Surviving an affair means a person will make internal shifts in the way one thinks about him/her self and the spouse.
Perspectives will change. This change may be an “aha” moment or may emerge over time.
These are often life-altering shifts that stay with a person for a lifetime and open new avenues of awareness, joy and personal productivity.
Here’s what one person says:
It (reading Break Free From the Affair) gave me a wider perspective on the problem, made me realize there was nothing wrong with me, personally, and allowed me to extract myself from the predictable and destructive cycle of questioning (seeing to punish and bolster my own confidence, rather than get to the real problem. Once I realized the problem and mistake were hers, it helped me get a grip on things and move forward. It also helped me to see that my marriage was something worth saving.
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Dr. Robert Huizenga, The Infidelity Coach
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This entry was posted by Dr. Bob Huizenga on Thursday, January 29th, 2009 at 3:47 pm and is filed under Surviving Infidelity. You may follow any responses to this entry through the RSS/XML feed. You may leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
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healing from the affair, surviving the affair, surviving an affair, coping with infidelity, marital infidelity, effects of infidelity, marriage infidelity, extramarital affairs, surviving infidelity, emotional infidelity, emotional affair.


