|
Internal Investigation
About a year
ago, I started to suspect my husband was having at least an emotional
affair. Something was changing the familiar pattern of our relationship.
I also found notes from a woman on his Facebook page and odd
numbers on the phone bill.
At first I attributed
the change in our level of intimacy to a combination of his age
and a medication he was taking for stress. However, when I looked
up the medication, there was no indication the drug affected
the sex drive. When I asked my husband if he was interested in
having an affair, I got a predictable answer.
Then last weekend
we were at a pub. He drank too much and told me he would call
his younger friend to keep him company unless I agreed
to stay with him and drink. I was not drinking. I got up and
went home, and he followed.
When I asked
him about it the next day, he could not give me an explanation.
I am an investigator by profession, and part of me wants to follow
up. I will be devastated if it turns out he is having an affair--emotional
or physical. We have two teenage children. Should I start to
dig, or should I live with a suspicious mind?
~ Rochelle |
|
Rochelle, unchecked, the worm
of doubt will eat you up. Thats the first reason to consider
digging. If your husband is involved with another woman, there
is a high degree of risk in your marriage. Thats the second
reason.
Whenever we have
risk in our lives, it is best to try to manage it. Thats
true whether we are talking about flooding rivers, other drivers,
or a potentially unfaithful spouse. But before you can manage
risk, you have to identify its presence.
Ignorance prevents
you from knowing the hazard and calculating the risk. You may
think your marriage will last no matter what, but that is a little
like people who believe they are good drivers even when they
are drunk. The point is, our beliefs have little to do with the
actual level of risk in our lives.
Something has
altered your relationship with your husband. Youve spoken
to him. No resolution came from that. Now you have to step up
and do more. It is no different than if a member of your family
had a medical problem. Would you forget about it?
You heard a bump
in the basement. Youre an investigator, so investigate.
And hold to the rules of investigation. Document, gather evidence,
get all your ducks in a row before you interview the suspect.
Documentation will help should it become necessary to verify
things to your children or to others.
~ Wayne &
Tamara
The Wrong Foot
My boyfriend
and I were friends for four years and recently started dating.
During our friendship we fell deeply in love and now want to
be married. During our months together we have noticed his dad
doesnt like me, so we have come up with a way to get married
without his father objecting.
I will get pregnant.
We want our families at the wedding, and we dont want to
elope. What do you think?
~ Suki
Suki, you cant change
anyone else. You can be a good person and respectful. You can
be a great mom and a great wife and perhaps win him over. But
that is not your purpose in life. Your purpose in life is to
be a good person for its own sake.
Let your actions
speak for you, let your character shine, let people know you
for who you are. Be worthy of respect, and if there are others
who dont respect you, never give them a second thought.
Some people cant be won over.
Part of being
worthy of respect is not using ploys to force from others what
is not freely given.
~ Wayne &
Tamara
|
Authors and columnists
Wayne and Tamara Mitchell can be reached at www.WayneAndTamara.com.
Send letters
to: Direct Answers, PO Box 964, Springfield, MO 65801 or email:
DirectAnswers@WayneAndTamara.com.
Direct Answers
appears in newspapers in the United States, Canada, Australia,
the UK, Grenada, Guyana, Spain, Lesotho, South Africa, Antigua
& Barbuda, Papua New Guinea, and Kenya. |
|
|
Direct
Answers Archive 2009 |
|
- ©
Copyright 1999 - 2009 Pioneer Thinking. All Rights Reserved.
- *
tm; the property of Pioneer Thinking Company.
|
|
|