, and maybe even bring that energy back to our — unknowing but no doubt appreciative — hubby? Maybe.

Want to learn how to create space in your marriage to own your erotic self? (Of course you do!) Then read The New I Do: Reshaping Marriage for Skeptics, Realists and Rebels (Seal Press). You can support your local indie bookstore or order it on Amazon.


2 Responses to “Can infidelity make your marriage better?”

  1. Rob says:

    LOL, you can’t make this stuff up folks. I love how the cheating whores this blog glorifies try to rationalize their narcissistic behavior by wallowing in their man-hating, selfish feminist beliefs. It figures that they would try to blame men for their immoral, home-wrecking behavior. It certainly doesn’t surprise me any more.

    Let this be a lesson to you guys out there. Stay from these aging feminist sluts and date younger, hotter women (preferably foreign) who have not been infected as heavily by modern feminist beliefs and are not as bitter and jaded as these old hags who believe this feminist nonsense.

    • Sarah says:

      Rob,
      I am not a feminist and never have been one. I am happy being a wife (to my husband) and a mom (to my children). I have never cheated and never will. I believe in fidelity. I believe a man should be faithful to his wife. I believe a wife should be faithful to her husband. If they are not happy, then it’s best to get a divorce and NOT cheat. Cheating is a choice and it is one I will never make. I am not shallow and I have a tremendous respect for my marriage vows and my husband. I am also not overweight and I am not unattractive.

      But, your response to this blog article exploring women’s desire comes off as dehumanizing. To call someone an “aging, feminist slut” is uncalled for. If you have a sister or a mom or a daughter, I do not think that you would like such words to be directed at them.

      We have seen a shift in society. In the past, men cheated on wives freely. But, now, women are able to cheat as freely as men. There is an even playing field. As a woman, I cannot tell you what it’s like to be cheated on an discarded by my first fiance and the fall out from it. Luckily, I married someone much better in all ways, but it has left scars.

      All this talk about finding young, foreign women disqualifies you as good husband material from a woman’s perspective.

      Think about it this way, what is every woman in America was talking about how all American men are old and fat and have smalls dicks. So, it would be much better for American women to go to foreign countries to find young, hot men, with huge penises.

      You would hate that.

      I don’t know if I can get through to you, but again, I do not believe in infidelity and not all American women are bad. Women are not commodities. We are not objects. We are human beings, just like you, worthy of respect.

      Sarah

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