Anonymous wrote:^ she could certainly have identified that living a double life and the incumbent stress from keeping up the charade for years was directly linked to increased alcohol consumption and anger (which by the way all ended once everything was out in the open).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My therapist did not urge me to end my affair. She helped me weigh the benefits of the affair vs the emotional costs. No judgment at all.
I hope she urged you to make a decision instead of unwillingly exposing your spouse to disease. That’s crap.
Anonymous wrote:My therapist did not urge me to end my affair. She helped me weigh the benefits of the affair vs the emotional costs. No judgment at all.
Anonymous wrote:Any therapist worth their salt will urge you to come clean with your spouse and end the affair.
But I agree, you can’t really benefit from therapy when you’re hiding such a massive secret from your therapist. You’re not tackling the underlying issues.
Anonymous wrote:^ she could certainly have identified that living a double life and the incumbent stress from keeping up the charade for years was directly linked to increased alcohol consumption and anger (which by the way all ended once everything was out in the open).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My spouse’s therapist let him just sit on the pot. She forced no solution. She was perfectly content to hear about his double life. She didn’t feel it was a problem to lie and excuse me to STIs. She told him he could define his life and morals
If she was his therapist and not yours, how would you be in a position to know that any of these statements are true?
He told me everything and I saw emails at the end before he fired her and came clean with me.
If he had stayed her course we would be divorced.
She was against him giving me any details. She did not force a decision.
He broke up with the AP and spilled everything. He got a new therapist that was marriage friendly (under the right circumstances).
Anonymous wrote:My spouse’s therapist let him just sit on the pot. She forced no solution. She was perfectly content to hear about his double life. She didn’t feel it was a problem to lie and excuse me to STIs. She told him he could define his life and morals
If she was his therapist and not yours, how would you be in a position to know that any of these statements are true?
My spouse’s therapist let him just sit on the pot. She forced no solution. She was perfectly content to hear about his double life. She didn’t feel it was a problem to lie and excuse me to STIs. She told him he could define his life and morals
Anonymous wrote:My spouse’s therapist let him just sit on the pot. She forced no solution. She was perfectly content to hear about his double life. She didn’t feel it was a problem to lie and excuse me to STIs. She told him he could define his life and morals.
I’m sure that’s the type of therapist OP wants. Get a young one. They tend to be like this.