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Strengthen Relationships > Resources

When Friendship Outside a Relationship Is a Threat

NOT "Just Friends": Rebuilding Trust and Recovering Your Sanity After Infidelity

Shirley P. Glass, Ph. D. Free Press: 448 p.p.

I will let this paragraph from the inside jacket of this excellent book speak to the content:

Today's workplace and the Internet have become the new danger zones of attraction and opportunity—the most fertile breeding grounds for affairs. In the new crisis of infidelity, more and more marriages are being threatened by friendships that have slowly and insidiously turned into love affairs. Yet you can protect your relationship by recognizing the red flags along the slippery slope. You’re right to be cautious when you hear these words: "I'm telling you, we're just friends.

This book is an extremely comprehensive and well-written tool, both for couples who actively work on preserving and improving their relationship, and for those couples in which one of the partners may have found themselves dealing with a perceived or real threat to their relationship.

It is particularly timely in our modern society where the interaction between men and women is of a very different nature than a few decades ago—and genuine platonic friendships with members of the opposite sex are a fact of many people's lives.

There is one aspect I especially appreciated. Many books offering therapeutic solutions to problems incorporate actual cases—substituting fictional names. I know that some people find this a useful tool, but it is not something that I personally have found helpful. I feel that if one is going to part with the substantial amount of money that books cost these days, I would rather read about the core elements of, and potential solution to, the problem. A large percentage of situations used as case examples may not be relevant to my particular needs, and one does not always have enough time while in the bookstore to determine what percentage of a particular book is given to this approach.

Although Not "Just Friends": Rebuilding Trust and Recovering Your Sanity After Infidelity does cite some actual cases, the vast majority of this book is an instructive and illuminating resource on dealing with the devastating effects of infidelity by a partner, and about how the problem may be prevented before it actually arises by examining the elements of friendship between members of the opposite sex.

© Chris Burdett-Parr, Support 4 Change.

Box-Relationships



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Cover of Ask Yourself Questions and Change Your Life

gate to change

DEALING WITH AN ABSENCE OF SEXUAL INTIMACY

Dear Judith and Jim,

How do I know when to let go? I have been married for 14 years. I have two wonderful children. I love my husband and I know he loves me, but we have not been intimate for years and years. I feel like I have lost or am losing the will to continue to work to achieve or reestablish intimacy. My husband has not really changed. He never worked with me to experience intimacy, but I guess I ignored that in the first flush of love. With a child 10 months into the marriage, I felt bound in ways that have nothing to do with intimacy, perhaps. So, how will I know when or if I should let go?

How Will I Know

Dear How Will I know,

First of all, congratulations for recognizing that you were half of the decision to let your sexual relations evaporate. We would ask that you examine what was more important than addressing this issue with your husband, for that may be more of what is still at the bottom of your uncertainty about staying with him.

Next, discuss the issue with your husband, telling him how much you miss the sweetness and closeness that come with sexual intimacy. And that you miss it with him—not just in general. Find out how he feels about not having sex with you anymore. And make sure this conversation is safe and friendly. No blame.

Then, if your husband will not participate in co-creating your romance and intimacy, you must decide if you can live the rest of your life being loved in only the ways he loves you. For some people that would be enough. It may not be enough for you. Only you can decide.

We wish you well.

Judith and Jim

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