Anonymous wrote:You can totally be attracted to another person even when you are happily married. The key is to set boundaries and exercise restraint. Not a big deal...especially when you are happily married.

Anonymous wrote:You could be happily married with a great sex life and still feel sexual attraction towards another person. And if the other person also felt the same - you could certainly flirt or make racy comments or entertain the thoughts of "what ifs".
Even if you loved your spouse, the idea of an affair with OM who you find attractive or even flirting with that person, could give you the thrill of a new romance.
I don't think that this sort of an attraction is an impossibility in even the happiest of marriages. It is another matter if you decide to act on it or not. It is also an entirely different matter if you are willing to give up your marriage for it.
I do not think that this (being attracted to another) necessarily means that there is something lacking in your marriage. It just means that human beings can be attracted to more than one person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
PP, why do you try to avoid all contact when one of you is on vacation? I have a sort of similar situation and wondered about this.
I try to maintain boundaries. When she's on vacation I want to give her and her family space. I'm okay if she checks in but I try not to intimate anything. Same when I'm on vacation. I don't mind when she reached out to say hello but I definitely don't feel the need to check in.
Initiate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
PP, why do you try to avoid all contact when one of you is on vacation? I have a sort of similar situation and wondered about this.
I try to maintain boundaries. When she's on vacation I want to give her and her family space. I'm okay if she checks in but I try not to intimate anything. Same when I'm on vacation. I don't mind when she reached out to say hello but I definitely don't feel the need to check in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
DH here. Have a similar relationship w a female. She has what appears to be a very happy marriage marriage. Mine is pretty strong (we fight infrequently, have regular sex, try to respect each other's needs) Female friend and I don't really talk about our spouses. And, while we flirt a little (similar teasing to poster above) we don't talk about anything sexual. We text, but never late at night. I think we both try to maintain certain boundaries.
We both rely upon each other emotionally and other than our marriages and sex, we probably talk about everything else. We also have told each other how important the other is - but never in a way referring to love or a long-term relationship - just thankful for our friendship and positive qualities we like in the other. Sometimes I feel sexual tension - but I'm a guy, so it's probably imagined.
When one of us is on vacation I try to avoid all contact. She sometimes breaks that rule - I don't think she has the same rule for herself. But, again, it's just a hello. Hope everything is good type contact. Never, I miss you.
I'm sure most would classify our relationship as an EA.
PP, why do you try to avoid all contact when one of you is on vacation? I have a sort of similar situation and wondered about this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does a close friendship really signify an emotional affair???
I have a male friend and we text each other every now and then...sometimes at night...and sometimes it may border on flirting (not so much direct sexual flirting; more joking around and teasing). There's an unspoken attraction, but it's solidly based in a close friendship more than anything else...and I don't think it's an emotional affair.
My DH has seen many of the texts since I don't regularly clean out my inbox, and he knows the guy. I have deleted a few texts that might have crossed a line or been questionable (from the guy to me), but I still don't think it's an emotional affair.
Am I wrong?
Anyways, DH and I have a good marriage filled with lots of sex, so I have no real need to search for something in another man. Having said that, I do value my friendship with the guy.
DH here. Have a similar relationship w a female. She has what appears to be a very happy marriage marriage. Mine is pretty strong (we fight infrequently, have regular sex, try to respect each other's needs) Female friend and I don't really talk about our spouses. And, while we flirt a little (similar teasing to poster above) we don't talk about anything sexual. We text, but never late at night. I think we both try to maintain certain boundaries.
We both rely upon each other emotionally and other than our marriages and sex, we probably talk about everything else. We also have told each other how important the other is - but never in a way referring to love or a long-term relationship - just thankful for our friendship and positive qualities we like in the other. Sometimes I feel sexual tension - but I'm a guy, so it's probably imagined.
When one of us is on vacation I try to avoid all contact. She sometimes breaks that rule - I don't think she has the same rule for herself. But, again, it's just a hello. Hope everything is good type contact. Never, I miss you.
I'm sure most would classify our relationship as an EA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'm the OP. Listen, EAs are nuanced. As I said in my OP, I consider myself happily married and when you meet someone with which you share intense similarities and chemistry, it's difficult to figure it all out. Feelings and emotions are complicated and when you throw on an extra layer of an unhappy marriage, you are talking about people whose heads are probably spinning. I am cutting things off with mine, but I have someone enriching to come home to... Everyone has periods of weakness, so PP I do hope you can find some strength and figure out what will work best for you.
Did you tell him you were cutting it off? If so how did that go? Or are you just going to no contact without telling him why?
Anonymous wrote:
I'm the OP. Listen, EAs are nuanced. As I said in my OP, I consider myself happily married and when you meet someone with which you share intense similarities and chemistry, it's difficult to figure it all out. Feelings and emotions are complicated and when you throw on an extra layer of an unhappy marriage, you are talking about people whose heads are probably spinning. I am cutting things off with mine, but I have someone enriching to come home to... Everyone has periods of weakness, so PP I do hope you can find some strength and figure out what will work best for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess I am having an ea with someone I met several years ago. We are in regular contact, and I believe the feelings are mutual. Our spouses are not aware of the other, or the closeness that has developed. Nothing physical yet. Both of us are in okay (or poor) marriages with kids. Absent kids, I would be gone for sure. Her spouse appears to be a loser. What I am struggling with is that part of me thinks that we would be great together. Similar outlook, values, humor, etc.
You are keeping a relationship with another woman a secret from your wife for several years and then calling that woman's husband a loser?
LOL. Dude you are a loser too.
FYI, I'm not the OP. I don't think this is fair, when you don't know the details of why the marriages are poor. The unhappiness in my own marriage, the lack of emotional connection to my DH, and his unwillingness to do anything about it or talk to me was a huge factor in my emotional affair. When you are starved for affection and married to someone who refuses to talk, life is extremely lonely. It's very easy to end up getting emotionally involved with someone else. It's certainly not something I planned out. I don't consider myself a loser for wanting more than what my DH was willing to give me. I think there are a lot of people who know me that wonder why I'm still with him. If I had left DH, it wouldn't have been because of the other man. It would have been because we were already on the rocks. I'd already been thinking of leaving before I developed another attachment to someone else. If my marriage had been strong, the other attachment would never have happened.
What keeps me in the marriage is my daughter, but also the fact that DH has finally agreed to work on things.
If you are unhappy in your marriage, then leave before drifting to another man. As normal, the woman finds something new....THEN starts thinking about leaving. You can fool your friends, but the rest of us know....the other man is a reason for leaving your husband. You use all the BS of "Lack of emotional connections, unwillingness of DH, etc..." as the excuse.
And I really got a kick out of: " If my marriage had been strong, the other attachment would never have happened".
LOL No. If you were a strong person who truly respected your husband, that attachment would have never happened. But you don't respect your marriage or your husband.