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English Pages [264] Year 1972
THE CIVILIZED COUPLE'S GUIDE TO EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
the
/JVILIZED
COUPLE'Sy-UIDE TO EXTRAMARITAL
d^^VENTURE
? Dr. Albert Ellis
Peter H. Wyden, Inc. /Publisher NEW YORK
THE CIVILIZED COUPLE'S GUIDE TO EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE Copyright
©
1972 by Albert
Ellis
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this
book, or parts thereof,
in
any form, except for
the inclusion of brief quotations in a review.
Names and
identifying details have been carefully altered throughout
the
book
to assure the privacy of all concerned.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOG CARD NUMBER: 72-85999 MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
5
CONTENTS
1.
Extramarital Adventure:
Almost Everybody
Is
Doing
It
1
2.
Kinds (and Degrees) of Extramarital Adventure
17
3.
Healthy Reasons for Extramarital Adventure
40
4.
Disturbed Reasons for Extramarital Adventure
69
5.
To Be That
6.
Not
or Is
to
Be an Extramarital Adventurer:
the Question!
Ground Rules
95
for Civilized Extramarital
Adventure 7.
1 1
Etiquette and Techniques for Extramarital
Adventure 8.
139
Overcoming Emotional Problems About 156
Extramarital Adventure 9.
10.
Special Problems of
How
to
Women
179
Handle the Problem of Children 201
and Extramarital Adventure 11.
How
to
Be Happily Monogamous
Nonmonogamous World
in
a
215
BibUography
239
About
249
the
Author
1 Extramarital Adventure:
Almost Everybody
K
HY SHOULD ANYONE BOTHER,
Is
Doing
in the closing
It
decades
of the twentieth century, to write a guide to extramarital adventure? Granted that this kind of behavior has always occurred in
both civilized and uncivilized regions, to
is it
really extensive
enough
warrant a Baedeker? Yes!
Whether we a
like the fact of adultery or not,
good or a bad
we can hardly deny any longer
that
it
it is
virtually ubiquitous. Millions of individuals
is
act,
whether we think engage
in
it
that
every
year in the United States alone; on a worldwide basis, the figure
may
possibly run into billions. If marital union
is
the most popu-
sexual activity on this planet, and masturbation a fairly close
lar
second, extramarital relations
may
well be the third most frequent
form of sexual encounter. For although premarital and postmarital sex this
gle it is
is
more extensive today than
it
ever was before, a great deal of
kind of activity takes place between one individual
and a partner who
is
who
is
sin-
legally married; so, technically speaking,
adultery.
The
men and women, moreover, marry and most of their adult lives. Consequently, when
great majority of
remain married for
these people engage in nonmarital sex, as they frequently do, they
can resort only to masturbation or to adultery. That
is
why it can name is
be most accurately reported: Extramarital adventurer, thy legion!
1
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
2
my word
Don't take
thorities in the field
that there
now
for this. Literally scores of outstanding au-
of sex, love, and marital relations have shown
an exceptionally high prevalence of adulter-
exists
ous relations and that
news
to you,
this
is
no cause for alarm.
If this
suggest that you now- skip to Chapter 2.
1
wonder what the experts are saying,
me
let
is
not
you do
If
acquaint you with a
small sample of their research and their views.
Hyman
Dr.
sexual infidelity
estimate,
up
This
tal sex.
is
in their
to
book. The Wandering Husband, that
widespread
phenomenon.
as a natural
Lucy
Spotnitz, a noted psychiatrist, writing with
Freeman, points out
in
may be regarded
urban society, they
90 percent of American husbands have extramariin contrast to the
is
our culture and
In certain parts of
astoundingly high figures that the
Kinsey researchers reported as far back as 1948: that 50 percent of the husbands and 25 percent of the wives they interviewed even in the early
1940's admitted to at least one extramarital affair.
Lael Scott, in a survey of the urge to ports: " 'Infidelity
is
roam
in
marriage, re-
now taken as a matter of course in a number among people under 30,' one marriage
of middle-class marriages
counselor said. Tt's no longer considered a deviation from the
norm by many young
people.
Women
erant of infidelity, as long as the
man
especially are peculiarly tolcarries "
on within the family
as usual, so that the family appears intact.'
Morton Hunt checked the old Kinsey Gebhard, director of the
Institute for
figures with
Sex Research
Paul
Dr. at
Indiana
University, which Kinsey founded and which carries on his work.
He
quotes Dr. Gebhard as follows: 'Tf
I
were
to
make an edu-
cated guess as to the cumulative incidence figures for 1968, they'd
be about 60 per cent for males and 35 to 40 per cent for females."
Hunt
also
"Nearly
all
reports
married
his own findings about affairs and notes: men and at least a majority of married women
are conscious of extramarital desires from time to time,
more
often."
He
ports that over
adds:
"A
if
not
recent study by two sociologists re-
70 per cent of the men
in
one high caliber cocktail
ALMOST EVERYBODY
DOING
IS
3
IT
lounge in a West Coast city were married, successful, stable persons looking for nothing more than a
little
fantasies
and overt
affairs, great
excitement and sexual
and above extramarital
variety." Finally, he points out that over
numbers of individuals engage
in
adulterous petting that stops just before intercourse:
"From
the Kinsey study of
questionnaire data, of
all
women
plus
my own
interview and
would hazard the guess that about a quarter
I
somewhere between a some kind of ex-
middle-class American wives, and
tenth and an eighth of their husbands, have had
tramarital experience that stopped short of intercourse."
much
earlier
group and by Dr. Lewis Terman and
his as-
Confirmations of Hunt's findings were published
by Dr. Kinsey and sociates.
his
Working with questionnaires and interviews
in the 1930s,
both Kinsey and Terman found that about three-quarters of middle-class
American husbands and over one-quarter of
their wives
admitted feeling a desire for extramarital intercourse.
Mrs. Virginia
Satir, a
renowned family
therapist, notes:
Almost any recent study of the sexual practices of married many marital partners do not live completely monogamously. Marital partners report from few to many extramarital sexual relationships, which are largely secret. people reports that
Frequently-married
which which
myth
is
is is
persons
practice
a
consecutive
monogamy;
the fact
is
frequently polygamy.
Dr. Joseph Downing, a psychiatrist serving as the San
Mateo County Health
widespread
serial
program chief of
Services, concurs: "In California
particularly, the high incidence of divorce to
spousing
polygamy done in parts. Mate -swapping, polygamy in the open, is becoming more frequent. The a sort of
and remarriage amounts
polygamy. Thus, a legally sanctioned form of
extended family has developed." Brian Boylan, in his incisive book, sults
of his
own
Infidelity,
survey of marital unfaithfulness.
reports the re-
He
defines
infi-
delity as the urge or desire to look for sex-love fulfillment outside
of marriage, and distinguishes
it
from actual adultery, where an
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
4
He found among men:
overt sex act occurs.
women
as
it is
that this urge
is
as
common among
On the basis of extensive interviews, it appears that married women practice infidelity in its various forms just as much as married men, ahhough married women take longer to admit to unfaithful desires. The broadened definition of infidelity as something that happens any time a married person has to look outside the marriage for an unfulfilled need is especially perti-
nent to
women.
delity as long as
A it
married
means
woman may
adultery, but
stoutly
when
deny any
infi-
the psychological
and emotional aspects are mentioned, a surprising number readily admit to them.
Numerous Breedlove
starting
investigators,
William
with
and
Jerrye
1964, have brought forth facts about the phenome-
in
non of mate-swapping or swinging among married couples. In form of sex
activity,
a husband and wife team
this
up with one or
more other couples and exchange partners. The Breedloves estimated that no less than eight million American couples are generally
involved in the swinging scene and that, conservatively, two
and a half million couples exchange partners on a somewhat regu-
more times a year). Duane Denfeld and Michael Gordon did
lar basis (three or
a study of the sociol-
ogy of mate-swapping, especially of the swinging club and magamarket,
zine
and
approximately
located
publications catering to this
who
field.
fifty
They found
nationally
sold
that the swingers
advertise in these publications and attend swinging parties
"do not conform
to the stereotypical
image of the, deviant. They
have higher levels of education than the general population; 80 per cent of one study attended college, 50 per cent were graduates,
and 12 per cent were found Smith,
in
professional
1969).
still
students.
They
are disproportionately
and white-collar occupations
They tend
to be conservative
(J.
and
L.
and very straight."
Dr. Robert N. Whitehursfs study of extramarital involvement
concluded that often extramarital
affairs
are
all
but inevitable:
ALMOST EVERYBODY
IS
DOING
^
IT
Given certain average conditions males involved,
it
is
in the
number of males between
for a great
may be
ty-five that
married
life
possible to predict an adulterous the ages of forty
of the
outcome and for-
created out of natural conditions arising
over years of marriage coupled with a differential value notion .
.
Recent research shows that marriages, contrary to the
.
to-
getherness notions extant in our culture, do not, through time,
become characterized by
increasing depth and intensiveness of
marital communication.
Instead, there
time takes
its toll
in regard to the
some evidence
is
that
importance of the relation-
The phenomenon of extramarital male
infidelity can problem with a high probability of involvement for many males ... it can be seen as either a problem in the marital relationship or in the personality of the deviant (although all levels may be involved in any particular case). In its essence, the behavior should be quite frequently expected, and if expected and explained as a social -structural and cultural problem, it may then be construed much more nearly as normal rather than as abnormal behavior
ship
.
.
.
as easily be conceptualized as a cultural-social
in the
kind of society
Note,
if
you
will, the
we now
experience.
conclusions that are being drawn by these
outstanding authorities and researchers:
—
of American males and a quite high some time or other engage in overt
that a very high percentage
percentage of females at adultery;
— many middle-class marriages no made to-do about extramarital adventures; — extramarital are universal among males and increasing among females; — addition widespread an enormous amount of petting of — many mates who abjure are polygamous because they engage a marriages; of — mate-swapping or swinging becoming commonthat in
great
that
desires
that in
to
practically
adultery, there exists
that stops just short
that
technically
intercourse;
affairs
series
in
that
is
is
actually
legal
fairly
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
6
and
place,
that
mate-swappers tend
to
be conservative and
straight;
—
modern marital conditions are such that adultery expected under normal conditions and need not in the that
to
be
least
be
is
viewed as a deviant practice.
These are rather
startling conclusions;
and they are based on
what seem to be factual information. Current
lifestyles
encourage
these trends:
John
F.
Cuber, a respected researcher on marriage and di-
vorce, observes: It is
startling to realize
how many
millions of Americans live
for prolonged periods in foreign countries in connection with their professional
and occupational
roles.
And, of course, there
are the periods of travel for recreational purposes
—
particularly
where both husband and wife are employed and, sometimes by intent,
extended vacations are taken separately. Under these
we found that substantial numbers of contemporary Americans of the upper middle class consider themselves freed from the bonds of monogamy for the duration of their absence from home, although the expectation in such a case is that the encounter be a relatively brief one and not a sustained, meaningful relationship which may threaten the marriage.
conditions,
Increasingly,
adultery
is
neatly
organized.
Richard
Warren
Lewis reports on "The Swingers" of Southern California, by
which he means both married and single individuals (often the
mer
are linked with the latter)
who
constitute "a
for-
new breed of un-
abashed orgiasts and casual couplers." Says Lewis:
Los Angeles area alone, quite apart from The Swing, a dozen lonely-loins clubs charge male applicants up to $25 initiation fee, plus $5 monthly dues (girls are admitted free), for leads to like-minded members of the opposite and sometimes the same gender. Among the sex societies in and around Los Angeles: The Local Swinger, The In-Crowd, The Compatibles, The Exchange, The Group, Dial-A-Date Tonight and the best-organized of the lot. The Utopians, which boasts a In the
more than
—
—
ALMOST EVERYBODY
DOING
IS
IT
/
membership of some 200 swapping couples and 1 800 swinging singles, male and female, who preach as well as practice the 1
club's
winking motto: "Let's keep
the ultimate in sign language ers
—
In addition to a
in touch."
telephone introduction service, each
member
furnished with
is
triangular-shaped
bumper
stick-
whose arrangement of yellow borders designates a particular
category.
Some
monogamy
is becoming more the M. Lewis of the department of Southwestern Medical School, in his paper, "The Fam-
authorities believe that
exception, not the rule. Dr. Jerry psychiatry, ily
Physician and the Evaluation of Marital Infidelity," contends:
"Fidelity, like thrift
and
chastity,
may be
a disappearing value."
TV
Dr. Joyce Brothers, the famous psychologist and estimates: "Infidelity has risen in Kinsey's
day
to an estimated
from 50 percent of the married men 75 percent today."
While the prevalence of group sex tus of the participants
is
difficult to
in their
gest that there are about
book. The Groupsex Tapes, sug-
two and a half million people
United States, mostly nice married couples,
who
From
interviews with
cago area he concluded that
more than
in greater
just
Group 280 swingers
enjoy group sex. Gilbert Bartell, author of similar assessment.
gauge, the sta-
well documented. Herbert F. Margolis
is
and Paul M. Rubenstein,
personality,
in the
happen
to
Sex, arrived at a
Chi-
in the
Chicago alone probably
group
eight thousand couples regularly practice
Dr. Stephen Neiger, a well-known psychiatrist
who
also
sex.
made
intensive studies of mate-swappers, reports:
All ages are represented, from the late teens to the seventies. met a would-be swapper couple, both of whom were well over seventy! I met university professors and laborers. By and large, I found mate-swappers tended to be rather up-scale in education and income. I found teachers, lawyers, physicians, psychologists, anthropologists, writers, one minister, one psychoanalyst, executives, and businessmen among the mate-swappers I studI
ied. Practically all studies
higher
educational
level
confirm
my
findings that despite their
recreational
swingers
tend
to
be
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
8
respectable, solid citizens.
A
surprisingly large majority hold
conservative views.
For many years, studies have shown that premarital and extramarital relations were
more common among
cans, including both whites to
show
that middle-class
and upper-class Americans are becom-
ing sexually freer, particularly about adultery.
development
is
lower-class Ameri-
and blacks; now studies are beginning
well explained by Dr.
The cause of
this
Theodore N. Ferdinand,
professor of sociology, and anthropology at Northeastern University:
... ica
a large part of the revolution in sexual behavior in
Amer-
can be attributed to two fundamental changes in the Ameri-
can social structure. First, a very large segment of the middle and upper classes are now exposed to a social milieu, that is, the large state university, in which sexual relationships have become a preeminent aim of virtually all its members. With the
among these classes, the ascetic way to a frankly hedonistic relations have become the keystone. The
spread of higher education
ethos of their ancestors has given
one in which sexual upper-upper class has endorsed a humanist, expressionistic ethos since its emergence in America in the post-Civil War period, and life in the lower classes seems to have continued relatively unchanged since the Industrial Revolution. Thus, the spread of higher education among the middle and upper classes has been a crucial factor in the American sexual revolution. A second factor is the extraordinary growth in the relative size of the middle classes in the American social structure. There is general agreement that the broad shift from blue-cOllar to white-collar jobs in the occupational structure and the general rise in real income has produced a much broader middle class in America, with the result that a much larger proportion of the population has progressively come under the influence of its life style. Hence, as the middle classes have changed their evaluation of sexuality, they have also embraced a broader share of the American people, producing what appears to be a sexual revolution.
ALMOST EVERYBODY
DOING
IS
V
IT
This widespread prevalence of adultery
is
hardly limited to
North America. Dr. Hugo Beigel, psychotherapist and editor of
The Journal of Sex Research,
What many people do
tells us:
not
know
is
that marriage per se does
not necessarily include the expectation of premarital chastity or marital fidelity, except in our culture. Not only do
we know of
cultures where marriage does not include sexual privileges be-
tween husband and wife, but we know also of the Muria in Shilong, India, for instance, where promiscuity is enforced. In the village of Kambaramba on the Sepik River in New Guinea, a whole population lives on the prostitution of wives and daughters. The men there prefer to marry women who already have it guarantees a better economic status. SimiArab groups along the trade routes of the Southern Sa-
female children; larly,
hara iend' their wives to merchants and passing camel drivers
—
money. Their marriage customs serve their survival. Arab nations, hospitality requires a host to offer his wife to an honored guest or a good friend. Children of such casual unions are thought to be of superior breed, since they have been bred from superior motives. As the honor is mutual, a for
In other
man
rarely sires his wife's offspring.
his friends' wives
and
his friends
Newsweek magazine informs
Rather he impregnates
impregnate
us that
"much
his.
to the
envy of many
a Westerner, the middle-class Japanese has traditionally enjoyed
the social
freedom of keeping a mistress without much
career and marriage.
A
risk to his
survey conducted by a leading weekly
magazine shows that 58 percent of some 260 executives admitted
—
and the number may be considerably higher. 'Among my close acquaintances at the golf club,' asserts one Tokyo executive, \ know of no one who does not have a
they had mistresses
mistress.' "
According to Sexology magazine, "as high as seventy
per cent of
all
Japanese husbands have sex relations with
other than their wives. Professor Shinichi
women
Asayama of Osaka Mu-
nicipal University has estimated."
Dr. Fernando Henriques, an international authority on sexual
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
10
behavior and a lecturer that those
ain
who
at
Leeds University
criticize the
would better take a look
valleys,
where wives are
in
England, points out
"new morality" of youngsters
still
at
what
still
is
happening
in Brit-
in
Welsh
being exchanged according to an old
nineteenth-century pattern of the Yorkshire mining communities,
where workers
permit their wives to have sexual relations
still
with bachelors. Noting that there has always been "quiet defiance"
of the rules of sexual morality by a considerable number of people in
Great Britain, Dr. Henriques reports: "That quiet defiance has
now become mous book,
and loud."
articulate
Professors Clellan
S.
in their fa-
Patterns of Sexual Behavior, reviewed the sexual
tudes and practices of ogists.
Ford and Frank A. Beach,
They concluded
1
atti-
85 different societies studied by anthropolthat only a small
number
— 16 percent — of
these societies restricted marital partners to a single mate, while the rest allowed various forms of polygamy; and of the small
ber requiring legal
monogamy,
less
num-
than one-third banned both
premarital and extramarital unions. At the same time. Ford and
Beach show, 39 percent of 139 goups studied actively approve of
some type of extra-mateship liaison. What with all these undeniable facts, innumerable authorities on sex, love, and marriage have come to the conclusion that there is nothing intrinsically wrong with such extramarital unions; if anything, they had better be encouraged and sanctioned. Here are some typical opinions in this regard: Mervyn Cadwallader believes that adultery may well be a godsend to
many married
porary marriage untary
affection,
is
individuals in our culture because "contem-
a wretched institution.
of love
freely
given
It
spells the
end of vol-
and joyously received.
Beautiful romances are transmuted into dull marriages; eventually
becomes constricting, corrosive, grinding and deThe beautiful love affair becomes a bitter contract." John F. Cuber holds:
the relationship structive.
...
an alternate system should be a minimally-coercive system.
Individuals and pairs should be allowed wider choices than the
— ALMOST EVERYBODY
IS
DOING
IT
1 1
current de jure system grants, should be able to exercise these
choices with greater freedom of conscience,
and should be
obliged to observe less concealment and pretense than
now
the case.
The supporting
logic
is
usually
comes from the assessment
of the current situation in which countless persons of
ages
all
suffer the consequences of having incompatible ideologies
and
imposed upon them. And society suffers the collective problems which follow from these personal dilemmas, resentments, and impasses. Consequently, the proposed sex-marriage-family modes would be pluralistic; that is, not all married pairs, not all parent-child relationships, not all sexual conduct would be expected to be the same, since choices would be made variously among the alternatives offered. There would be built-in a recogrestrictions
nition that there are
many
kinds of mentalities on the subject of
much
marriage and sex, and child-rearing,
now
mentalities
and
sure,
among
as there are
many
extant regarding religion, esthetics, use of
That
political persuasion.
it
takes a
little
doing to
the various breeds should be obvious, but
if
we can
learn to do with varied religions, leisure plans, styles of
and
political ideologies,
ily-kinship
why
lei-
live
life,
not also varied sex-marriage -fam-
commitments and practices?
Dr. Herbert A. Otto concurs:
"We
are a pluralistic society
with pluralistic needs. In this time of change and accelerated so-
we should encourage innovation and experimentadevelopment of new forms of social and communal
cial evolution,
tion in the living."
Dr. in
Edward
the
C. Hobbs, professor of theology and hermeneutics
Graduate Theological Union and the Church Divinity
School of the Pacific, adds his voice to those
need for
strict
There
is
family unit.
monogamy
who
question the
within the marital relationship:
hardly any alternative to marriage as a basis for the
If this is the case, it should be seriously questioned whether the demands might not be lessened or altered in some way that could provide for a greater possibility of fulfillment and satisfaction of the needs which we have hitherto brought to
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
12
marriage, without losing the family-structure
Further, the
itself.
form of the question for us here is whether Christian theology itself might not provide some clues as to possible directions such modification might take. While it is possible to treat theology as thc>ugh it justified perpetuating the past and its forms (of marriage, as of everything else), we have already seen that this is an erroneous understanding of theology; indeed, if theology is rightly understood,
//
should be expected to take the lead
in
proposing constantly -new modes of expressing the understanding implicit in its relationship to what happens. (That this is more a judgment on the irresponsibility of theologians than a failure of the public to
understand rightly their
role.)
Dr. Leon Salzman, deputy director of Bronx State Hospital and clinical professor of psychiatry at Albert Einstein College of
New
icine in
well as
York, clearly indicates the propensity of
men)
to
engage
Med-
women
(as
and to be able to gain
in adulterous affairs
by them: There appears
to
be
little
evidence to support the notion that
biologically the female tends to be
more
loyal
her partner in spite of her role as mother.
woman
is
"naturally"
more
faithful to her
and dedicated to
To
mate
say that the
for reasons of
being more intrinsically dependent and insecure requires the validation of a historical era in which
women
well as political liberation and child rearing
have economic as
community woman. Inti-
a
is
function rather than the sole responsibility of the
macy, love, tenderness, and loyalty are not the exclusive property of either sex. Circumstances may favor these in one sex when it rewards loyalty and punishes infidelity. But it is yet to be demonstrated that liberation of the female will not only extend her potential for more constructive and expansive living but also allow her some of the normal and neurotic excesses heretofore permitted only to the male. Dr. Sidney sity
M. Jourard, professor of psychology
at the
Univer-
of Florida and past president of the American Humanistic
Psychology Association, regards the recognition of pluralism marriage and other sex affairs as nothing
less
than essential:
in
ALMOST EVERYBODY
DOING
IS
13
IT
Polygyny, polyandry, homosexual marriages, permanent and temporary associations, anything that has been tried in any time
and place represents a possible mode for existential exploration by men and women who dare to try some new designs when the conventional pattern has died for them. Not to legitimize such experimentation and exploration is to make life in our society unlivable for an increasing proportion of the population.
Mrs. Virginia Satir
flatly
deplores
The marriage contract ...
as
it
monogamy stands,
is
as unrealistic:
potentially inhu-
man and anti-human, and works against the development of love, trust, and connectedness with other human beings. It is made with the apparent assumption that the conditions present at its inception will continue without change for eternity. This asks people to be wiser than they possibly can be. Dr. Victor Kassel of the University of Utah Medical School and Dr. George
Rosenberg, professor of sociology
S.
at
Case Western
Reserve University, argue that since so many older
Western
civilization are being left
some form of poly-
becoming almost mandatory
is
these older citizens. Says Dr. Rosenberg: ''Not only do
any age have lower mortality rates than men, but their
more
rapidly.
We
creasing surplus of older
women
in the population
tancy
increasing
is
surprising, then, that in recent years in alternate
in
unmarried and unattended sex-
ually today because males tend to die earlier,
gyny or extramarital liaisons
women
shall
much
for
women life
at
expec-
continue to see an in-
...
interest has
It is
not
developed
forms of the family for the aged."
Dr. Gerhard Neubeck, director of the Minnesota Family Study
Center
at the
adultery
is
University of Minnesota, pinpoints one reason
a sensible practice for
Marriage cannot serve spouses
at
implicitly
all
—
times.
many meet
to
Many
will leave to outsiders,
all
of the
needs of both
marriage partners define
certainly discreetly
why
spouses:
— what
at
least
area of satisfactions they
and they are not only not disturbed that
outsiders serve in this capacity, but probably relieved that they
themselves are not called upon to have to address themselves to
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
14
each and every need or
whim
of their mates. In this sense the
extramarital relationship becomes a supplement to the marriage
The "extra" no longer
relationship.
refers to the geographical
outside, but to something additional.
Dr.
Joseph Fletcher, professor
School
at
in
the
Episcopal Theological
Cambridge, Massachusetts, explains why adultery
is
by
no means necessarily wrong or immoral: There
some
is
cases
nothing against extramarital sex as such, and in is
it
good
.
.
.
tionships are positive. Sex
The Christian is
criteria for sex rela-
a matter of certain ideals of rela-
These ideals are based upon a certain belief about who man is, and destiny. Therefore, if God, people do not embrace that, and most don't, there is no reason that they should live by it, and most do not. It is time we faced up to this. If true happiness means a marital monopoly, then let those who believe in it recommend it by reason and example. Nothing is gained by condemning the unbeliever. Indeed, to condemn him is much more unjust, unmoral than a sexual esca-
tionships.
Christ, the church,
pade. Dr.
Warden Pomeroy, one
of the original
members of
the Kin-
sey research team and former president of the Society for the Scientific
Study of Sex and the American Association of Marriage
and Family Counselors, considers adultery
to
be no worse a form
of extramarital companionship than tennis or any other activity: Here's a
man who
enjoys
some
particular activity. Let's say
playing tennis. His wife despises tennis and doesn't want to get
happy
have her husband play tennis with may be, and he does this openly and with her knowledge. Does the sexual context of the involved, but she
another
man
or
is
woman,
to
as the case
extramarital intercourse give this something special or different
than you would get under the tennis example?
Morton Hunt,
in the
epilogue to his carefully researched and
well-written book, The Affair, concludes:
ALMOST EVERYBODY
IS
DOING
15
IT
ethic for our time would be an answer to the dilemma of infidelity a set of answers. The mature and emotionally healthy individual, taking into account his own needs, those of his mate and children, and the probable effects of his acts on all connected with him, can make a better choice for himself than can society. The most beneficial changes that could take place in our national sexual attitudes would include a still greater and more overt acknowledgment of the diversity of our emotional and sexual needs, and a far greater toleration of our varied ways of satisfy-
The most wholesome sexual
ethic of diversity, the best
ing them.
Dr. Russell V. Lee, founder of the Palo Alto Medical Clinic and a physician
who
has
made more than 250,000 house
calls in the
role of family doctor, told at conference at the University of Cali-
fornia Medical Center that "the male needs a long tether and the
wife
is
well advised to see that he gets
it.
Men
really suffer in
marriage more than do women," he noted, as he strongly advocated extramarital liaisons. Dr. O. Spurgeon English, a psychiatrist and former director of the
Department of Psychiatry
mous
at
Temple
University, wrote a fa-
article for the professional journal, Voices:
The Art and
Sci-
ence of Psychotherapy, in which he advanced adultery as a solution for
many of
response to his
the
normal problems of modern marriage. In
article, several professionals heartily
commended
him. Dr. Samuel Baron noted: It is
naive to assume that just a relationship, no matter
happy, will insure sexual compatibility or
fulfill
how
the frequency
needs of each partner, whether these needs are physiological, neurotic, or both.
judge? "It
is
Who
is
to appraise their nature?
Who
is
to
a matter of individual decision." Barry Stevens
me that marriage is an impossible situation. must promise to love each other, while marriage is based on possession, and love can exist only in freedom. Beautiful, couwrote: "It seems to
We
rageous, loving people
all
over are attempting the impossible
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
16
—
and feeling and putting so much constant energy into it because their marriage isn't what it
guilty, inadequate, a failure,
'should be.'
Of riage,
"
course, by no
means
all
modern commentators on
sex,
mar-
and the family see the disadvantages and impracticalities of
unadulterated affairs.
They
monogamy and clearly
consequently espouse extramarital
Many
don't.
Levin, Rebecca Liswood, and
fashioned view that although affairs
may
Max
such as
conservatives,
Vance Packard
follow the old-
still
well be increasing they
are not necessary, are highly inimical to marriage, and should be
and squelched. Usually, these
violently fought against
own
their
very
fish to fry, are
realistic.
And
have
they are becoming a minority.
Extramarital adventure this
antis
not particularly objective, and are hardly
is
certainly here to stay.
By
the end of
century the vast majority of American males and the distinct
some
majority of American females will engage in adultery at
time during their
lives;
about non-Americans
all
and the same can be
said,
more or
less,
over the world.
Extramarital liaisons, therefore, are no small problem. They constitute major issues
and hassles for millions of "normal" and
neurotic people. Although
many
—
indeed, perhaps too many!
guidebooks for marital adventure and even premarital exist today, serious
existent. Is this a
manuals for adulterous unions are
mere oversight? Or
is it
all
—
affairs
but non-
a form of sexual defen-
siveness and censorship? This book, at any rate,
nondefensiveness and anti-censorship. People
who
is
an attempt
at
are contemplat-
ing (or are overtly engaging in) affairs need no longer be secondclass citizens. In the following pages,
some of the most
I
shall
crucial questions that they
do my best
commonly
to
answer
raise.
Kinds (and Degrees) of Extramarital Adventure
T .OU xou
ARE, ^
us suppose, in the market for an extramarital ad-
let
You know
venture; or at least you are considering the possibility.
— —
perfectly well
with yourself
your
for
get along with your
certainly wouldn't ily.
Your sex
And
if it
are
—
yes,
I
to
like
said adding
are your choices?
open
Your
fairly enjoyable.
you? What
well. You home and fam-
What kinds
routines are
life
something
—
soft of people
be honest
not exactly
is
mate reasonably
be divorced from your
comes along without too many
adverse to adding
What
is
to
But you frankly would
fortable.
more.
life
want
real effort to
and absolute monogamy
that utter
You
taffy.
you keep making a
it
to
else,
hassles,
com-
something
you are not
your existence.
of extramarital adventure
go
for,
and are inclined to
be happy with, the different possibilities? Which one of the potential
opportunities would be better
ridden,
and
more
practical
—
— more
for
you?
enjoyable, less hassleLet's
give
this
some
thought.
OCCASIONAL AFFAIRS Occasional, pairings of the stay.
You
yourself,
just
who
light
affairs
are
usually unplanned,
spontaneous
moment. You go out of town for a relatively brief happen to run into a person, probably as married as is
charming, bright, attractive
in
a different
way 17
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
18
from your mate. You dine, walk, or are thrown into some together.
Somehow, before you know
it,
activity
you get turned on; so
does he or she. With or without the help of some alcohol, you
your conversation
finish
sexually, than exciting;
a gas.
it's
tantly say goodbye.
own
bailiwick, your to be able to
in
bed.
It's
An
hour, a day, or a
But you also want
week
to get
it's
later,
home
to
different,
novel;
you
it's
reluc-
your
own
mate. In fact, you wish you were lucky enough
your permanent partner about
tell
much
really not that
with your husband or wife. But
is
it
You
without threatening his or her security.
this lovely
episode
decide, usually, that
you're not quite that lucky.
You
think of your lover quite a lot for a
You
affair has ended.
did,
though a
Maybe
it
it
week or two
that everything
after the
went the way
it
couldn't resume from time to time.
can; and you arrange to meet again, once in a
it
while, especially other.
happy
sad that
little
Maybe, even,
are
if
you happen
to live reasonably close to
really can't continue at
all.
So you
still
each
think of
it
occasionally, though with decreased intensity, and after a year or
two or more you hardly think of it any more. But it was was good. You definitely wouldn't want to have missed
nice; it.
it
You
wonder, with pleasurable anticipation, when anything so delightful will
happen
to
you again. You hope
it
won't be too long.
Occasional affairs such as these are commonplace.
When
half
the husbands and a quarter of the wives in the Kinsey studies ac-
knowledged fair,
that they
had had
at least
one overt extramarital
most of them meant that they had engaged
Why? Because
thing.
of
all
that the average spouse
seems
to
fit
most
tastes
Is
in this sort
of
the kinds of extramarital adventures
would
— and
disruption of the marriage
af-
like to have, the occasional is
one
the easiest to carry on without
itself.
there any particular type of individual
who would
like to
have an occasional affair? Probably not: for this type is universal. Marriage, for all its indubitable virtues and advantages, is relatively
monotonous,
is
routine. Occasional affairs, whether
out-of-town or home-town basis, are just about the opposite.
on an
KINDS (and degrees)
19
my
professional acquaintances, married happily
Listen to one of
for fifteen years, delighted father of
me
let
isn't
be honest. The
up
my
to
woman
wife in
—
were really flabby; she really didn't adore and that Jeanne and
had
two young teenagers: "Look:
was with on the seminar cruise many ways hell, almost none! Her breasts I
I
like
many
almost can't get enough of; and
spend two or three weeks with her, I'm sure
to
shitless.
But even her flabbiness was new,
get bored with her for the three days
when she comes
town
into
October. As long as
mind you
in sixteen years,
marriage
solidity of
is
if I
didn't
I
Nor
will
I
for a couple of days, as she plans next
see only a
I
And
together.
I
be bored
I'd
different.
we were
little
of her,
great.
— taught me:
But so
can probably go on
I
enjoying her forever. That's what this affair
had
of the sex things
—
the
one
first
nonmar-
the difference of
is
I've
the sameness and the
riage!"
So
who engages
in
occasional, one-night-and-that's-it or one-
night-every-once-in-awhile
type that
I
know
extramarital
of; practically
No
adventures?
every type, in
fact.
special
Liberals and
conservatives, the straitlaced and the perennial chasers, respect-
able citizens and
few mates
—
members of
the lowest socio-economic classes.
especially husbands who travel a good deal
what might be called a regular habit of
it.
Whenever they
chance, they're eagerly looking, always trying to
counter happen. this
Some
wives, even, plot and
make
A
— make get a
a casual en-
scheme
to arrange
kind of adventure: they regularly go to bars, for example, to
find
men
are
minding the kids
to pick
up and rush at
off to
home
bed with, while
or working
late.
their
husbands
These "regular"
one-night-standers constitute only a small proportion of married
and in some significant ways they are different from They are usually highly sexed, adventure-seeking, or fed up with the routines of marriage. Some of them have real problems: alcoholism, over-rebelliousness, withdrawal from the grim individuals,
the rest.
realities
But
of everyday living.
this,
to time
again,
is
the minority.
have extramarital
affairs,
Of and
the millions in
who from time
between such
affairs
go
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
20 back
much
have never
yet)
work and home
to the responsibilities of
are not
ity
different
most always been a
history, the
varietist
the female has been
somewhat
somehow managed
male of the species has
al-
and has arranged some kind of non-
marital releases for his urges, and in
has
(at least as
themselves engage in an extramarital adven-
let
Throughout human
ture.
the vast major-
life,
from the other millions who
less
many
cultures like our own,
driven to sex-love variety but
to get her share.
Now
that
we
are
becom-
ing more sexually honest and less hypocritical, the arrangement is more openly acknowledged and frequently acceptable to one's
mate than previously. But overtly or covertly, practically mal" spouses want occasional tend to have them.
The only
affairs,
and
surprising thing
all
"nor-
one way or another
in
is
we have only human relating.
that
recently been able to admit this obvious fact of
STEADY AFFAIRS when a married indimember of the other sex
Steady, often quite prolonged, affairs arise
vidual persistently sees one particular
who
very frequently
is
also legally married
— and
have sex (and commonly also love) relations with
this
continues to
person for a
period ranging from a few months to twenty or more years. Al-
though steady relationships of
mon
this
kind are by no means as com-
as occasional affairs, they are amazingly prevalent consider-
ing the difficulties that often have to be gone through in order to
keep them
alive.
Louise R., by way of illustration, has been having an affair with her boss for two years.
He and
she are both married; she has a
seven- and a nine-year-old daughter; he has five children, ranging
from four other.
to seventeen.
Louise and her boss
Even more important, both
than their legal mates and find
it
are
extremely
watchful eyes of these mates, to have as as they
would
like to have. If
like
and love each
much more
much
highly sexed
difficult,
under the
extracurricular sex
Louise stayed away from
one night a month, her husband would have a
fit.
home even If
her boss
KINDS (and degrees)
21
didn't pretty well account for
home,
his wife
would
all
practically
So, ostensibly, Louise
the time he stayed
commit
away from
suicide.
and her boss stay
at the office until
seven
o'clock every Tuesday for a "board meeting." If her husband or
happens
his wife
to call at that time, they are always available to
answer the phone. For the sofa
in his office is really a
and one of the always locked drawers
vertible bed;
Castro con-
desk
in his
contains quite an assortment of contraceptive and sexual devices.
Louise and her boss really don't like their arrangement too
and
much
more freedom by the circumstances of would marriages, they see each other occasionally, no doubt, they were allowed
if
their
but not as regularly as they do. But given the limitations places on them, they are only too
happy
out this well for them, and they enjoy each other as
How
can.
long their arrangement will continue
something better turns up for each of them,
more
it
is
life
working
that things are
much
as they
dubious. Unless
may go on
for
many
years.
Other steady
Joan Z. and for neither
other
affairs are frequently
Bill F., for
is
more amative than
example, barely make
sexual.
together sexually,
it
very sensuously inclined. But their feeling for each
so deep that for six years they have gotten together about
is
week
twice a
husband and
in a specially rented Bill's
wife are quite friendly, and would immediately
divorce their respective mates
What kind
apartment, even though Joan's
if
they learned of this affair.
of people tend to have steady extramarital affairs
with a single partner of the other sex? Several kinds, including these:
(1)
Individuals like Louise and her boss
who
are closely
watched by their mates and who somehow, often by sheer luck, just
manage
and
Bill
to find
who
one available
lover. (2) Individuals like
are deeply attached to each other and
Joan
do not con-
sider sex in general (or sex variety in particular) very important. (3)
Individuals
who have
finally
found an extramarital partner
who
is
least
very important) appeal to them
is
uniquely suited to them sexually and whose main (or at
unusually good. (4) Individuals
is
that sex with this partner
who remain
legally or
conven-
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
22 tionally mated, often for social or
they hardly care for and
fairs the real sex-love focus
who become
economic reasons,
who make
to a spouse
their steady extramarital af-
and locus of
their lives. (5) Individuals
just as neurotically attached to a steady lover as they
might become attached to a legal mate: a wife, for instance, has a considerate, stable husband
worm
such an undeserving
home
at
who
but
who
thinks she
remain adulterously
that she has to
who mainly
tached to an inconsiderate, unstable lover
is
at-
gives her a
hard time. Steady extramarital
other words,
affairs, in
or unhealthfully motivated.
Some people
—
may be healthfully women are
—
especially
just
enormously loving. Since they have no trouble whatever lov-
ing
two or three
easily can, as
attractive
males
at a
pointed out a good
I
time
many
— and
a
human being
years ago in The Ameri-
can Sexual Tragedy, truly love two or more members of the other sex simultaneously
— they
naturally and quite maturely carry
on a
steady extramarital relationship while also giving considerably of
themselves
to
especially
men
two people to their business
mate
their
—
and
their
children.
Other people
neurotically need (or think they need!) at least
flatter
them
and one
at the
same time
—
one, for example, for
for their sexual prowess. People's motives
for having steady affairs, similar to their motives for having occa-
sional ones, differ widely.
SECRET AND OPEN AFFAIRS Most extramarital adventures have been,
in
Western "civilized" countries
at least until recently, secret
or undercover. Married
individuals are usually afraid that their spouses, relatives, friends,
business associates, or children will discover that they are having liaisons
on the
side;
partners
— who
themselves
also learn to
—
may be
single
afraid, their sex-love
and unencumbered
keep their mouths shut about the details of their
adulterous ventures. the eye
and because they are
or ear
—
Much more
goes on
in this respect
of the objective onlooker.
than meets
Considering what
KINDS (and degrees)
some of
23
the real risks are in this connection, discretion usually
is
the better part of valor: so that even the sexually most liberated
among
us often learn to keep our big mouths shut.
Dr. Joseph B., for example, was a fairly well-known anarchist, the leader of a small group of socio-economic libertarians
whose
publications frequently opposed the concept of the nuclear family
and espoused the virtues of
''free
never legally
numerous
girlfriends,
Although he was not
in the least
his
fairly
them, he never mentioned these rarely
was seen with them
ashamed of
homes or ever
Why? Because he
to his friends,
and made sure that he
in public places,
their family affairs.
get involved with
recognized and accepted the
husbands and associates would probably take a
reality that their
dim view of
his relationships with
women by name
them
so.
Among
were formally married.
several
didn't call or write
at their
He
love" or extramarital unions.
married and had no intention of doing
their affairs with him,
might well penalize the
women
because of their prejudices, and might possibly even vindictively try to
punish him for his relations with them. Out of sheer practi-
cality, therefore,
than
many
he was quieter about his extramarital adventures
a hardshelled Republican
would
be. Largely as a result
of his discretion, neither he nor his paramours got into any culties
and he continued his undercover
affairs until
diffi-
he reached a
ripe old age.
Does
this
mean
that a wise person
who
lives
our society
in
should invariably keep quiet about his extramarital liaisons? Not necessarily.
The new
morality, which
is
adhered to by
at least a
minority (but an increasing minority) of the population, says
al-
most the opposite of the old morality: namely, that lying and hypocrisy about extramarital affairs
is
horseshit and that the only
decent and marriage-promoting thing to do
is
to be completely
honest with oneself and one's mate and have affairs,
all right,
with his or her full knowledge and acceptance, like the couple
came in They
to see
me
a
who
few months ago.
didn't really have a problem, but
their future
but
married
life in
had decided
to
conduct
a highly unconventional way, and they
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
24
just
wanted
to see
if
I
way was crazy
felt that this
their best friends clearly did.
He was
—
as
some of
twenty-four and she was
They had been married, and quite happily for the most part, for four years. They had both thought of having extramarital adventures during this time, but had decided not to do so twenty-three.
yet
— mainly
because they
felt that
the other
would then had
would be seriously
good marital relationship
hurt in the process and because their
So, without even consulting each other, they
suffer.
both refrained.
Then, somehow, they had a distinct extramarital desires,
do about them. Neither one their marriage
wanted
to
felt that
he or she had to go beyond
bed sexually, and both agreed that they could,
forego
necessary,
admitted that they each had
talk,
and discussed what they could best
all
extramarital
activities.
if
But they honestly
have them, and what could be done about that?
After a good deal of further rapping together, they agreed that they both would have outside affairs. Not immediately
mind
ther had anyone special in
— but one
—
since nei-
of these days. They
faced the matter squarely, brought everything out in the open,
made
their little pact,
had nothing further
and
felt
to hide.
what extent should they
tell
immensely relieved now
that each
But then another question arose:
to
one another not only that something
had occurred with another partner but what that something was.
Everyone they talked with about that had the same suggestion: "Don't, for god's sake absolutely don't, tails!
that's
tell
each other the gory de-
Say you went out; say you had sex with someone it
—
don't go further than that!
no one, can
really take
more than
No
else;
loving mate, and
I
but
mean
that."
Despite their friends' unanimity, Jon and Andree violently disagreed. "Look," Jon earnestly told me, "that's exactly what
we
don't want, what these friends are telling us, to try desperately to
keep the other from getting it
got us nowhere.
want
And we
to get over that stuff.
tried that bit before
and
don't believe in that kind of 'hurt.'
We
'hurt.'
We
We've
want
to
grow
—
to reach the point
where we're not hurt when the other one does something sexual.
25
KINDS (and degrees)
And we want
grow together
to
sexual jealousy thing love each other and
—
to help each other see that this
crap, just sheer crap, and that people can
is
much
very
still
"Yes," Andree joined
enjoy outside affairs."
"we
in,
don't want
the usual way.
it
That's not really growing to us, especially growing together.
want
others in our lives. lives,
Not
And
not just our outside lives
We
our lives with each other.
thing, nor
Not is
yet, at least.
Jon.
tells
me,
'I
we
And we may
really
never be.
'
Mary
did with like her
wet
know what
enough
for me.
— and how
kisses,
We may we
I
is
want
want
to
have
it
we had a nice know more of what he it.
Did he
really
dry ones? Did she do any-
thing special to please him, that I've never done yet? can, about Jon; and
I
to
doing. If Jon merely
he reacted as he did
my
always have our
also
night and
last
even more than
learn more, everything
inside
with us.
foursomes or anything
the other
went out with Mary
screw,' that's not
in
don't think I'm ready for that sort of
I
sex privately, with one other person. But together; so
— our
want the others
that we're going to try threesomes or
like that.
»
We
develop so we can stretch our sexual horizons, include
to
how
will
I
I
want
to
ever learn
up at the thought of his mentioning just what he did some other girl and just how he felt about it? I can't!" "Yeah, and it's so damned hypocritical, what we usually do!"
if I
shrivel
with
John agreed. "Andree's
if I
had a
talk
about philosophy with Mary, Andree would want to
know
just
hit
what Mary said and how ent?
How
I
just right. After
it
reacted to
it.
Why
all,
should sex be differ-
can people really reach each other, know each other
if
they must keep their sexual reactions to other people so shushed
up? As Andree bush stuff for
men
None
said, they can't!
us.
I
want
to
know
she goes with. That way,
of this beating around the
everything Andree does with the
can be with her more, really know
I
her more." Frankly,
I
was more than a
little
surprised. I'd been through
just the opposite thing with sexually liberated
times before
—
in civilized
adultery (a term
that
is,
I
couples quite a few
observed them make agreements to engage I
coined some years ago to describe
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
26
arrangements where both participants are entirely
extramarital
open and aboveboard) where they deliberately stipulated that they would not tell each other any of the details of their outside affairs.
And rd couples
also
been through several sessions with liberal-minded
who had
kissed others and told; in most of these instances
one or both the mates
just couldn't take the telling
they had fairly easily agreed on the kissing. So
I
even though
had generally
concluded, by observing these kinds of open extramarital arrangements, that silence was indeed often golden, and that not too
many
partners could listen comfortably to a detailed narrative of the other's affairs.
This was not in the least the feeling If
I
got with Jon and Andree.
ever saw a couple really well equipped to have outside rela-
I
tionships with the full consent and detailed knowledge of the other
mate, this was such a couple. They asked plan would work, and
would, order.
in spite
of
its
They seemed
to
I
me
if
I
frankly answered that yes,
thought their I
thought
it
general inadvisability in our present social
be rare exceptions to the general rule; so
definitely thought they could
make
it
on the unusual
I
level they
outlined.
Well, so far
I
have proved to be
right.
A
report from Jon and
Andree, some three months after they had started what they called their
"new growing edge on
life,"
and when each of them had had
outside affairs with two different partners, seemed to
show
that
they were capable of ruthless sexual honesty. At their follow-up sessions they greatly enjoyed the details of each other's adven-
they were working through their original feelings of selfdowning and hurt, they felt that they had learned as much about
tures,
life
and love from hearing about the other's relationships
had learned from having new ones of
their
as they
own, and they were
looking forward to an indefinite continuation of their unique experiment. to
I
predict they will go on growing like this for
some time
come.
The two extremes of hidden and described hardly cover the
field
overt extramarital affairs just
of possibilities. For more centu-
27
KINDS (and degrees)
ries
than some people would like to imagine, a good
many spouses
have taken the middle ground: both husbands and wives have
known
full
well about their mate's sexual infidelity, but have pre-
ferred to ignore
occurred. Here
my
married
"You
completely and often pretend that
it
between
a typical conversation
is
it
has never
me and one
of
clients:
say that you and your husband can't seem to agree about
your daughter's going to school?"
we
''No,
or not.
I
can't.
He
doesn't think
important whether she goes
it
think she needs the best education she can get and should
definitely finish college."
"But on other things you do agree?" "Oh,
yes.
I'd
we have a pretty good marriage. We have a common. We like to do things together. We
say
good many friends
in
rarely quarrel."
"How
about sex?"
"Forget
We
it.
haven't had
it
years.
in
But
really not a
it's
problem."
"What do you mean "It really isn't.
We
it's
just don't
we ever did. and who is quite
don't think years,
I
make
it
and
together, that way;
have a boyfriend,
whom
satisfactory sexually.
But
I've that's
And he has several girlfriends woman who works in his office."
mainly sex between
one married
not a problem?"
us.
"And do you both openly know about each
—
had
I
for it's
it:
especially
other's affairs
and
we
just
don't 'know.'
We
even talk about them together?" "Well, not exactly.
We
dogs
lie.
know
We We find
don't say anything about just let sleeping
both
This frequently occurs
it.
in
what's going on. But
'know' and it
to
we
be better that way."
Western marriage. One or both mates
teen-year-old
— but keep daughter and seventeen-year-old son — know. But no
one
mentions the extramarital arrangements. This now-
knows
perfectly well
quiet about
it.
officially
Even
what the other
the children
—
is
doing
prefers to
in this particular case, a nine-
you-see-it-and-now-you-don't "acceptance" of sexual infidelity
is
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
28
common
probably more
than most people suspect.
often contin-
It
ues for years; and, unless something special occurs (such as the
making an
jealous mate of one of the "outside" partners finally issue of
what
is
occurring), no one usually seems
to be
harmed by
it.
Doesn't
it
seem
whether
to matter, then,
affairs are
conducted
in a partly
open, fully honest, or completely underground manner?
Of course
it
does; sometimes
dishonesty, as
I
it
matters greatly. Thoroughgoing
point out in Sex Without Guilt, can be particu-
good marital relationship:
larly inimical to a
"In general, the risks one takes in committing adultery behind
same
one's mate's back are the
major unilateral move. Thus,
new
risks
one takes
in
making any
one invests the family savings
if
in a
Cadillac, or accepts a job in Alaska, or decides to discontinue
the use of contraceptives without informing one's mate, one
is
hardly being maritally cooperative, and risks his or her severe displeasure.
"By
the
same token,
if
one
is
secretly adulterous,
one
is
usually
not being too cooperative with one's mate, and therefore risks his or her eventually discovering this fact and being highly displeased (not to mention hysterical) about
Quite aside, then, from the
it.
sexual aspects of adultery, which are highly emphasized and exag-
gerated in our particular society, the secret commission of any
major act with which one's mate
is
one's relationship with this mate,
concerned
is
bound
and usually to
to affect
affect
it
ad-
versely.
"This, then, would tery itself
and
its
seem
to
be the major issue here: not adul-
so-called moral consequences, but the conse-
quences of being dishonest with one's mate, and through dishonesty risking an impedance or destruction of mutual
this
trust,
confidence, and working partnership." All things being equal,
it
is
highly probable that honest extra-
marital liaisons are better than dishonest ones and that semi-honest
ones are probably somewhere
in
between. But the problem
that all things practically never are equal.
One mate who
is
loves
— 29
KINDS (and degrees)
everything but sex with, whit
if
he lays
fifty
let
us say, her husband doesn't care a
different girls a year, as long as he doesn't
spend too much time away from her and the children
happy
In fact, she's genuinely
desires
manages
in
doing
so.
to satisfy his sex
elsewhere and doesn't resentfully miss having relations
with her. first
that he
Another mate, who has
just as little sex interest as this
one, bitterly resents her husband's even looking at any
and raises holy
when she thinks he
is
woman
him, her family, and the whole world
hell with
doing
so.
Under these conditions
are obviously far from being equal!
—
the
first
— which
husband would
probably be foolish not to have open affairs and the second one
would be behaving that he
idiotically if
he so much as hinted to his wife
was having them.
This doesn't
mean mates cannot be
sexually repropagandized or
gradually trained. Fortunately, they often can be! John T.,
once
split a
who
gut at the very idea of his wife's having wet pants
when watching certain male movie stars, now calmly baby-sits with their two children every Friday night while she is visiting with her ten-year-younger lover. Rhoda J., who just couldn't think of either her or her husband having affairs, now enjoyably makes the orgy scene with him every few weeks or so. So extramarital sex that was once verbally and actively swept under the rug can sometimes
later, especially
with persistent persuasion on the part
of one of the spouses, be openly acknowledged and performed
own home. The only rule, today, be no invariant rule. One couple's cup of tea is swig of bitters. Any choices that you and your
occasionally even in the couple's is
that there can
another couple's
mate make
in this respect
had better be your own!
OPEN MARRIAGE What I have called civilized adultery can also be nicely subsumed under the broader term, open marriage, which Nena and George O'Neill have made a popular topic of discussion bestselling
book by
that
name. Not that they have been the
in their first
to
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
30
espouse the concept. The famous (and infamous) American Claflin sisters essentially
Havelock
tury.
advocated
and
Ellis
middle of the nineteenth cen-
in the
it
his wife, Edith,
had a viable open marBertrand Russell
riage in the early part of the present century.
championed
it
which appeared Dr.
Ben Ard,
in
his
well-known book, Marriage and Morals,
in the 1920's. in
a 1967 paper on
"How
to
Avoid Destructive
implied an open marriage solution to this
Jealousy," strongly
problem. Dr. Carl Rogers,
in the early 1970's,
noted that "the
at-
titude of possessiveness, of owning another person, historically has
dominated sexual unions and Dr.
Robert N. Whitehurst,
1970,
is
in
likely to be greatly diminished."
a paper originally presented in
"Violence Potential in Extramarital Sexual Responses,"
outlined both the advantages and difficulties of open marriage
and concluded: Recently Jessie Bernard has raised the question of the rela-
permanence and exclusivity within a marriage. She notes is toward the choice of exclusivity in a pair relationship at the expense of permanence. It may more logically be concluded that we would do better to consciously strive to reverse this state of affairs, that is to encourage permanence in the pair relationship but to set some structures so that we will tion of
that the trend
not always expect exclusivity.
The
rationale for this
straightforward and simple one; since
we seem
a fairly
is
to drift
from one
paired relationship to another with increasing divorce,
it
may
be better to attempt to realistically strive for reality expectations within marriage
cannot be
fulfilled
and get those things outside of
it
which
within instead of breaking up marriages on
suffers
making a new marriage which from the same kind of probabilities of break up.
Many
authorities
the basis of infidelity and then
on marriage, such
as those just quoted,
set the stage for the O'Neills' forceful case for
Nena and George O'Neill have and views of this.
not only incorporated the materials
their predecessors; they
They have
have
open marriage. But
assertively defined
have creatively gone beyond
open marriage
as
"an honest
31
KINDS (and degrees)
and open relationship between two people, based on equal free-
dom and
identity of both partners.
It
involves a verbal, intellectual
and emotional commitment to the right of each vidual within the marriage riage that
.
.
.
grow
to
What we propose
in
a complete revision from within the marriage
is
as an indi-
open mar-
—
a revision
depends upon the two people involved, not upon what has
been traditional
in the past."
Although they do not especially emphasize the sexual aspects of nonexclusive marital arrangements, the O'Neills hardly mini-
mize these phases. They unequivocally
state:
jealousy has any place in open marriage. prevalent in closed marriage does not
mean
"We do
The
not believe
fact that
that love
it
is
so
and sex must
always be accompanied by this dark shadow."
They
what they
also espouse
call
open
love:
Open love similarly builds upon itself, expands itself. Once you have freed yourself of the false idea that love is limited, once you have begun to give openly of your love, you will find that your capacity to give will grow continually greater. The concept of limited love holds that love is like money; the more you spend the less you have. And so love is hoarded. But the giving of love is not like spending money, it is like investing it. The more you invest, the more you get back. The rich get richer because money creates money. But love also creates love. The more you give, the more you receive and are capable of receiving; the more you have, the more you are capable of giving. Finally, they put sexual fidelity in the
framework of open mar-
riage:
Sexual fidelity
whom
is
reasons and often at
god
is
god to wrong the cost of the very relationship which that
the false god of closed marriage, a
partners submit (or
whom
supposed to protect. Sex
sioned in terms of
fidelity,
they defy) for
in the closed
all
the
marriage
is
envi-
thus becoming the be-all and end-all
of love, instead of being seen in
its proper perspective as only one facet of the much larger reality of love. Fidelity in the
closed
marriage
is
the
measure of limited
love,
diminished
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
32
growth and conditional trust. This fixation in the end defeats its own purpose, encouraging deception, sowing the seeds of mistrust and limiting the growth of both partners and so of the love
between them. Fidelity in
its
root meaning, denotes allegiance and fealty to
a duty or obligation. But love
and sex should never been seen
terms of duty or obligation, as they are
They should be seen together, as they are in
And
is
presently
more of
that Phyllis
a concept than a
Raphael describes
autobiographical novel. They Got What They Wanted,
"And when he
have her and his her
if
girl
and enjoyed
open marriage.
The kind of marriage
popular:
in
closed marriage.
as experiences to be shared
open marriage
still:
reality.
in
in
is still
her
most
tentatively suggested to her that he could
she cried and screamed that he didn't love
he could propose such a thing because she thought that
when you
someone you wanted only that person and she knowing that he didn't want her love only her." But open marriages are becoming more love
couldn't bear the rest of the world
enough
to
prevalent, as a Life magazine article
ments showed
They
will,
as described
in the spring of I
on The Marriage Experi-
1972.
wager, increase in the future! Civilized adultery,
and upheld
in the present
book,
and may take over tomorrow. Preferably, eral context of
sound;
it is
I
is
increasing today,
hope, within the gen-
open marriage. The O'Neills' book
is
not only
also prophetic. Meanwhile, extramarital adventure can
occur and bring good results even within closed marriages
some of the
rules to be described in this
—
if
book are followed!
SWINGING GROUPS Swinging groups come into being when a number of couples, some of them married and some not, get together at clubs, parties, dances, or other kinds of gatherings and arrange to swap mates. Sometimes premises are immediately at hand for swapping; sometimes only dates are made and the swapping couples later meet in
KINDS (and degrees)
own homes
their
33
or a motel to engage in the actual swinging.
Swingers also arrange to meet with and exchange partners with each other through the mail, by telephone, and in various other
The essence of swinging or mate-swapping generally
ways.
opposed they
to orgies, that
swap
partners,
all.
Spouse-swapping of
generally casual and promiscuous
Group
—
this
kind
Sex.
What kinds of people go ually "liberated" but
to
swinging groups?
who may have They
They are more interested sex than in anything else. letting their sex
adventurists;
— and
Not
all
in lov-
in
ri-
looks and in the physical aspects of
And
they have no serious intention of
escapades interfere in any way with their mar-
These
are, in a sense, true sex
and a somewhat different kind of sexual experience,
in a setting far
want
hangup
their extramarital adventures.
riages or with the rest of their lives.
ple,
are sex-
virtually every other
are quite unspontaneous and almost
ways they carry on
tualistic in the
removed from
their regular lives,
is all
they seem
get.
swingers are in the same category as the
almost stereotyped group.
Bartell's
Suprisingly
who
man. These people are not particularly interested
to
ing or even relating.
to
therefore
is
as Gilbert Bartell points out
enough, rather conservative, bourgeois individuals
known
as
and they usually see each other again only oc-
casionally, or not at
in
is,
one couple somehow meets another couple,
I
a professor of physics at one of the
who has been married
members of
personally know, for exam-
New York
universities
for thirteen years to the personnel director
of a large national corporation; they have a nine- and a ten -year-old
daughter school. lived
who
are getting along very well in a fashionable private
For the
first
ten years of their married
life,
this
couple
most conventionally, copulated with each other two or three
times a
week
in a satisfactory
manner, and got along better than
most couples of their socio-economic
class.
— another couple of — became mem-
Then, through two of their closest friends high academic and professional attainment
they
bers of a select swinging group. This group includes about eight
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
34
couples
— sometimes
old couples all
move
a
few more, sometimes one or two
or drop out and
new ones
less,
as
are invited to join
of them distinctly bright and knowledgeable. They usually get
They swap
together, by telephone arrangements, in groups of four.
mates
for the
day or evening, and they do so not only on a pure
same They then arrange to get together at some future time perhaps a few weeks hence. In between, they may go to dinner or the theater together, as a foursome. Or husband A and wife B, as well as husband B and wife A, may meet as couples for lunch, or speak over the phone to each other, or otherwise carry on the elesexual basis but often relate significantly to each other at the time.
ments of a friendship or mild love relationship. Occasionally, one of the husbands and one of the wives to
may become deeply
attached
each other for a while; but this kind of attachment rarely seems
primary marital and family
rela-
other words, does not have to be casual but
may
to interfere seriously with their
tionship.
Swinging,
be engaged
in
by selected groups, on a more consistent and more
in,
This type of swinging
relating basis.
is
frequently arranged by
who want some relief monogamous marriage but who
high-level, emotionally healthy individuals
from some of the monotony of
also are interested in sex-friendship or sex-love affairs rather than
purely sexual encounters. This does not
mean
that the
more casual
type of swinging has no value and that only screwballs engage in it.
For those who experiment and keep
trying,
it
value. Indeed,
most of the people who keep up
report that
is
it
ways. But for those
to go
who
back
to their pre-swinging
selective
who have
own kind
of sex-love varietism,
forms of mate-swapping can be arranged.
For almost two decades his wife
monogamous
just can't see the unselective type of
swinging as satisfactory for their
more
kind of thing
a distinct addition to their lives and that they
would not ever want
other and
clearly does have this
I
have known a leading playwright and
spent a considerable amount of time traveling
around the country switching mates with couples of their own intellectual and artistic level. If ever they write up their adventures,
35
KINDS (and degrees)
form, they will have some startling sto-
in fictional or nonfictional ries to tell!
Some
of the affairs they started years ago are
tant; and some of the emotional heights they reached
of these affairs have immeasurably added to their lives.
main personal reservation
I
still
in the
ex-
course
The one
have about their adventures
is
the
enormous amount of time and energy they have put into arranging their extramarital exploits. The number of other things they could have done had they been more monogamously inclined
is
enor-
mous! But then who
it
is
is
when
to say that life, especially
al-
ready enjoyably ordered, should be lived in any particular kind of
way?
THE ORGY SCENE Orgies are the most promiscuous and public kinds of sex imag-
From
inable.
three to several dozen people get together
them may be perfect strangers few hours engage
— usually
in
to
each other
— and
— most of
for the next
every kind of coital and extracoital activity
heterosexually
but sometimes homosexually
as
well.
Small orgies are frequently mate-swapping affairs where the couples, instead
tionships,
do
of adjourning to separate rooms to have private relatheir switching in the
Large orgies generally take place apartment, where
many people make
the afternoon or evening,
male) is
may
same room in
at the
same
time.
a sizable room, house, or it
together in the course of
and where one person (especially a
fe-
copulate with five or ten other people before the orgy
over.
What kinds of people go to orgies? Probably all kinds, these if we include the occasional customers. Most people are so
days,
curious about what goes on at an orgy, and
might make out
how
they personally
at one, that they are not too loath to getting in-
volved in one or a few of them; and from time to time during their lives they
may
repeat the original experience, with varying
degrees of satisfaction.
People
who go
in
for
a
considerable
amount of drinking or hash-smoking especially may wind up, on a
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
36 few occasions,
And
spontaneous orgy.
at a
cohol-laden parties continue apace, great majority of people
who
it
some time during
Consistent and planned orgy-going
who engage
body contact than
may be
al-
that the
frequent such affairs will have par-
ticipated in at least one sex orgy at
category. Those
pot-smoking and
if
eventually
in
it
is
their lives.
not exactly in the same
are usually
more
in socializing; they frequently
interested in
do not care what
individual they are physically intertwined with (and sometimes
even what the sex of that individual
hung up on proving
cally
is);
they
may
well be egotisti-
(especially if they are males)
how
great
they are sexually, and they are almost always clearly looking to
add
to their marital sex participations rather than to get involved
with specific
members of
the other sex and thereby perhaps to
jeopardize their marriages.
The orgy
scene, though at
first startling to
watch and engage
in,
and consequently an encourager of some amount of jealousy, usually
is
valuable.
well adjusted to by most couples
Here
is
who
a typical description by a
find
it
exciting and
husband who was
lured, almost against his will, into participating in a four-in-the-
same-bed deal with
his wife
and another married couple they
knew: "Well,
want cause
I
must say that
to start the thing I
was afraid
afraid of?'
up
one to get going, though that
it's
life,
was shocked all,
and
I
at first!
guess
I
I
wife, Jane, I
know
seemed
really didn't
only got into
to refuse. Joe kept saying, 'Look:
And my own
before in her
I
at
it
be-
what are you
just as eager as any-
she hasn't done anything like that
and usually she's so modest
in-
front of people
hard to get her to wear a bikini!
"Anyway, before
I
hardly
knew what was happening,
there
we
were on Joe and Barbara's big bed, naked and ready to go. was so preoccupied, at first, with what Joe was doing with Jane all
I
—
and especially with how she was ardently at least that's the way seemed to me returning his kisses and caresses, that I hardly knew what I was doing with Barbara, and I think I just sort of went through the motions mechanically of making love to her. it
—
Seeing your wife, after
all,
bouncing up and down under one of
— 37
KINDS (and degrees)
your best friends
seemed
And
something!
really
is
she certainly
boy,
to be bouncing!
seem to matter very much. And by that time I was really humping Barbara. Speak of wow, does she really have it! Once I was on top tits and an ass of her, with my head buried in her big boobs, I just forgot that "But then
got used to
I
It
it.
just didn't
—
Jane was even there. such circumstances
have come
which
—
never thought
I
but, boy, did
humping away every time It really was something!
it
was
it
I
I
must
last time;
again?'
it,
or anything like that, and
my
blood. But I'm sure
and Jane's already asking about 'When
The most amazing thing
wasn't jealous after the
our bodies
all
could see Joe and Jane
exactly want to soon again. For one thing,
just a little too exciting for
won't be the
can we do
I
I
had a second's breather with Barbara.
I
haven't arranged to continue
I'm not even sure that think
think
I
you know, the way
it:
touched from time to time; and the way
this
great!
within about twenty minutes
at least three times
thing very exciting about
I
was
never recall having done with Jane. There was just some-
I
"We
could lose myself under
I
It
I!
first
few minutes of
won't in the least be next time.
Come
it.
is,
however, that
And
to think of
it,
I
I'm sure that just because
I
way and I know that Jane feels exactly the same, that's what makes it seem so right to try again sometime. It just isn't
feel that
going to jeopardize Jane's and
one thing I'm absolutely sure the future.
And
my
of,
relationship at
learning that lesson, and
safely
have sex with other people for the
know,
I
knowing rest of
made
I
that's the it
that
our
guess that's one of the most valuable things
about myself. That alone really
all;
no matter who we do
with in
we can
lives
— you
ever learned
the entire experience worth
it."
COMMUNAL
LIVING
Perhaps the rarest kind of extramarital sexuality living,
is
communal
or what researchers Larry and Joan Constantine call co-
marital group sex.
Two,
three, four, or
more couples, sometimes
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
38
with some single individuals added, and often with a bevy of their
own
children,
together in a large house or apartment and
live
share not only sex partners but also expenses, domestic tasks, child-rearing,
and
the other major aspects of marital living.
all
These kinds of communes are not only
still
rare, but they fre-
quently reorganize or break up. Most couples find
it
exceptionally
any length of time, usually because of
difficult to live together for
nonsexual (rather than their specifically sexual)
difficulties. If
four
couples, for example, decide to live communally, and one of the
do her
eight people proves to be quite untidy, another just won't
share of the housework as originally agreed upon, and
still
another
begins to have extreme political differences with most of the other
members of
disharmony soon tends
group,
the
to
reign,
and
They
can!
sooner or later serious disruptions occur.
Not
As
I
that sex conflicts cannot be a real hassle, too.
point out in an essay,
tive?"
which
I
Search of a Future, society to find
it
hard enough for a
is
and who seems a
mestic
bliss.
others to
A
man
one member of the other sex
trusted
problem
"Group Marriage:
Possible Alterna-
wrote for Herbert Otto's volume. The Family
When
and
'marry'
to solve!
this
likely candidate for settling
man live
To make
or
woman
down
to do-
goes out to seek several
with simultaneously
things even
in
woman in our who can be fully or
more
— wow,
difficult,
I
what a
note:
manage to set up a group marand love problems are almost certain to arise among them. Thus, Jane may get so devoted to Harold that she only wants to be with him or to have sex with him alone. Or Bob may be perfectly potent with Helen and Mary, but not with Jane and Betty. Or Helen may be highly attractive If three
or four couples do
riage arrangement, sex
Or Betty may may want to have sex
to all the males, while the rest of the girls are not.
be the
least attractive of the
relations with the males
And
females and
more than
all
the other girls do.
so forth, and so on!
For reasons such as these, communal marriage as yet has not
worked very
well;
and although we now have many more people
39
KINDS (and degrees)
communes than
living in
ever in the past, most of them voluntarily
decide not to extend their communal arrangement to sex or they
do so full
in a highly
dividuals
who
who
are extremely devoted to the
Although
theoretically
and
who do
persist in the
likely to
is
My
open
all
kinds of possible
this special type of extramarital
to all
who want
to try
it,
remain relatively unpopular
somewhat pessimistic view of
idealistic in-
communal process and
are willing to stick things out in spite of
difficulties. is
modified manner. Those
group sex arrangement are almost always highly
it
is
adventuring
utilized
in the
by few
near future.
the prognosis of group mar-
riage tends to be concurred in by several authorities in the field,
such as Drs. Reese Danley Kilgo, Herbert L. Smith, and David
Reuben. Yet much ticularly in the
is
to be said
on the other side of the fence, par-
upholding of communal marriage as an alternate
system of sex-love relations for that minority of individuals are fed
up with conventional systems and want
different.
to try
who
something
Such widely different writers as Dr. George R. Bach,
Larry and Joan Constantine, Rick Margolies, Robert Rimmer,
Joseph M. Rizzo, Dr. Jerry Rubenstein, and James and Lynn
Smith see
many
more or some of the are
right.
positive values in this kind of arrangement and
less optimistic
about
its
time. Further research
working well for some people
may
well prove that they are
Healthy Reasons for Extramarital Adventure
y^ I EVERAL YEARS AGO,
%^ ^
sociation convention
in
American Psychological As-
at the
Washington, D.C.,
presented a
I
paper, "Healthy and Disturbed Reasons for Having Extramarital Relations." This paper
no great
stir
at
became famous because, although
the convention,
front-page reportage and, for to the
The
it
raised
Washington Post gave
it
some strange reason known mainly
newspaper world, featured the contents of the
first
part of
the paper almost entirely, which gave the healthy reasons for adultery,
while barely mentioning the second part, which gave equal
space to the unhealthy reasons.
From
this
newspaper account,
stated that extramarital relations
people
who engaged
in
it
appeared as
if
I
had
solidly
were invariably healthy and that
them indubitably had
excellent reasons for
so doing. Sparked by this kind of one-sided slant, the Post's story
blazed across the news wires around the world, was taken up by
innumerable radio and tional
TV
programs
made
scores of na-
bitter fire
from a large
as well,
and international periodicals, drew
number of platforms and pulpits, and had me busily hopping for quite a number of weeks trying to explain exactly what the Washington Post and
and what I
I
its
mass media brothers and
sisters said
concluded from
all this
hullabaloo that large numbers of
zens here and abroad want to believe that there are
40
I
said,
actually did say.
many
citi-
healthy
HEALTHY REASONS FOR ADVENTURE
41
and virtually no unhealthy reasons for having extramarital advenFor no matter how much
tures.
many
disturbed reasons too,
of the people
ignoring these and returning there are a
I
I
talked to kept blithely
"But you did
to,
say, Dr. Ellis, that
good many normal and undisturbed grounds for people
Now
committing adultery. Yes,
kept insisting that there were
I
what, again, did you say they are?"
certainly did say that
many
of the people
who engage
in
extramarital affairs are hardly neurotic or self-defeating, that they get considerably
more gain than pain from
and that their problem have them
try to
at less
disadvantage. In this present chapter,
same thing again
say exactly the
their participations,
not to give up having their affairs, but to
is
— adding some
not include in the original presentation. But again,
let
shall
I
details that
did
I
me warn
the
reader (and potential quoter!): the succeeding chapter nicely outlines
some of
the indubitably disturbed and self-sabotaging aspects
of committing adultery. Don't forget to read that chapter, too!
me
Let
say,
that
first,
my
material for the following analysis of
healthy and disturbed reasons for having extramarital relations
does not als
with
come
whom
exclusively from clinical interviews with individuI
have had psychotherapy and marriage and family
counseling sessions.
Much
of what
know about
I
sex, love,
and
marriage does, of course, come from this kind of respondent, since almost every week of each year clients
rive a considerable their
I
see
more than seventy
and over a hundred group therapy
own and
As has been
amount of
their friends'
clients.
salient information
and
I
individual
naturally de-
from them about
associates' extramarital affairs.
frequently pointed out about Freud's and other
psychoanalysts' conclusions about
human
behavior, however,
it
is
hardly entirely legitimate for a therapist to investigate mainly the lives
of disturbed individuals and, from these investigations, to
make sweeping
generalizations about the personality of so-called
normal individuals. Consequently, affairs
I
in
my
studies of extramarital
have talked with scores of non-clients
countered in
many
whom
I
have en-
parts of the United States (as well as in
ada, Central America,
and Europe); and
I
believe that
Can-
on the
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
42 whole these non-clients represent a
fairly
five years or
more. Although
my
have
had average,
generally
have expecta-
whose marriages have
instances been quite rocky and far from ideal,
interviewees
well-
have been married for
client respondents
bly included a high percentage of people
many
random sample of
whom
educated middle-class adults, most of
my
in
non-client
and
above-average,
sometimes remarkably good marriages. The sample on which base the following conclusions, therefore,
is
I
both extensive and
wide-ranging. I
have talked
intirnately, then, with literally
ried individuals about their adulterous desires
past five years.
From my
hundreds of mar-
and
talks with these spouses
acts during the
— some
of which
—
were relatively brief and some of which took scores of hours
hypothesize that there are several healthy reasons for husbands
and wives, even when they are happily married and want
to con-
tinue their relationships, strongly desiring and often participating in extramarital affairs.
Some of
the
main healthy reasons
follow:
SEXUAL VARIETISM Most of the
history of
biologically, a truly
mankind demonstrates
monogamous
monogynous than monogamic, rather than a single acts
woman
that
man
desiring
for a lifetime,
one
addition to his regular marital sex.
seems
than
is
to
be
less strongly
the male; but she, too,
not,
woman
at
a time
and that even when he
monogynously he strongly craves some adulterous
cies
is
animal, that he tends to be more
The female of
the
affairs in
human
spe-
motivated toward plural sexuality
when she can have
varietistic outlets
with social impunity, quite frequently takes advantage of them.
male chauvinism recedes and
women
start to live
As
by a consistent
single standard of sex morality (instead of the female-downing,
hypocritical
double standard they have unfortunately accepted
during most of Western and Eastern history),
it
is
quite possible
that they will turn out to be as varietistically inclined as
ready,
among
today's
young people, they are not too
the male attitude and aptitude in this respect.
men. Al-
far
behind
HEALTHY REASONS FOR ADVENTURE
A
43
healthy married person in our society
is
usually
able to
enjoy steady sex relations with his or her spouse, but frequently tends to have less satisfaction after several years than was experi-
enced during the
husband
cal
first
months or years
lusts after
ticularly those
who
innumerable
after the
women
wedding. The typi-
besides his wife, par-
are younger and prettier than she
is;
he quite
often enhances his marital sex enjoyment by thinking about these
women when
other
he
is
copulating with his spouse; he enjoys
mild or heavy petting with other females
at office parties, social
gatherings, and other opportune occasions; and he actually en-
when he when he can otherwise dis-
gages in adulterous affairs from time to time, especially
and
his wife are temporarily parted or
creetly have a
little fling
with impunity, knowing that his spouse
not likely to discover what he
is
is
doing and that his extramarital
marriage and family life. same kind of extramarital her husband, but perhaps less often and less intensely;
affair will not seriously interfere with his
The
typical wife tends to go through the
thinking as
and she has much
less
of a tendency, at least as yet, to
make any
notable effort to actualize her fantasies and dreams.
This
is
not to say that every single red-blooded husband and
wife in our culture continually lusts after relatives, friends, and
working associates of the other sex and spends an inordinate
amount of time and energy trying to seduce these others. It is to say that the husband or wife who never once, during thirty or more years of married life, is sorely tempted to engage in extramarital adventures for purposes of sex-love variety
is
to
be sus-
pected of being biologically or psychologically abnormal; while the
mate who frequently has such desires and who occasionally
and unobtrusively carries them into practice
is
well within the
normal, healthy range.
Marilyn K. has returned to work
now first
that her
two children are going
in the field of data processing,
to junior high school.
ten years of her marriage, while she
children, finishing her schooling,
build
up
men and
his insurance business,
For the
was very busy having her
and helping her husband, Ron, she rarely thought about other
certainly never considered getting involved with one.
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
44 Then she seemed she did have
it
she found
as busy with his
more than
want sex
to
own
it
and
less
with Ron, and
less
relatively routine
when
and boring. He,
just
career as she was with her pursuits, was
willing to cut
down
their
bedroom
activities.
But then,
going to graduate school, Marilyn found that several of her fellow students and a few of her professors rekindled her interest in men.
Over
had four discreet
a period of a few years, she has
affairs.
She loves Ron, although she now finds him physically unattractive. She cares for her children and thinks that Ron
is
the best father in
home. And she
the world for them. She likes her
four of her lovers, as well as a few other
men
finds that all
she has at times
thought of replacing them with, are "utterly impossible to live
As
with.
far as I'm concerned, their
wives are welcome to keep
them!" So she quietly continues her adulterous ways, with
Ron
ap-
parently having no inkling that anything has even changed be-
tween them, and she happily looks forward tence of this sort for a good
many
to a continued exis-
years to come.
The natural varietism of innumerable males and females has been demonstrated throughout
all
human
history; the fact that
it
is
well within the normal range and does not in the least indicate any
kind of emotional or sexual disturbance on the part of individuals
these
many
of
by many outstanding authorities.
attested
is
Thus, Dr. Harold Greenwald, renowned psychologist and sexologist,
points out that
many husbands
up with
are able to put
their
wives satisfactorily largely because they frequently go out of town their sex
away from home with other women
them home,
refreshed, to their wives. Moreover,
and thoroughly enjoy
— who
often send
Dr. Greenwald indicates, these cate girls
who
themselves are
men do
varietists.
not want a long-term relationship across
many
times
married man. She
is
.
an unmarried
may be more
.
.
not find
it
difficult to lo-
"Very often these
An example
girl
I
girls
do
have come
having an affair with a
or less faithful to him, but on oc-
casion (either from anger or loneliness) will become involved
in
a
sexual episode with another man." Dr. William Masters and Virginia Johnson, the famous sex re-
HEALTHY REASONS FOR ADVENTURE
45
searchers and therapists, state that the the Freudians'), which insists that the
bed
really afraid that he
is
Masters, "True for
is
Don Juan theory (mainly man who flits from bed to
not male,
is
largely false. Says Dr.
some men, but generally speaking,
enjoys going to bed.
And
until
He
no.
just
he has trouble finding cooperative
partners, he exists in a delightful haze."
Dr. John F. Cuber, another
renowned researcher and one of
America's best-known sociologists, notes
The
desire for sexual fulfillment
enlightened day, is
many have no
many
that, for
spouses,
not easily denied and, in this
is
it. The fact American men and women
intention of denying
that a large proportion of both
new adventure, whether they are conscious of it or Then also, there is a growing but still small proportion
are ripe for
not
.
.
.
of married couples
who
deliberately arrange separate vacations
or take jobs in different communities so that they
may be
freed
from the expectations of monogamy and domesticity which impinge on "the normal married couple." There is usually in these cases a tacit understanding that whatever one does on his vacation, he should not jeopardize the marriage. "Vacations are for fun; our marriage
work out
this
is
for keeps."
way, but
it
is at
Of
course,
doesn't always
it
least the intention.
There are un-
we should not leave the impression that all sex away from home is to make up for a sexual malaise at home. As one salesman said, "I have a great marriage bed is best at home. But it wouldn't be that way if I'd be home all the time. That's why salesmen have such good
doubtedly other types as well. In
fact,
—
marriages!"
LOVE ENHANCEMENT Human
beings, although
often foolishly deny
it,
we
frequently refuse to admit
it
and
are quite capable of loving pluralistically
— and not only can they genuinely love one person
after another
but can fairly easily love two others simultaneously. their conjugal or familial feelings tend to
remain
to deepen, over a long period of years, their
alive,
AUhough and even
romantic amour gen-
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
46 erally
wanes
in
from three
to five years
—
as
Henry
T. Finck,
one
of the outstanding authorities on love, noted almost a century ago. Indeed, as he sagely observed in a thick tome, Romantic Love and
Personal Beauty, published ularly fades
when two
1880s, romantic passion partic-
in the
lovers live under the
numerous unromantic exigencies of
same roof and share
life.
Because passionate attachment for a member of the other sex a uniquely exciting
repercussions on one's whole existence, a great
and stable married individuals are loath to give longer feel that
tend to find,
fall
is
and enlivening feeling that has many splendid
number of sensible it up when they no
way about their legal mates; they spontaneously with someone other than their spouses and
in love
on some
level, a
mutual expression of their amatory feelings
with these others. Indeed, for one to be incapable of further ro-
mantic involvements just because one
is
married
in
is
some
re-
spects to be dead. Both in imagination and in practice hordes of
who
healthy husbands and wives, including those a real fondness for their mates,
tramarital affairs. Although
sexual actualization,
many
do.
The
romantic ex-
result has,
unfortunately and misleadingly, been a great
number of adulterous
in
of these affairs do not lead to
some of them
and remarriages. But the
continue to have
become entangled
result has also
probably
number of divorces
been an even greater
love affairs that, for one reason or another,
have not led to legal separation from the original mate but that have been carried on simultaneously with the marriage. It
would best be remembered
that
men's and women's reasons
for engaging in extramarital adventures are basically the their reasons for
engaging
in
for sex but also for love, involvement,
as
companionship, and other
amative motives. Loneliness, as Harold Greenwald notes, the prime irritants that drives people into the
same
premarital relationships: not merely
arms of members of the other
who
are
is
one of
away from home
sex: "This, of course, ap-
plies not only to
men. Today there are a great many
travel as buyers,
newspaper reporters, instructors
women who
in special busi-
ness techniques, and for a variety of other reasons.
They too may
HEALTHY REASONS FOR ADVENTURE
47
be married, and finding themselves alone, choose to trade their sexual favors for relief from loneliness."
The Erotic Life American Wife, found that female adultery may easily be sparked by all kinds of love and companionship motives, ranging Natalie Gittelson, while researching a book.
of the
from inordinate romanticism
A
hard-headed
sociability:
Southern California wife puts the case
not just a lay
it's
to
I
want, although
at home." Lilly's husband male of affluent America. He
Man Who
Isn't
"Bob wings try to
the sort no one ever
typifies the
archetype married
by
is,
it
from one
Hamilton Park.
way
When
I
all
wifely accounts.
The
city to
we
see
home
he's
him
another and from one coun-
take the car from Hillsborough to
—
not often
—
for dinner
up
he's
community work,
eyeballs in committee meetmgs, if
a ro-
It's
There.
another the
We're lucky
that?
—
mantic, intense Louis-Jourdan-type affair
has
"Look,
explicitly.
why knock
to his
local politics.
one night a week."
Now
her brown eyes narrow and her voice grows steely. "Blame his hard,
masculine drive. Maybe.
I
just don't care
it on anymore.
I've faced up to the fact that I need a man in my life, not just somewhere around the edges." After a long, reckoning pause,
she adds,
"And
I've
found another shoulder to cry on, thank
goodness. He's married too. But that matters to
Even those staunch, intimidated,
me
not at
traditionalist wives
all."
who,
paraphrase a current novel, are "just too good for their
to
own
good," are not nearly as "good" as they used to be. While conceding
among themselves
working women, marriage survival's sake,"
own
they too
materialist plots
that, still
at
least
for dependent,
demands compromise
may be
non-
"for sheer
quietly manipulating their
and plans.
Companionship outside of marriage is also sought, fairly frequently, by males. Dr. John Scanzoni, professor of sociology at Indiana University, notes: Evidently the chief catalyst to the emergence of the "office wife" pattern
husband and
is
the lack of dialogue about his job between the
his actual wife.
To
put the problem in perspective,
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
48
show that blue-collar workers have communicating with their wives regarding their jobs (and indeed about most other things, including sex) than do white-collar workers. And in spite of the fact that few of them have secretaries, it is likely that some blue-collar workers do develop attachments which might be the equivalent of
we should
note that studies
greater difficulty in
the white-collar worker's ''office wife," or especially the "cocktail
lounge model."
Another sociologist and noted researcher on family
Gerhard Neubeck,
also talks about the "cocktail lounge
Dr.
life,
model" of
adulterous relationships: In the beginning of marriage
when
the family
is
very simple
enough time for husband and wife to "feed" on each other to meet each other's emotional needs. As people reach their thirties and forties, life usually becomes so complex that there are fewer "feeding" times. Therefore one partner whose emotional needs are not being met may find another person under circumstances such as a five o'clock cocktail hour or on a trip someplace which provide some kind of protected haven in which this personal indulgence, temporary as it might be, may go on. I think this is a great temptation for because there are no children, there
is
a lot of people.
Dorothy K. lovely,
is
now
in
her late
sixties,
but she
and exhibits a joie de vivre that most
twenties and thirties would envy.
is
Her husband, Raymond,
died at the age of seventy-two, and
it
home
life
—
Raymond's death,
in
slim, their
recently
probably won't take too long
for her to remarry, since she already has three eager
prospects. Until
still
women
and able
the two not only had a
happy
they have four children and twelve grandchildren who,
even though most of them lived quite a distance away, were constantly visiting
—
but they also were truly attached to each other
and rarely had intercourse For
all
this,
less
than twice a week.
Dorothy's main romantic
forty years, outside her
life
has been, for over
home. She has had two regular lovers
so long that she can hardly
remember when
for
their affairs started
HEALTHY REASONS FOR ADVENTURE
49
Up, and every few years she has added, usually for a passionate
period of a few months at a time, a
new inamorato. Unlike most
well-adjusted matrons, Dorothy does not dote on bridge, gardening,
women's groups (which she abhors), or even the real estate made some amount of money for several decades. Her basic interest is love, love, love, and
business that she has carried on (and at)
when she is thinking intensely about a some amount of interest in her. like many women, severely disturbed in the sense
she feels fully alive only
man who She
also has not,
is
man
that she absolutely needs a
to love her, or else she considers
herself worthless and desolate. But she truly enjoys loving
and
being loved far more than she enjoys anything else in the world.
And
she had to remain married only to a husband and involved
if
only in a somewhat tepid
way with him, she would
was missing one of the main delights of
life
she
feel that
and would
be, if not
depressed, at least sad. Fortunately, her husband realized this and
gave her the leeway to add sex-love involvements with other to their regular domestic routines. Otherwise, she probably
have champed so much
at the bit
of conventional married
many
they would have ended up in the divorce courts
not a "sexpot," and could easily have given
Dorothy
is
ing with
men
life
give
other than her husband
—
—hack
it
Somewhat
less
romantic
whom
Stuart
is
W.
up copulat-
she had had to
if
really could not
—
or would not
the adulterous Little
of
life
many
actors
and Arthur Cantor describe
book. The Playmakers:
All actors experience loneliness and insecurity
out of town while the show for
that
years ago.
in marriage.
and actresses, in their
would
life
particularly since her sex
with him had always been notably good. But
up extramarital romance, she
men
is
on tour or when
when it
is
Broadway. One actor regards intra-company love
they are
trying out affairs in
such circumstances as completely natural and normal. ''A love affair within a cast
is
like a
convenience when you're on tour,"
he says. "I need female companionship.
town and
it
comes eleven
o'clock,
I
When
I'm in a strange
don't want to go back to
my
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
50 hotel
an
room alone. Out of town, if you have an affair, you have The company all know about it. After all, it's impos-
affair.
in those circumstances. But they don't tell. And back to New York, each of the partners goes back respective home.
sible to hide
when you to his
it
get
EXPERIENTIAL LEANINGS Loving, courting, going to bed with, and maintaining a relationship with a
member
ing experiences.
of the other sex are
They
all
are, especially to
part of satisfactory living as, to others,
interesting
partners learning a great
many
it
fascinating and valuable things it
leads to their hav-
ing thoughts, feelings, and personal interchanges that
and
in
come
in-
also results in the sex-love
about themselves and their chosen ones; and
to relate,
gratify-
This kind of experiencing not only
ing, traveling, or sports.
cludes sex and love participations;
wise probably never
and
some people, as much a would be working, paint-
their way.
To
would other-
live, to a large
degree,
is
our society intimate relationships usually reach
acme in sex -love affairs. The healthy, experience-hungry married
their
individual,
conse-
quently, will be heavily motivated, at least at times during his or
her conjugal
life,
to
add
tained through marriage
to the experience that itself,
and often
to
perience some of the high levels of relating with other sex that he or she
may have known
individual's desires to experiment
and
logically
members of
lead
to
and
extramarital
the other sex
who
likely to
is
be
at-
be impelled to reex-
members of
the
before marrying. This
to feel deeply
adventures
—
may
especially
easily
with
are radically different from his or
her mate. In addition to having varietist sex leanings, most individuals
have distinct urges to do different kinds of nonsexual things: to travel, to eat in strange restaurants, to see exotic
performances, to
read unique books, and to engage in a host of unconventional events and occurrences.
The very conformities and pressures of
HEALTHY REASONS FOR ADVENTURE everyday
their
lives,
while not considered utterly intolerable, are
much more bearable by
often rendered
odd things they
many
51
vacations they take and
do. Similarly, marriage can be
couples, less pressuring
made, for a great
accompanied by
if
Even the
sional extramarital sex-love outlets.
at
least occa-
distinct advantages
—
—
monogamous mating such as sharing or togetherness can become unrelieved and monotonous when they are not balanced by experiences that are to some degree antithetical. In speaking about mate-swapping, for example, Dr. Alex Comof
a world-famous authority
fort,
of
its
virtues
is
"an attempt
sive relationship that to
withdraw and
society, noted that
'I
one
to avoid the sort of crushingly exclu-
called 'togetherness.'
is
say,
on sex and
am
I,
We
need the
ability
and you are you.' Engaging
in
group sex may be an attempt to reduce the intensity of the oneto-one relationship."
When
an individual makes sure that he experiences wider-range
involvements than he
marriage he
is
ever likely to experience in conventional
attending to what
is
is
perhaps one of the most "nor-
mal" or healthiest aspects of adultery marriage.
The chances
are
good
—
especially
who want
sidered from the standpoint of those that
if
when con-
to aid or "save"
absolutely no extramarital
adventures of any sort were allowed in a society such as our own,
people would tend either to refrain from marrying in the or would insist
ond
place.
ments but this
much more
Given the option of maintaining still
engaging
first
place
quickly on getting divorces in the sec-
in outside
their marital arrange-
affairs,
they frequently pick
option over complete dissolution of stable arrangements.
Just as the
famous
historian, Lecky,
ago that prostitutes and "fallen
remarked over a century
women" were
gamous marriage, so might he remark today often being preserved by adultery.
A
prime
the saviors of that legal critic
mono-
mating
is
of rigid mono-
gamy, psychiatrist O. Spurgeon English, has been the modern Lecky
in this
respect,
and has made some pointed observations
about the role of affairs as a safety valve for ordinary mating. For
example:
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
52
am
1
sure that there are people
me
would keep me
who could
devise a limited
and healthy as long as I live. But I could get awfully tired of this monotonous diet. It might keep me alive; it might keep me healthy. But I'd get tired of it. I would want some variety. Marriage as an institution will keep one alive but it doesn't give many of the extras that people diet for
that
alive
desiring an affair are looking for in it
anyone's is
life
contributing
.
.
Jessie
I
don't regard the affair
.
ropean proverb that carry and sometimes three. Dr.
...
anybody of anything. Most times My dear friends, there's a Southern Eusays that marriage is a yoke it takes two to
as "cheating"
And
today maybe four.
Bernard, a renowned marriage counselor and re-
search scholar at Pennsylvania State University, at least partially
concurs with Dr. English:
Kinsey and his associates noted that sometimes extramarital
improved a marital relationship. In some cases they were encouraged. Sometimes it was the learning of the relationship which was harmful rather than the relationship itself. It appears that older spouses can accept infidelity better than young ones, although in the working classes young women have been accustomed to accepting it also. relations
Another
psychiatrist. Dr.
Martin Goldberg, points out that
sons involving office wives and office husbands mainly
liai-
become
known to professionals and to the public when the relationship has become an unhappy one or has further complicated a difficult marriage. However, he notes, "I am certain there are many other instances in which the office wife actually helps to maintain her
employers' marriages, and or the employer
make
life
s
attentions serve to
and marriage bearable for the secretary."
This idea, that extramarital unions not only do not necessarily tend to interfere with (and to break up) marital relationships, but that instead they frequently serve to enable the participants in
these relationships to get along fully than they otherwise
The
facts
seem
to
show
would,
much more is
tolerably or success-
becoming more accepted today.
that adultery
is
frequently
good
for a
mar-
HEALTHY REASONS FOR ADVENTURE
53
riage,
and that the experiences, diversions, and distractions
brings
may
aid rather than sabotage a legal union.
Terence Q.
banker who was born and reared
a fairly typical
is
Wasp Waspy woman, and who
family,
an upper-level
in
it
who married an
almost
ideal
Long
has comfortably maintained a
Is-
land country club kind of existence with her and his family for the
He
past twenty years. leads; he does not
happy
quite
is
to
unhappy about and becoming
off
the
life
he
a hippie; he
be making the amount of money, well above
makes each
that he
sixty thousand,
not really
is
dream of running
year; and he doesn't enjoy
going with the boys to a high-class brothel when they are away at a banker's convention in another city. But Terence
New York
his artistic
and
fairly
women who
tached
bohemian friends
for
in
pot-smoking and
intel-
bed with one of the unat-
is
really not that sexy,
number of occasions spent
merely hugging, talking, and sleeping. For but
to get laid, that
is
really enjoys
getting to
is
up-
are frequently present at these groupings.
Terence, mind you, prisingly large
all
City, getting together with
and winding up
lectual conversation,
not
month he thoroughly ensome of
per-middle-class Wasp. Several times a joys staying over in
is
fine;
if
she
know
is
and has on a sur-
the night with a female if
not, that
his partner is fine,
too.
is
willing
What he
her as intimately as possible: to
discover what makes her tick, what things she has done that are
much
different
his thoughts
from the things he has done, how she responds to
and
feelings,
and about
himself,
life
and what he can learn about
in
her,
about
general by becoming conversationally
(and perhaps sexually) intimate with her.
While many other people tobiographies to discover
in
how
Terence's class read novels or authe other half lives, he
much more
greatly enjoys
having more personal contact with some of the
people
other half, and he finds that he
do
this
through his participation in the conversational parties and the
girls
in this
he takes
do
in
home from
any
less direct
is
able to
these parties better than he would be able to
manner. So Terence
seeker and secondarily an adulterer.
pens nicely to abet the
first.
is
mainly an experience
The second
activity just hap-
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
54
ADVENTURE SEEKING routine, fairly dull, unadventurous lives;
Most people today lead
chances of fighting the Indians, hunting big game in Africa,
their
or even trying a
new job
after
working
in the
same one
for a de-
cade or more are reasonably slim. Life just can't very easily be arranged that adventurously any more
—
especially for females,
were never given too much opportunity for risk-taking days and
who
are
still
kept pretty
much
who
in the old
and the
to the practical
routine today.
One
of the few remaining areas in which husbands and wives
can frequently find excitement and novelty
Even when rearing,
this
scene
and the
fairly
domestic
life,
is
in sex-love affairs.
temporarily closed by marriage, child-
is
scheduled pursuits that tend to accompany
the healthy and
still
adventure -seeking person
fre-
quently looks longingly for some other outlets, and he or she likely to
be able to find them
does not mean that
up
their
mean
humdrum
all
in extramarital relationships.
life-loving
mates must eventually
viduals will
try to jazz it
does
adventure-bound
indi-
existences with adulterous affairs; but
that a certain percentage of creative,
do so and
that they
may
well
is
This
do
it
for sensible, non-
neurotic motives. Claire
S., in
spite of her forty years, her three teenage children,
and her presidency of the ter,
would
for a
so
—
really
local
League of Women's Voters chap-
have liked to go hitchhiking around the country
good part of every year. She never quite got around partly because of the real dangers
it
to doing
might have involved
but she never ceased daydreaming about getting away from
it
all
and having some genuine risky adventures. So she did what she thought was the next best thing. Every few months, she went
away, for a few days or as long as a couple of weeks, to a large city
that
was not too long an airplane
trip
from her home
usually to Boston, Philadelphia, Detroit, Cleveland, or
She registered there
at a
downtown
hotel
St.
Louis.
and immediately started
HEALTHY REASONS FOR ADVENTURE
55
looking, often in the lobby or the bar of the hotel
companionship. Being attractive and
lively,
long to end up with a suitable partner
married males attending a convention
—
it
itself,
for
male
seldom took her
frequently one of the
in the
town where she was
staying.
Claire liked the moderate degree of risk she took in the course
of these out-of-town sojourns. She might meet up with the wrong
man, who would somehow give her a hard time. She might run
some of her hometown friends, who would be more than curious about what she was doing. She might become much more emotionally involved with her companion (particularly if she stayed with him for several days) than he might become involved into
with her. She might be completely rejected by a male, because of her age, the ugly appendectomy scar on her taste for oral-genital relations.
abdomen
or her dis-
She might possibly acquire (though
she never yet had) a venereal disease. So she considered each of
her extramarital adventures decidedly risky, and she liked them the
more because of
In another ten years or so, she thought, she a
little
all
the riskiness.
would probably be
too old for this sort of thing and would probably stop her
extramaritally bent travels. But they certainly added a hell of a lot to her life right
now! Oh,
yes: they
provided an extra bonus, too.
Whenever she was sexually bored with her husband, all she had to do was to remember in her head one of the particularly exciting jaunts she had had with another
man
in a strange city
and she im-
mediately became more sexually involved and orgasmic. staid,
accountant husband had
known what was
spiring at these times he probably
If
her
cerebrally tran-
would have been
horrified
and
rendered himself impotent. But fortunately he never did know,
and she had no intention of
telling!
SEXUAL CURIOSITY Although an increasing number of people today have premarital sex experiences and quite a few also have affairs between the time
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
56 their first
marriage ends by death or divorce and their next mar-
riage begins, there are the age of forty or
still
fifty
—
many
especially females
and have had a
total
— who reach
of only one or two
when they
sex partners in their entire lives. Such individuals, even
have had
fairly satisfactory sex with their spouses, are often cu-
rious about what
would be
it
like to try
one or more new partners;
and eventually a good many of them do experiment to
satisfy their
curiosity.
Others,
including those
who
are
would never consider breaking up
their
who
married and
homes, are motivated by
because they would like to see
their sex curiosity to try affairs
how
happily
sexy they really are, because they would like to bring
own marriage
techniques to their at least
new
bed, because they want to have
one orgiastic experience before they
die, or
because some
other aspect of their healthy information-seeking in sexual areas
cannot be adequately
monogamous
satisfied
relations.
in extramarital
they continue to have purely
if
Husbands and wives who
ventures out of sex-love curiosity
tute a high percentage of all spouses.
much
like to
actually engage
may
do so and are sometimes sorely tempted
likes into practice
probably number
Mrs. Gertrude G. was for
years one of the sexually cu-
had had one brief
marriage, which had not been very sexually arousing, isfying.
to put their
in the millions.
many
rious desirers but non-tryers. She
not consti-
But those who would very
affair before let
alone sat-
During the course of her eight-year-old marital union, she
moderately enjoyed sex but never got too excited about could live without
it,
and maybe
—had had an orgasm two
—
it,
easily
she wasn't quite sure about this
or three times. Both she and her hus-
band, after experimenting with almost everything they could find in a
half-dozen sex manuals that they read, had reluctantly con-
cluded that she just wasn't very
much
with
it
sexually and that she
probably never would be. Since he had no trouble being aroused
and
satisfied
by her, their sex
life
hardly suffered and neither
felt
enormously deprived. But Mrs. G. was
still
curious. She suspected, though she wasn't
HEALTHY REASONS FOR ADVENTURE by any means
57
combination of anatomical facts had
sure, that a
something to do with her relatively low sexuality. She herself had an unusually wide vaginal
orifice
small penis and a tendency to in intercourse.
and her husband had both a
last, at
most, only a minute or two
She wondered whether, with a differently endowed
and longer-lasting partner, she wouldn't enjoy sex a
come
more and
lot
orgasm much more frequently.
to
She continued to wonder half-idly for a good many years. Her
when her
curiosity increased notably
ably married
woman, kept
telling
best friend, also a respect-
her that she really hated her god-
damned husband, and was going
him
to divorce
and she could go back
their child got a little older
clear conscience; but the one
just as to
soon as
work with
good thing about him, she kept
a
in-
sisting,
was that he had one of the biggest jongs around and could
keep
hard for a half-hour with no trouble whatever. God, was
it
she going to miss that
someone
As
she really got rid of him and he married
if
else!
luck would have
this
it,
friend
open
the field beautifully
marry him, and
to
left
for Gertrude G., since the friend's hus-
band always had been
clearly attracted to her.
was gone, and he was
living in their old
Now
that his wife
house only a couple of
doors away from Gertrude's home, he made after her mightily
love with another
in
fell
man, rather quickly divorced her husband
it
clear that he lusted
and would be delighted to share her bed on one
of the fairly frequent nights
when her husband was away on
busi-
ness trips.
Her
curiosity
now became almost overweening, and even
though she thought
little
ex-wife's view of his
many
cided to try him.
It
of
him personally
—
in fact
shared his
undesirable personality traits
— she
de-
probably wouldn't work out half as well sex-
ually, she told herself, as she
had fantasized for years about such
an adventure. Even so she would then be ahead of the game: she
would have realistic
sex
life
at least
proved to herself that her daydreams were un-
and that she'd better content herself with her pretty mild with her husband.
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
58
Well, was Gertrude surprised! Within twenty minutes of taking off her clothes in the
bedroom of
the
new
covered that her female friend was exactly
divorce's house, she dis-
name!) did have an immense one, and he could keep ingly forever. trating,
her
was
It
and so
ecstatic
fifth
— O,
it
beautifully was!
utterly joy producing.
(what an apt
right: Peter
—
so
hard seem-
it
filling,
own home. She
something of a bastard
— but what
thought that Peter was
still
a charming, sexy bastard for a
now charming and suddenly sexy woman like her! Being a bright woman, and realizing that her success might have been mainly the result of a if
all,
you
the next few
whether
make
will
it
it
is
will give
with Peter
prophecy
you much rarer
highly likely, just because of this
fulfill
your fantasies
— Gertrude spent
months experimenting with several other men. And,
was the
it
self-fulfilling
you believe that a big penis
delights than a smaller one, belief, that
after
orgasm, and had a rough time getting up and
going back to her
after
so pene-
She was utterly spent
result of autosuggestion or not, she invariably
found the same thing: the bigger the man's organ and the longer he lasted with
the greater pleasure
it,
and the more orgasms she
tended to have.
As
a crucial experiment, she tried (on
that her
my
advice)
making sure
husband had considerably more orgasms per week than he
previously had been having with her. Consequently he began to last
much
longer in intercourse than he had previously (mainly be-
cause he became more used to sex with her and consequently imperiously desirous of having
it).
She found that he then
less
satisfied
her considerably more than before, but, since the size of his penis
had obviously not changed, not quite as much as some of the er-organed
men
she had been experimenting with.
Gertrude, quietly and discreetly,
found
that, first,
she
is
is still
not.
riage bed
experimenting. She has
something of a sexpot
her husband had been utterly convinced,
was
larg-
all
Second, she has been able to bring
some of
— although
these years, that she
home
the things she has been learning
so that their relations are
now
she and
to their
mar-
on the outside,
far better than they ever
were
in
HEALTHY REASONS FOR ADVENTURE the past.
One of
these days
—
59
since she really cares for her hus-
not emotionally involved to any degree with any of
band and
is
the other
men
she has recently tried
— she
may well stop having down to a renewed mono-
extramarital affairs entirely, and settle
gamy. But not quite
methods of
yet!
Her
and her search for better
curiosity
self-fulfillment are not entirely satisfied.
SOCIAL AND CULTURAL INDUCEMENTS Millions of average Americans and Europeans occasionally or frequently engage in extramarital relations because
proved social thing to do
that are a regular part of their lives. will think
it
is
the ap-
times and in certain settings
at various
Normally monogamous males
nothing of resorting to prostitutes or to easily available
non-prostitutes at business parties, men's club meetings, or conventions.
And
sedate
women
will take off their girdles
orgasm or have extramarital intercourse parties,
on yacht or boat
at
and pet
to
wild drinking or pot
cruises, at vacation resorts,
and
at var-
ious other kinds of social affairs where adulterous behavior
is
not
only permitted but even expected.
Although civilized Westerners rarely engage periodic kinds of sex orgies that
many
in the regular or
primitive peoples permit
themselves in the course of their married
lives,
they do engage in
occasional orgiastic parties where extramarital affairs are encour-
aged and sometimes become the est
kind of adulterous behavior, but
social normality
This
rule.
it
and often does seem
is
may
not be the healthi-
well within the range of
to satisfy, in a socially ap-
proved way, some of the underlying sensible desires for sexual experience, adventure, and variety that might otherwise be very difficult to fulfill in
our culture.
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney M. were quite faithful to each other, sexually and amatively, throughout the eleven years since their
wedding. Both of them had had tempting offers from members of the other sex with
whom
they were acquainted, but their usual an-
swers were almost identical: 'T really appreciate your telling
me
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
60
how attracted you are to me, and I must say that I feel much the same way about you. But I have an unusually good thing going with my wife (husband) and I wouldn't want to jeopardize it in any way. Even if she (he) never finds out that I am having an affair with you, I'll know it and that would make me feel too uncomfortable. So I'm afraid that it just wouldn't work out." About twice
a year, however, Mr.
and Mrs. M. would attend
pop Almost
or give a high-class party where the liquor flowed like soda
and virtually everyone, including themselves, got potted.
always, on such occasions, she would wind up in a locked bathroom with an attractive male for twenty minutes or more and he would wind up for about the same time in a parked car with a willing female. Although each was fully aware, most of the time, of what was happening with the other (because each had literally been caught in the act a couple of times), nothing was ever said after the party was over and no attempt was made to refuse the
next similar invitation. Both mates
felt that as
long as these epi-
sodes constituted a small, spontaneous and socially acceptable part of their lives
—
since their friends, at the
ing in similar behavior all
was
right with the
— nothing was
same
lost,
parties,
were engag-
enough was gained, and
world and their marital relationship.
SEXUAL DEPRIVATION Many husbands and
wives are acutely deprived sexually, either
on a temporary or permanent
They may be separated from as whqn the husband or is inducted into the armed
basis.
each other for reasons beyond their control goes off on a long business trip
—
forces or the wife has to take care of one of her parents for several
weeks or
is
in
such poor physical health for a while that
precludes her having virtually any kind of sex with her mate.
man and woman may
live together
available to each other, but one of
sex drive than the other,
may be
this
Or
a
and be theoretically sexually
them may have a much lower sexually incompetent, or
may
otherwise be an unsatisfying bed partner even though he or she quite adequate in other aspects of marital
life.
is
HEALTHY REASONS FOR ADVENTURE
61
In such circumstances, the deprived mate can very healthfully
long for (and from time to time seek out) extramarital affairs. In
many such
may
instances this mate's marriage
actually benefit by
such affairs, for acute and chronic sexual deprivation
may
age resentments that can easily disrupt a relationship. cases the interesting thing relieved
if
that both partners
is
encourIn such
may be immensely
they honestly face the problems engendered by sexual
deprivation, just as both
may
put themselves under
terrific strain if
they do not face such frustrations.
Jonas K. and his wife Margie had a fairly good sex first
for the
life
few years of their marriage; but then Jonas was smitten with
a series of infections that his physicians
were barely able
to
keep
under control. For a couple of years he could make only a very marginal adjustment to
life.
who
Fortunately, he was an editor
could do most of his work at home. Even at that, he barely man-
aged to get through each day and was so exhausted by about nine o'clock in the evening that he
had
to
go to bed.
He had no sexual inclination whatever and didn't much to help his wife achieve satisfaction,
since she
usually required about twenty or thirty minutes of active lation of her clitoral region to
achieve climax.
become
sufficiently
The mere thought of having
pletely.
Not
that he didn't care for
And
sure; he did.
in
off
en-
com-
loved her more than he had
to him and had drawn became ill. So he clearly cared for condition made him negative about having sex with
closer than ever to her, but his
much
him
Margie and her sexual plea-
many ways he
ever done before, since she
manipu-
aroused and
to exert so
ergy to give her what she wanted sexually turned
like
feel
doing very
him
was so helpful
since he
her.
At
first
his wife.
Jonas worried a good deal about his lack of sex with
He knew
that she
had very normal desires and was ex-
ceptionally frustrated, especially after tions whatever.
He wanted
find the words.
How
you care for me, don't
want
to
weeks of practically no
to talk to her
about
it,
could he say to her: "Look, dear.
in spite
of
my
rela-
but could not I
realize
present disabilities, and you really
have any intimate contact with anyone
else.
But you
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
62 do have a physical body, you think
that
mind and emotions, don't give some thought, while I'm
as well as a
maybe you'd
better
He
unfortunately this incapacitated, to satisfying that body, too?" thought,
many
this to her.
how he might
times, of exactly
say something like
But he got so embarrassed about the idea that he just
couldn't bring himself to open his mouth.
He
desperate that he decided to get some psy-
finally got so
He
chotherapeutic help. I
arranged to "see"
—
me over the phone as who have some diffi-
frequently have phone sessions with people
culty in leaving their
my
office.
home
who
or
During these sessions,
live
some distance away from that it was hardly
showed him
I
shameful to be physically and sexually incapacitated, or to discuss openly with his wife what she might do about his inability to isfy
her for the present.
He
finally got the
main points
I
sat-
was mak-
ing in this respect: "I can see
now what you mean.
most unfortunate that
It's
way and that she may even possibly see me as being this way though I really think she doesn't.
this
—
merely sees
self in that light, but she
porary handicap. Anyway, no matter
and she
that I'm in this state,
awful or horrible, and
it
is left
I
can only keep
much
sexually hanging,
way and
thought in
this
my
am
/ may see myme as a person with a temhow unfortunate it may be
doesn't in the least
worthless person for being this
I
a weakling for
mean
it's
for depriving her.
head,
hardly
that I'm a
Now,
if
shouldn't have too
I
trouble honestly raising the entire issue with her, and agree-
ing with her what might be better for her to do."
Jonas did work on sistently into his
did have a talk with his wife.
hardly be enthusiastic that
if
to believe
He pointed
she had
that her urges
were being
it
more con-
basically.
He
then
out to her that he would
evils in a case like theirs,
some ways he would be frankly
about not satisfying her himself.
it
some sex outside marriage, but
might well be the lesser of
it
that in
know
Eventually he got
this thought.
head and was able
satisfied
To
relieved because he
and would not
feel
and
would remiss
his surprise, she took this talk
very well and actually did arrange to have sex every
now and
then
HEALTHY REASONS FOR ADVENTURE
—whenever she
63
got really aroused and, as she put
climb walls thinking about
it"
— with
and Margie were both so happy about working out practical arrangement that they
"began
it,
to
an ex-lover of hers. Jonas
drew even
kind of
this
and
closer to each other
began what was undoubtedly the warmest period of their
lives to-
gether. It
may seem odd
to
many
readers that a wife should want
more
sex relations with her husband than he wants with her, and the
may seem understandable
case of Jonas
only because
it
is
unique
and depends on special circumstances. Actually, there are many
normal and physically healthy wives
in this category,
and they
tend to be just as sexually deprived as millions of husbands have proverbially been for thousands of years. This has cially
true since, during the past several decades,
become
espe-
women
bear
fewer children, live longer, and actively feel that their sex interests should be gratified. Dr.
Leon Salzman did a study of
the relationship of coital fre-
quency to sexual satisfaction and found very fascinating things
in
the course of his researches. "Actually," he states, "our statistical studies indicate that, while in the earlier years the level of desire
and interest later years
in sex
is
greater in the male than the female, in the
female interest increases and male interest declines."
Dr. Salzman
correct, sexual deprivation of females
is
is
cant factor, especially as the years of marriage continue, and therefore only to be expected that a considerable
If
a signifiit is
number of nor-
mal, and otherwise highly conventional, females will consequently desire extramarital outlets.
In E. tal
one of the few research studies of extramarital coitus Ralph
Johnson found that "husbands who had experienced extramariinvolvement derived a significantly lower degree of sexual
isfaction
from
their marriages than did
perienced coitus outside of their marriage
'common sense referred to by
proposition.' "
Johnson
is
sat-
husbands who had not ex-
—
thus supporting the
The "common sense proposition"
the hypothesis that sexual deprivation
one of the main causes of extramarital
affairs.
is
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
64 Noting that
this hypothesis
probably correct, a committee of
is
leading Presbyterian churchmen discussed sex problems for two
and a half years and
comments on
finally
came up with
The committee
adultery.
a report that included
generally upheld sexual
but noted ''exceptional circumstances where extramarital
fidelity
sexual activity
may
not be contrary to the interests of a faithful
concern for the well being of the marriage partner, as might be the case
when one partner
pacity.
.
.
.
suffers
Such judgments
responsibility of the person
When eral
permanent mental or physical inca-
finally
who
have to be made by and on the
takes the exception."
even a Presbyterian committee comes up with such a
view of adultery
in the face
well be understood
why
to similar decisions
on
large
their
bility for having affairs
of real sexual deprivation,
can
numbers of other individuals come
own and
when
it
lib-
decide to take the responsi-
their wives or husbands
are, for
one
reason or another, sexually depriving.
PREPLANNED PLURALISM Almost
all
the sexual varietism that occurred in conventional
marriages in the past tended to take place as a result of postmarital
knowledge.
A man
and a
woman would
go to the
altar with the
firm conviction that they would have sex relations exclusively with
each other from the wedding day to the end of their
lives.
For one
reason or another, this unrealistic prediction would not turn out to
be
true,
and they subsequently adjusted, either overtly or covertly,
to another view: ically with)
namely, that being married to (and living domest-
one person
at
a time
sex-love relations on the side
is
is
even
fine,
finer.
but that having other
As
I
have been show-
ing in this chapter, there are several healthy and sane reasons originally planned
monogamy may
why
eventually be transformed into
marriage plus more pluralistic arrangements.
During the
last
decade, there has been a mild but significant
tendency for pluralism to be planned
in
advance, even before two
individuals decide on legal matrimony. At a meeting of the Asso-
HEALTHY REASONS FOR ADVENTURE
65
elation for Humanistic Psychology in San Francisco a few years
me
ago a young married couple told ried only after they
had
that they decided to get
nations and fully agreed that they both would in
gage in extramarital
affairs,
year-old graduate student
me
"Right on! Howard and
perhaps for the
all
probability en-
rest of their lives.
A
married for a year to a twenty-two-
nineteen-year-old mother,
agreement as she heard
mar-
thoroughly discussed their varietist incli-
I
in
nodded
sociology,
in
enthusiastic
talking to this couple, and she added:
even go a
little
farther than that.
We
when we meet someone suitable, and we think nothing of it. But what we really want to do is to find a few groovy people that we can form our own commune with, and share everything with, including our minds and our bodies. We haven't been able to find the people we each openly have our
want
to
do
this
affairs,
from time
with yet. But we're
still
to time,
hopefully looking!"
CONFIDENCE BUILDING Morton Hunt,
in his excellent
book. The Affair, makes
much
of
the fact that extramarital adventures can often lead to an increase
of self-confidence; Brian Boylan, in his equally good volume, delity, also implies that
people can learn
and their competencies through having
augment
their self-esteem,
much about themselves and may thereby
affairs
and so does Dr. O. Spurgeon English,
in his notable essay, "Positive
ble writers
Infi-
Values of the Affair." Being capa-
and observers, these authors have a good point, but not
being psychologists, they tend to be a
little
vague and to overstate
their cases.
The problem
is
to differentiate clearly
between what
is
nor-
mally called self-confidence and self-esteem, on the one hand, and
what other.
I
call
When
achievement-confidence or love-confidence, on the a
woman
feels that she is unattractive, that she
is
a
poor sex partner, and that only an unusually nice guy like her hus-
band could possibly enjoy her has affairs with a few other
in
bed and love
men and
her,
and when she
finds that, in reality, they
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
66 find her attractive, sexy,
and lovable, she has certainly discovered
some valuable new information: especially, that she is able to perform much better in bed than she previously thought she could and that she has more ability to win male approval than she ever
We
suspected.
can accurately say, therefore, that her confidence
in
her ability to achieve sexually and to gain love has definitely im-
now
proved. For
she
knows
that she can succeed in these ways,
while previously she falsely thought she could not. 5^//-confidence or 5e//-esteem,
same thing
woman's self-confidence it is augmented
ences,
falsely,
however,
"Now
that
I
is
Why
this
is
is
experi-
see that
I
quite
can do better sexually and amaI
really
can
like
myself as a
view false? Because an individual who acquires
more
her being)
new
raised as a result of her
makes me a better person. of my new-found abilities!"
better or
by no means the
as a result of her telling herself,
tively, that
result
is
as achievement-confidence or love-confidence. If this
efficient traits
(which are only certain aspects of
hardly a better or more worthwhile person (which
is
the entire range of her being). If she learned to speak Spanish or
play the piano, would that advantageous feature tinctly
different
and better person? Of course
make her not.
a dis-
Then why
should the acquisition of greater sexual or amative prowess (or nally realizing that she has such
takenly thought that she didn't)
while
fi-
prowess when she previously mis-
make
her a better, more worth-
human?
To have matter
of
5e//-confidence (or to like or accept oneself) definition
or
personal
is
This
decision.
really a
woman,
presumably, previously disliked or hated herself because she saw herself as sexually inept. She could have chosen, wise, to dislike her characteristic, her ineptness, self
down because
self to
she possessed
it.
Now
if
she were really
and not put her-
that she has proved her-
be more sexually competent, she chooses to like herself, her
being, rather than merely to like her newly discovered tence.
This
is
foolish:
since
if
inept again (for example, older
she happens to
and
become
less attractive
compesexually
and therefore
HEALTHY REASONS FOR ADVENTURE less able to attract
men
67
to her bed) she will almost certainly return
to disliking herself, or putting herself
one
If
would do best
to shy completely
away from attempting
basis of any trait (since virtually able);
down.
to like oneself (or, better, accept oneself) at
is
human
all
traits are
quite at the
is
the incessantly changing
— an almost
way
on the
very change-
and to accept oneself on the basis of just being
Otherwise, one
one
all,
this
—
existing.
mercy of human modifiability
— of
which people view other people
in
certain road to feeling exceptionally insecure.
The woman we
are discussing, therefore,
had better not acquire
ego-enhancing or increased self-esteem from her newly discovered sexual-amative competence. Otherwise, she to
come
tially right in
ter in love
is
sooner or later going
Hunt and Boylan, however,
a cropper!
are at least par-
implying that once she sees that she can
and
in life as a result
she will get a good feeling about her optimistic view of
make
it
bet-
of her extramarital experiences,
what she can do
own
more
capabilities, take a
in the future,
and look forward
sex-love participations that she has previously viewed in a
to
rather dismal light. In other words:
if
her achievement-confidence
and her love-confidence increase, she
in the sexual area
own
to try to fulfill her
potentials for enjoyment
take greater delight in living.
And
that,
and
of course,
will tend
will actually is
to the
all
good. If
own
confidence -building or increased knowledge of one's
capabilities
is
ventures,
is
it
one of the
fairly frequent results of extramarital ad-
also, naturally,
one of the good reasons for having
them. For just as practice makes perfect in tennis, golf, and almost
any other game you can think of love.
Knowing
in
woman may most affairs,
of,
it
advance that
also
this
makes
may
perfect in the sport
man
well be true, a
legitimately and healthfully try to arrange
even when he or she
is
happily married,
in
or
some
order to find
out what higher peaks of sex-love involvement are likely to be attained. Love-confidence
is
not the greatest thing in
life
and
again, a necessary part of self-confidence (which can be the
mere asking,
if
only people are sane enough to look for
is
not,
had for it);
but
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
68
it
nonetheless
a hell of an addition to ordinarily
is
humdrum
exis-
tences!
One
of the few factual studies ever conducted on the results of
adultery in our society was by
They
Lonny Meyers and Hunter
How
is it
that extramarital sex enhances
some marriage
We
would not pretend to know Based on our interviews, an affair may:
tionships?
•
me from"
rela-
answers.
is
happiness and fulfillment.
left
alone.
Increase the aliveness and
warmth of one spouse, thereby
turning on the other. •
the
Remove burdens from the spouse, such as the burden of sex when exhausted, ill, or preoccupied with other matters; or of trying to be an entertaining and pleasant companion when one wants to be
•
all
Lessen a feeling of resentment, a feeling that marriage
"keeping •
Leggett.
arrive at the following conclusion:
Motivate a person to become more attractive
—
to the
spouse
as well. •
Provide a temporary respite and diversion from problems at home, giving new perspective which helps solve or endure those problems.
•
Help a person discover new dimensions of his or her own sexuality and humanness including (for women) orgasm which
may
then for the
first
time be experienced also with the hus-
band. •
Make
an unpleasant marriage tolerable when there are good
reasons to maintain the marriage, such as children, finances,
•
and an established home base. Help persons remain (or become) warm individuals despite cold marriages.
•
Provide additional tenderness, excitement and joy for a person experiencing a good marriage relationship.
All of this tends to
show
that
my own
clinical findings are con-
firmed by the researches of others, and that healthy reasons for
and good
results
from extramarital adventures
definitely
do
exist.
Disturbed Reasons for Extramarital Adventure
HE PREVIOUS CHAPTER of
my
is
an extension of the
first
part
notorious American Psychological Association talk on ex-
tramarital relations.
second, and
much
Now
don't want to hear any
let
me
delineate and expand
upon the
popular, part. Lots of people apparently
less
more about
the unhealthy or neurotic rea-
sons for an individual's committing adultery. Perhaps these latter
reasons strike a
little
too close to home,
in
many
remind them of the poor reasons why they would actually have
engaged
think that all their ships are perfectly
in) affairs.
own
Or perhaps
instances,
like to
and
have (or
they would prefer to
reasons for considering outside relation-
good ones, and that none of
their reasoning in
this respect is illegitimate.
Be
that as
it
may, there are a good number of pretty disturbed
motives for people having extramarital ventures. These self-defeating urges include the following:
LOW FRUSTRATION TOLERANCE While almost every healthy married person
at
times desires ex-
tramural affairs, and quite frequently views his desires as real needs, any notions that one absolutely needs
them are nonsense
Human
beings have practi-
and constitute a distinct disturbance. cally
no natural or instinctive needs or necessities; they mainly
69
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
70
have strong preferences or desires that they often foolishly define
Why?
as needs.
Because, as
have been pointing out
1
my
in
books
on psychotherapy for a good many years, when an individual
in-
he needs to have extramarital relations in order to be
sists that
happy and
fulfilled,
he really means that he utterly should, ought,
and must have such relations; and no such shoulds, oughts, and musts exist
in the universe.
Take an individual with
a moderately
good marriage who has
strong varietist inclinations and would be indubitably happier and
unharmed
if
he or she 'gave
contend that
to
in to
would be
it
these inclinations. For this person
better, or preferable, or highly desir-
able for extramarital adventures to ensue often be empirically and logically verified.
is
a statement that can
It
damned
well might
be better for either or both spouses for such affairs to be arranged
—
as
some of
the cases in the previous chapter tend to prove. But
things that are better are rarely necessary, and events that are
preferable hardly have to occur. If he stops acting like a whiney two-year-old, the would-be adulterer can virtually always easily
maximally enjoy, monogamous marriage. He or she
tolerate, if not is
hardly going to die, blow up at the seams or be carted off to the
looney bin
if
his or her fondest extramarital fantasies are never
actualized.
This
is
true
emotionally
the individual
if
disturbed.
is
healthy or not too severely
The neurotic
individual,
however,
fre-
quently convinces himself that he absolutely needs what he wants, that his preferences are necessities. Consequently, he self so desperately
(according to his
monogamous fairs.
finds
that
unhappy
own he
marriage that
in a
is
makes him-
supposed
to be
original agreement with his mate) sexually literally drives
himself into extramarital af-
Being a demander rather than a preferrer, he then often
something intolerable about
and he winds up by becoming
his adulterous involvements, too;
still
more
frustrated, unhappier,
and
downright miserable and depressed. It
him;
is it
not marriage and is
really
his
its
inevitable frustrations that
unreasonable expectations that
"bug"
marriage
DISTURBED REASONS FOR ADVENTURE should not be as frustrating as
and him,
mean she and
also
I
it
frequently
her.
is.
And when
I
For although husbands
say he in
our
reasons, frequently rant and rave
partly for conventional
time,
71
against the sexual ties of marriage, and believe that they absolutely
cannot put up with them, wives are not terribly different in
this respect is
and often
and act the same way. Indeed,
feel
any considerable sex difference here
husbands
probably
it
if
there
the fact
lies in
feel exceptionally frustrated
by the limitations of
marriage and also act out their frustrations
in adulterous affairs,
that
while wives feel equally frustrated but do
much
less
about
it
other
than feeling intensely deprived.
Myron
R.
didn't have
really
a poor sex
life
with his wife,
Laura. Whenever he wanted to have intercourse with her, she was
almost always willing, even night.
She would
if
she was not feeling very sexy that
also, at his request, bring
him
off in whatever
extravaginal ways he wanted, including anal relations from time to time, even though they were mildly painful
Of
all
the sex partners
least fifty before
of age
— she
Myron had
satisfying.
— and he had had
at
he married Laura when he was thirty-two years
was probably the
main reasons he had married sexually and
ever had
and hardly
seemed
best. In fact, that
her: because she
was one of the
was so acquiescent
infinitely willing to give
him
a hard penis
without giving him a hard time.
But Laura wasn't really passionately devoted to sex, as a few of the other girls he had
known had
been.
They
avidly needed his
lovemaking; they flounced around on the bed wildly
down on them;
when he went when they
they cried and screamed like banshees
were having their orgasms. tense passion in
most of
And Myron
genuinely missed this in-
his partners, including Laura,
joyed themselves sexually,
all right,
who
en-
but not by any means in that
glorious way.
So Myron insisted upon "cheating."
came
terribly upset
He knew
when he came home
that she felt hurt
he didn't really love her.
He knew
that
Laura be-
at three in the
morning.
and that she (wrongly) concluded that
He knew
that she just couldn't under-
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
72
why anyone who
Stand
received five or six perfectly good orgasms
a week with her not only felt that he had to keep looking and looking for a more impassioned partner but also had to spend quite a lot of time away from her and their children to do this
He knew that Laura would most probably take his outmuch more tranquilly if he only, as she asked him to do many times, came home before midnight when he was with another woman. But he ignored all these facts and pigheadedly inlooking.
side sex
life
sisted that he absolutely
what
must have
more must have them
is
she put up too
much
his extramarital activities,
in his
and
accustomed way; and that
if
of a fuss he would have to break up their
marriage.
He had no
intention, actually, of separating
from Laura
—
for
he knew that they had some unusually good things, including sex, in
their marriage,
children
— but
and he was quite attached to
his
two young
he childishly kept demanding exactly the kind of
outside sex that he wanted and he wouldn't brook any kind of
compromise. Myron didn't merely want or prefer kind of sexual varietism; he stubbornly dictated
he get
He
his particular
that, at all costs,
it.
got
it,
finally, at
an exorbitant price. Laura, completely fed
up with his uncompromising stance, and feeling that she couldn't take
it
any longer, withdrew from having any sex with him. She
resented
him
continually, and
was vocal and
bitter
about
it.
She
him only because she couldn't figure out what better to do with her life. Having idiotically killed the goose and in many ways she behaved like a goose who laid his remained formally married
to
—
—
golden penis,
Myron became embittered about marriage
continued to look compulsively, and for the most part
too,
and
futilely, for
enormously impassioned females.
HOSTILITY TO ONE'S SPOUSE Hostility does not stem, as
many
psychologists have erroneously
believed for several decades, from an individual's being severely
or prolongedly frustrated by someone (such as a mate or a boss)
DISTURBED REASONS FOR ADVENTURE
whom
with
he
associated.
is
It
73
from puerile de-
rather,
arises,
mandingness that he absolutely must not be frustrated. As Dr. Robert A. Harper and
I
show
A Guide
our self-help book,
in
to
Rational Living, the angry, resentful, hostile, or enraged person
self
is
emotionally disturbed individuals) forcefully telling him-
(like all
two important
things,
one of which
usually rational and the
is
other almost totally irrational. Hostility follows the
A-B-C model
of disturbance which
A
core of rational-emotive psychology. At point cant Activating event his wife by,
let
—
husband
typically, a
us say, not giving her
there
is
is
the
a signifi-
frustrates or deprives
much
affection
and
still
wanting to have sex with her whenever he happens to have a good erection.
At point
Consequence
him
out,
with him like a
and if
—
C
there
a negative or disturbed emotional
is
she feels exceptionally hostile
yells that she'll
be goddamned
and
if she'll
bawls
sulks,
ever have sex
he keeps treating her like a mere piece of ass and not
woman
he presumably loves and wants to share affection
with.
Falsely, that
A
angry.
most people (and,
alas,
many
psychologists!) conclude
causes C: that the husband's frustrating his wife
They do not stop
to think that this
is
makes her
really impossible for
several reasons: (1)
Whatever he does, he cannot possibly get
and her gut and cause her to
feel anything,
into her
whether
it
head
be anger,
sorrow, or any other emotion. For her head and her gut belong to her,
and only she can create her own
(2)
—
that
Clearly, is,
if
feelings.
a hundred husbands acted exactly the
unaffectionately
—
hundred wives, not
a
to
wives would feel similarly or equally furious. not even feel affection),
would
feel
frustrated
(for
Some
same way all
these
of them would
they would not particularly want
and of those who did
feel distinctly frustrated,
some
merely disappointed, some hurt, some mildly angry,
some overwhelmingly enraged,
et cetera. Patently, then,
be the husbands' deprivation that
is
it
cannot
truly causing the wives' anger
or resentment. (3)
Emotions, as the philosopher Epictetus showed two thou-
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
74
many outstanding psychologists (such as Magda Arnold, Rudolf Arnheim, Milton Rokeach, and Stanley
sand years ago, and as
Schacter) have
more
specifically
demonstrated
in recent years, are
almost certainly connected with, and in a large sense caused by, certain cognitive mediational processes
— which
we normally
call
thoughts, ideas, attitudes, philosophies, or values. These philoso-
phies intervene between
A
(the Activating event)
and
C
Consequence) and to a large extent may be said
tional
(the
emo-
to be the
direct cause of C.
These philosophies or Beliefs are labeled point B emotive psychology. To make herself hostile frustrating or depriving her, the wife
Belief (rB), namely: this frustrating
How
ingly!
Belief,
"How
manner!
annoying!"
I
If
first tells
unfortunate
it
is
in rational-
her husband for
at
herself a rational
that he
is
wish to hell he would act
behaving
in
less depriv-
she stayed rigorously with this rational
and went not a whit beyond
she would feel (at C) the
it,
appropriate emotional Consequence of irritation, annoyance, displeasure, disappointment, sorrow, or regret. For
(from her frame of reference or
in the light
husband
it
is
frustrating her;
joyed about
it.
Moreover,
and if
it
is
unfortunate
of her desires) that her
would be crazy
if
she
felt
over-
she feels appropriately annoyed or
disappointed, she will usually be impelled, by her negative feeling,
do something about the frustration he
to
somehow
try to
Humans, pens
is
namely:
induce him to remove
"How
So what frequently hap-
wife also has a highly irrational Belief (iB),
awful that he
stand his acting like
this!
really doesn't care for this magical,
causing her and to
it.
alas, are rarely this rational.
that the
is
me
treating
is
He
me
so frustratingly!
shouldn't try to screw
that
I
can't
me when
much. That lousy bastard!"
It
he is
utterly senseless set of Beliefs that directly creates
her anger.
For anger invariably ing
demand
this wife's
results
from a
that the world be the
childish, grandiose, whin-
way
it
indubitably
isn't.
And
demands (over and above her preferences) about her
husband's behavior are irrational because:
DISTURBED REASONS FOR ADVENTURE
It isn't
(1)
awful, horrible, or terrible that he
frustratingly.
damned
It
merely,
is
treating her so
is
and accurately viewed,
objectively
inconvenient.
She can stand
(2)
never
75
may
like
it.
his treating her this
way
— even though
she
But she won't blow up into smithereens just be-
cause he does what she doesn't, nor ever
sex with her even
will, like.
why he
(3) There's no reason whatsoever
shouldn't try to have
he really doesn't care for her that much;
if
though there are several reasons, from her standpoint, why
it
would be better that he gave her more affection along with the sex.
But the fact that
proves that therefore
would be better
it it
if
something existed never
should, ought, or must exist.
He is not a bastard for frustrating her severely, but merely a human being with many failings, who is not acting very considerately of her. To condemn him as she essentially does when (4)
she calls
him
a bastard
alize illegitimately.
—
—
for having these failings
For he has hundreds of
and cannot legitimately be rated
in toto
to overgener-
is
traits,
good and bad,
because some of them,
much to be desired. who gives serious thought to that human hostility is basically
such as his considerateness for her, leave
Any
reasonably intelligent person
the matter can fairly quickly see
caused by demandingness or Jehovahism: by the dictate that "Because
I
want you
to treat
are a perfect bastard
makes herself angry
if
at
me
in
x way, you absolutely should and
you don't!"
therefore, a deprived wife
If,
her husband because he
is
unaffectionate
and consequently determinedly refuses to have sex relations with
him and vindictively begins
to carry
on extramarital
affairs,
she
is
doing both a sane and an insane thing.
Her displeasure and her withdrawal are perfectly
sensible, in
most instances; but her anger and her vindictiveness are means of
condemning him, an fectionateness,
entire person, for his distasteful trait, unaf-
and are largely aimed
at hurting
him
rather than
helping herself. If she w^iangrily and ^^vindictively had affairs, in
order to find outside her marriage the affection she couldn't find in it,
that
would be
rational; but if she has
them mainly
to spite him,
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
76 and because she
too
is
weak
what she wants
to strive for
to urge herself
calmly and decisively
in life, she is
behaving neurotically.
Moreover, by foolishly making herself angry instead of determined, she
is
unlikely to be truly affectionate toward her husband
or any other man, and consequently will probably wind up by get-
more
ting less rather than
affection herself.
who came
In the case of Susan G.,
exactly this situation
—
that
is,
of alcohol generally under her belt affairs with
me
to
because she was
in
and with a good deal
vindictively,
— picking up men and having
them because her husband, Jim, seemed only
inter-
ested in ''screwing the living shit out of me, but only relating to
me when
penis was snuggling hotly against
his
showed her
herself enraged at Jim,
A-B-Cs that
is,
my
fanny,"
the irrational Beliefs she kept telling herself to
and then got her
of rational-emotive psychology.
D
to
go on
to
D
I
make in the
consists of Disputing
vigorously challenging and questioning one's irrational BeSusan's case our marriage counseling dialogue went
liefs (iB's). In
like this:
"What do you that
is
think you can do about your irrational Belief
causing your extreme anger
"You mean
at
your husband?"
the Belief that he shouldn't be unaffectionate to
and that he's a
rat for acting that
way when
I
want him
to
me
be more
affectionate?"
"Yes.
And
the Belief that 'Therefore I'd better spend a lot of
time and energy fixing his wagon rather than trying to get him to
be more affectionate or determinedly finding the affection outside
my
marriage.'
"Mmmm. "And set
Yes,
think.
I
I
want
"
guess that's exactly
Humans
how
don't only feel.
I
feel."
They invariably have
a
of thoughts, too, behind their feelings."
"You're probably
right.
I
do
think,
and keep
specifically con-
vincing myself, 'Imagine! After I've been so nice and helpful to
him, ever since I've
and unkind against
my
to
known him. How can he
me and
possibly be so cold
only be interested in warming his penis
behind! That louse!'
"
DISTURBED REASONS FOR ADVENTURE
how
"Yes, and can you see
77
to Dispute
and challenge that nutty
idea?" "I guess with
kind to
me and
something
'Why
and un-
can't he be so cold
interested only in sex?
Even though
why does he have
nice and helpful to him, to
like,
to
been so
I've
be equally
warm
"
me?'
"Right! If you could keep Disputing, exactly in that way, your
own
irrational convictions that he can't be, has
you and that he has
to
would immediately
to
your anger
lose
no
warm
be as nice and
— but
right to be cold as
you
you would
are,
still
you
retain
your determination to have him change his behavior or else look
You might
for affection elsewhere.
For your disturbance the
still
carry on affairs,
if
you did
but you would not carry them on in a hostile, vindictive way.
this;
way you
not the fact that you are adulterous, but
is
are going about having affairs."
"And would
I
then
automatically
become unangry
after
a
while?"
"Yes, that's one of the beautiful things about the rational-emotive
method. Not only does
it
own
anger-creating nonsense a good
to believe pretty consistently that
(or
anyone
else) to
become
help you, very quickly, to
unanxious, undepressed, or unhostile.
it
But
many isn't
if
you Dispute your
times,
and
come
really
awful for your husband
view you mainly as a piece of feminine
flesh,
and that he has the right to be unaffectionate to you even though
you heartily dislike to the point
kind of behavior, you will eventually get
this
where you
will rarely
anger yourself in the
and therefore not have to undo your anger
That takes a while; but
it
definitely
where rational-emotive psychology
And
that's
she reported,
nored
me
happens is
in the
place,
second place.
in nearly all instances
consistently employed."
what did happen with Susan G. Several weeks
"You know, you were
practically
all
utterly right!
My
last
little
husband
Sunday, and even when
— what do you know! — he snuggled up against me got to bed, his
later ig-
made a he completely overlooked them. Then
day
few affectionate overtures
we
first
I
just as
old organ went up in a minute
soon as (I
must
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
78 admit
do have quite an
I
"Well,
hardly gave
1
it
diately said to myself,
penis does!
me. Well, Since
it
can't
I
it
was the
day of
first
'he
still
my body
loves
—
way he
is!
Tough. Now, the
simply keep looking and looking until
to sleep
me and my
—
I
would have got myself
talking with you a few if
you
I
realistically accept the fact that, 'Hell
real
imme-
shit
about
problem
forever,
find
is:
why
some other
for hours about
to stew before
weeks ago. You're
really think straight
I
calmly jerked him off and
I
and stewing
instead of stewing
'that bastard,' as
even arise
body?' So
to
period.
or at least his
way
looks like he's just going to remain this
loves
my
a second thought. 'Of course,'
though he doesn't give much of a
that's the
man who went
— even
and he was ready
attractive ass!),
practically rape me, even though
right!
I
started
Anger doesn't
about someone's ways and
— but
way he
that's the
" is!'
Susan G. solved her own problem of low frustration tolerance
and consequently she prevented herself from "automati-
nicely,
cally"
making herself angry
spouses
fail to
sciously, they
do
this.
at
her husband. Innumerable other
Therefore, deliberately albeit often uncon-
keep making themselves
hostile
and
resentful,
and
thereby encourage themselves to cop out of their marital relationships by extramarital affairs.
marked a good many years in their
As Somerset Maugham
ago,
women
husbands a perfection that English
find in their butlers."
And
as Dr.
the University of Minnesota, has noted,
in
some of
psychology
the
at
main reasons
often resort to adultery are, "(1) to get
attention, (2) to get power, (3) revenge,
discouragement."
to find
only hope to
John B. Oman, a well-known
Minneapolis Methodist minister and instructor
why husbands and wives
cleverly re-
"American women expect
The second and
and
third
(4)
of
because of utter
these
reasons,
of
course, are closely related to feelings of hostility.
James A. Peterson, professor of sociology and marriage counseling at the University of Southern California in Los AngeDr.
les,
also notes that individuals frequently
cop out of
their marital
relationships and engage in adultery by refusing to take responsibility for
what
is
going wrong with their marriage and blaming the
DISTURBED REASONS FOR ADVENTURE
Other partner for these errors:
"One
79
possible answer
why
man
the
does not do something to help his wife be more innovative and
spontaneous
is
that
he long ago became a habitualized and nonstim-
He may
ulating person himself.
home by blaming bution to ennui
The point
is
is
rationalize his sex
his wife for her lacks
when
away from
in reality his contri-
just as great."
that
many spouses make themselves
terribly hos-
against their mates and then, instead of resolving this hostility
tile
by changing their
own
irrational,
Jehovian demands, use
excuse for having extramarital affairs. This
is
it
reasons for engaging in such outside activities: since they are ing with their
and
will
own
an
as
one of the worst liv-
nonsense, they are being unfair to their mates,
very probably carry their hostilities on to their future re-
lationships.
SELF-DEPRECATION
A large number of spouses are so perfectionistic in their demands on themselves, and so self-castigating when they do not live up to these demands, that they cannot bear to keep facing their mates (who are in the best positions to see their inadequacies). Because they
condemn themselves
for not being excellent
look for outside affairs in which fewer
them or where they
They
feel
will not
economic
and so on, they
providers, housekeepers, parents, sex partners,
demands
will
be made on
expect themselves to act so perfectly.
more "comfortable," at least temporarily, while having The more logical solution to their problem would be
such affairs. to
work things out
self-flagellation.
in their
marriages while learning to cease their
But rather than
try that solution, they
divert themselves into extramarital adventures
manage
to
where they some-
times feel "just great."
Carl E. Batt, using an Adlerian frame of reference, indicates that in is
modern Mexican
society, "in the case
attractive or aggressive,
tress
where the man's wife
he seeks a submissive or motherly mis-
and sexually abandons the threatening sex objects." This
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
80
same kind of running away from the arms of a "strong" wife into those of a "weak" mistress is common enough among males in the United States and elsewhere, too.
Among
females, the tendency to engage in extramarital liaisons
out of feelings of inadequacy
is
especially strong and has been
Harold Greenwald observes: "Most commonly women who get involved with men away from home do so because of quite different problems. They may feel so inadequate about themselves as wives, lovers, or companions that they fear any relationship lasting longer than one or two dates noted by several authorities.
would unmask
Dr.
inadequacy or whatever
their
it
is
they are con-
cerned about hiding." Dr. John Racy, professor of psychiatry at the University of Rochester School of Medicine, also notes that
women who engage
in extramarital (as well as premarital) affairs
frequently do so out of their dependency or dire love needs:
There are course
(at
women who
openly admit that they seek
times indiscriminately) to secure warmth.
want
inter-
What
they
and protected. But they go through the motions of intercourse as a payment, fearing (perhaps correctly) that the partner is interested only in "going all the way." This particular pattern is one that is unusually touching and confusing touching because the person concerned is often pathetically in need of love, confusing because she appears adult, sexual, promiscuous, and capable of independence. really
is
to be cuddled, held,
—
In both
husbands and wives, then, adulterous escapism, that
al-
lows a spouse temporarily to run away from his or her personal or marital
problems,
is
one of the main disturbed reasons why
spouses sometimes engage in
affairs. It
may be guessed
that hus-
bands who commit adultery because of their personal feelings of inadequacy frequently
feel that they are
business areas, and that they
incompetent
somehow have
these defects by sexual conquests; while wives as a result of their feelings of worthlessness
to
in
general or
compensate
for
who are adulterous commonly feel that
they are sexually and amatively incompetent, and that they conse-
quently have to compensate by encouraging more successful sex-
DISTURBED REASONS FOR ADVENTURE love relations outside of marriage.
what
Thomas
L.
was married and ran
better socially,
inefficient all
knows, however, cover or
try to
might prove
to a "terrific
woman"
—
household with amazing efficiency.
their
brilliant as she,
most high-level people as well as she
both
at
home and
a school ad-
and was
did,
the office. Although his wife recog-
these ineffectualities on his part, she easily forgave
them
and was content that he was responsible, considerate, a loving ther,
and an unusually good
lover. Unfortunately,
was sure that she and
their entire social
him behind
at
his back,
fa-
he couldn't ac-
cept her acceptance of him, and continually put himself down.
laughed
be
to
he, got along with people
and with some reason, that he was not as
didn't impress
nized
in this area
who made more money than
ministrator
felt,
really
mates usually
and rewarding.
interesting
He
No one
inferiority feelings philandering
overcome, and an empirical study
81
He
group despised him and
and he agreed with the image of
himself that he projected onto their image of him, namely: that he
was a no-goodnik and that sooner or out and run off with
someone
later his wife
Meanwhile, Thomas had a number of
whom
find this
affairs with other
women
he realized were just as sad sackish as he. They couldn't
measure up to terribly
his wife in almost
any way; but because they had
low estimations of themselves, because they got along
poorly in
life,
(since he really
sional
would
better.
life),
he
because they thought that he was rather
was quite bright and did felt
Then they began placement.
comfortable with them
to bore
terrific
fairly well in his profes-
—
at least for a while.
him and he would look around for a reto get some of his very normal and
Thomas managed
healthy desires for varietism and adventure filled with his extramarital sweethearts. In the main, however, he got involved with
them because he was afraid wife; he
was sure she
to
be too involved with his
really didn't
put up with a turd like
him
forever. His self-deprecation,
childish attempts to "protect" himself
friends "rejection," affairs.
were
his
"terrific"
want him and was not going from
his wife's
and
and
to his
their
major reasons for having extramarital
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
82
EGO-BOLSTERING men
men (and quite a few married women feel that they are not really women) unless they are continually "proving" that they are by new sex-love
Many
married
feel that they are
not really
—
conquests. Some, particularly males, also feel that unless they can
be seen
in
public with a string of particularly desirable sex part-
no one
ners,
them. Consequently, they steadily
will truly respect
keep looking for new lovers
conquer and have adulterous
to
fairs to bolster their (underlyingly
ual or
af-
weak) egos, rather than for sex-
companionship purposes.
Elizabeth R. was vivacious, competent, and sexy, and none of her friends and acquaintances was surprised
when she married,
she was about to graduate from college, a
tall,
as
dark, and hand-
some lawyer who seemed to be destined for an outstanding career. But Elizabeth was very surprised and could hardly believe her 'iuck." She thought she was one of the most unfeminine women alive,
what with her six-foot height, her broad shoulders, small
breasts and narrow hips. She couldn't bear to go to bed with her fiance before marriage
she was terrified
—
not because she was prudish but because
how he would
and she was sure that he would
When
it if
he saw her totally naked
they were married and he didn't at
she was built sistently
take
call the relationship off.
—
all
seem
to
mind how
and, on the contrary, kept complimenting her per-
about being "the greatest fuck" he had ever had, she
thought to herself that he was just being nice and was, for some strange reason, willing to forgive and forget about her physical in-
adequacies because he happened to like her
never did seem to cuses to herself
why
In spite of her life,
tire
in
other ways.
He
of her physically, but she kept making ex-
this
was
so.
good marriage and perfectly
satisfactory sex
Elizabeth compulsively carried on affairs with a steady series
of men. Unlike
Thomas
male partners with
L.,
whom
who
he
delighted in finding schnooky fe-
felt relatively
adequate, she consis-
DISTURBED REASONS FOR ADVENTURE highly
selected
tently
woman would have
83
men about whom
desirable
They were even
drooled.
taller,
almost any darker, and
handsomer than her husband; they followed very ''manly" pursuits were great athletes or huntsmen); and they were unabashed
(e.g.,
who
women-chasers, out acting as
Elizabeth
if
never
let
an attractive female walk by with-
they just had to get into her panties.
felt that if this
man
kind of
took her to bed and
visi-
bly demonstrated that he found her to be sexually attractive, that
he fully wanted her as a woman, she then would not feel as unfeminine and shitty as she usually
felt.
Each time she picked such a man,
with him outrageously
flirted
he whisked her off to bed, and got him to say something to
until
the effect that she
was
all
woman and
the most sexually exciting
thing he had run across in a lifetime of bedhopping, she
felt
im-
mensely relieved and worthwhile. Unfortunately, that lasted a few days at most, and the next time she viewed her shouldered body
winced
ingly
whom
in
— and
thin, big-
tall,
her full-length bathroom mirror, she despair-
thought
about the
next
full-blooded
male
she might convince that she was really, oh, yes really, a
woman. The ego-bolstering aspects of adultery have been pointed out by many authorities
in the field.
commonest motive
the
Racy
Dr. John
notes:
for intercourse in adolescent boys
prove that they are 'men.' For them, there
sire to
equation of sexual potency with power
common and
its
known
so well
is
no need
Cowan, professor of psychology out that
women
in
men who have
sex
at
the de-
is
Don Juan syndrome on
to dwell
Wayne
is
an obvious
other areas. This
in
persistence in adults as the that there
is
"Perhaps
it."
so is
Dr. Gloria
State University, points
away from home frequently
treat
an alienated fashion, as commodities:
used for reasons extrinsic to the sex objects themselves: proof of performance, to allay boredom Freedom not only .
.
.
.
.
.
involves fewer external strictures but also freedom from the use
of one's sexual performance to serve a variety of protective or narcissistic functions, inherent in
which
is
the abuse of others.
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
84
Sexual freedom hopefully would result in sexuality's becoming a part of
life,
often, sex
integrated in the individual's total functioning.
away from home
is
sex
away from
Too
self.
Dr. Robert N. Whitehurst, professor of sociology at the Univer-
of Windsor, indicates that extramarital sex
sity
cultural
flect
values
"may simply
re-
which emphasize newness,
society
this
in
achievement, and aggressiveness to gain ends of 'success.' Certainly, success
with the ladies
America." Dr.
J.
the
is
one of our achievement values
American Foundation of Religion and Psychiatry
York, reminds Infidelity in
our culture seems to occur more frequently with time of life when their own sexual appeTo forestall acceptance of their declining may seek other sexual partners in order to
at that
begins waning.
"masculinity," they
demonstrate that they
common
for
them
ual partners
who
It
is
also
New
in
us:
males and often tite
in
Herbert Manton, director of clinical services for
still
blame common for them to
will
can perform sexually.
It
is
rather
their spouses for the flagging libido. to
choose young inexperienced sex-
not be able to discern their decreasing
sexual capacities.
Although most authorities comment, as those
just
quoted do, on
the adulterous husband's tendency to find ego satisfactions false self-esteem in his extramarital affairs,
out that
women may
and
some of them point
also be prone to this kind of extramarital
motivation. Dr. John L. Schimel, associate director of the William
Alanson White chology
in
City,
glected by their spouses their
Psychoanalysis and Psy-
Institute of Psychiatry,
New York
may
take to bed with other
wounded sense of self-esteem" and
with practically everybody
is
who feel nemen to heal girl who sleeps
observes that "wives
that "the
using sexual encounters as a prop for
her self-esteem." Although Dr. Schimel appears to be a
mental and moralistic
in this regard, there
conclusions are accurate. Ego-bolstering
why spouses engage
in
affairs,
but
it
is
is
is
little
bit judg-
doubt that his
hardly the main reason surely one of the most
DISTURBED REASONS FOR ADVENTURE
common among
85
the disturbed or neurotic motives for having such
affairs.
One of the few researchers in the field who has actually asked a number of people engaged in extramarital affairs what they did and why they did it has been Morton Hunt, who reports his findThe
ings in his valuable book,
Affair.
bolstering, he notes: "Nearly half of the
viewed
indicated
the
that
On
the question of ego-
men and women
I
inter-
was a major
need for self-esteem
motivation behind their infidelity," Hunt's findings, along with the observations
clinical
show
counselors, tend to fairs for
psychologists,
psychiatrists,
and
that individuals frequently engage in af-
disturbed reasons, particularly that of ego-inflation. At
same
the
many
of
"Some of
time, as he points out,
their statements could
be interpreted as the complaints of neurotics, but others seem
more
like the expressions of
people struggling to keep or recap-
ture emotional health."
Ego-bolstering, in other words, has two distinct aspects, as
have previously noted
in this
book.
I
First, the individual desires
confidence that he or she can function well sexually or amatively; this
kind of confidence-seeking
is
quite normal and healthy. Sec-
ond, the individual wants to accept his or her
self,
and he or she
seeks this kind of acceptance, falsely, by proving that he or she
accomplished
some sex-love area
in
is
(instead of by defining himself
or herself as acceptable merely by virtue of his or her existence or aliveness).
It is
people seek the
by having
engage
first
affairs.
rule can cover als
difficult to
determine,
in individual cases,
Each instance may be
them
whether
or the second of these kinds of ego-sustenance
all.
in affairs for
But the
fact
different
remains that
and no general
many
individu-
unhealthy ego-bolstering reasons.
GENERAL ESCAPISM Most married individuals have serious enough problems in life,
at
attitudes
home,
in their
work,
in their social affairs,
to face
or in their
toward themselves. Rather than face and eventually work
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
86
it much "easier" some diverting affairs, such as those that adultery may Wives who are poor mothers or who are continually squab-
through these problems, a number of spouses find to run to offer.
bling with (and feeling abused by) their parents or in-laws can find
some bachelor's apartment.
distracting times in motel
rooms or
Husbands who won't face
their difficulties with their wives or with
in
their business associates can forget themselves, at least for
ternoon or an evening,
in
some
mistress's
Both husbands and wives who have no life,
and who refuse to work
more meaning
at finding
more than
vital
af-
absorbing interests in
major goals that would give
immerse themselves
to their days, can
an
willing arms.
adulterous
in
involvements of a promiscuous or long-term nature and almost forget the aimlessness of their existences. Extramarital affairs that
are started for these reasons themselves often tend to be meaningless
Mah
and unvital. But surely they are more interesting than
Jongg and
television!
Delia R. was a suburban housewife. She had quit college after
one year
to
marry and
raise a family.
When
her children were off
to high school, she just couldn't see herself returning to school,
then going on to graduate school to get the Ph.D. that
she
little
in
had sometimes thought about painting and decorating, but
getting.
felt that
in
biology
She dabbled a
her talents
both
in
areas were quite modest and that there was no use spending
much
time pursuing them. She couldn't think of anything else big or vital
on which
to center a
good portion of her time. She
ever, decide to take a course in to her surprise
tractive
and
young men
delight, discovered that there in the class
they would like to do with her
did,
Yoga every Saturday morning
happened
to be available
and,
were several
at-
who made no bones about what
still
very youthful-appearing body.
This sounded very interesting to her. Most of these young just
how-
on Saturday afternoon
men
— which was
generally her time for frequenting nearby shopping centers, getting
her hair done, and going to movies (which her husband abhorred
and would rarely accompany her ideally.
She could go
to the
to).
Yoga
Things therefore worked out
class in the morning, return to
DISTURBED REASONS FOR ADVENTURE
87
give her children lunch, and then go out again for her usual Satur-
day afternoon of dallying around town. Actually, she polished off the shopping quickly, often didn't get her hair
skipped the movies. This
left
done
and
at all,
her practically the entire afternoon
off for amative dalliance.
At
first,
she dated
men
only for the fun of
it
and as a
relief
from the monotony of her existence. But then she saw, whether consciously or not, that a grand passion was truly the thing to
make her
life sizzlingly
alive.
This would have been well within
why should
the normal range of sex-love varietism:
a routinized
housewife not add to her rather dull existence with a sizzling
af-
of the heart, mind, and genitals from time to time? Delia,
fair
however, was really escaping more than housewifery. Deep down, she
still
wanted very much
to
be a biologist, but she
probably wouldn't be able to get through outstandingly ple,
—
in
that she
or, really, get
through
graduate school. And, like so
many
bright peo-
she was "lazy" (meaning, she kept convincing herself that
was too hard
for her to
was
that
it
day afternoon
Ph.D.
was merely hard). So
affairs,
it
do the scholastic work that was required
to get her to her goal of getting the
truth
—
felt
and
if
if
in biology; instead, the
she could have her Satur-
she could think of them obsessively
during the week, this gave her something vital to do, and something big enough to divert her from the other big goals in
life
that
she was afraid to attempt, because of her basic fear of failure and her
unwillingness
to
work concertedly
for
what she basically
wanted.
To make matters
still
more
neurotic, the
men
with
whom
Delia
kept getting involved were not only a good ten years younger than she, in
most instances, but had their own distinct hangups. They
picked her because she was easily available and because they,
somewhat
like
her,
were afraid
to
go after what they really
woman, without a husband and children, who more permanent and more encompassing kind of re-
wanted: a younger could
make
a
lationship with them. So they helped put Delia through a great
deal of
Sturm und Drang
— which
in a
way she
ate
up and thrived
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
88
on
— and they always were breaking
ratically
er-
and badly; and her preoccupation with them and their
re-
was usually
lationship
a brooding, anxiety -filled, depression-oriented
kind of thing that kept her busy, thoughts
dates with her, being inconsid-
and otherwise treating her
erate of her, breaking off with her,
in a
As she
right,
all
but
filled
her
life
and
highly negative, almost suicide-impending way.
herself recognized after a couple of years filled with
four hectic affairs,
wound up
with
all
giving her
little
nothing but preoccupation
men who promised
her everything and
but heartache, she garnered practically in
these relationships. She had no con-
was aiming
was merely
up her when the ledge on which she was standing would suddenly give way; structive goal she
for; she
filling
time excitedly living on the edge of a precipice, wondering
and, as the years went by, any long-range, organized purpose she
might have
in
life
was becoming
and
less
less
of an achievable
reality.
Was
Delia ever cured of her compulsive, anxiety-impelled seek-
ing for extramarital affairs? Yes, a year later, subsequent to three
more
tragic relationships
But only
after she fully
ing adventurous relief herself into believing
and two suicide attempts, she
acknowledged
from marital boredom,
when
I
first
her extracurricular activities were
finally was.
that she wasn't merely seekas she
was fooling
Once much more an evasion
saw
throwing herself into purposeful, happy her original aims, got herself (after
she admitted that
her.
living, she
much
difficulty)
graduate school, and became quite absorbed
in the
of than a
went back academic
Then, as frequently happens, she ran into a professor who was years older,
widowed about
a year,
and quite
to
enrolled in
attractive
life.
five
and
at-
tracted to her.
For once, she didn't merely run off
know him
other. Ultimately, they
are
still
pen, but
had an
devoted to each other. it
to
bed with him, but got
to
well before they had anything sexually to do with each
may
affair It is
and now (eight months
well be that she will divorce her
to live with the professor.
For
later)
not clear what will finally hap-
this
husband and go
time she really
is
trying to
DISTURBED REASONS FOR ADVENTURE build a relationship and has selected
89
someone who seems
equally interested in that sort of thing. other constructive interests and
is
And
be
time she has
this
not trying to
to
up an empty
fill
with ephemeral affairs. So what was once a neurotic drive for
life
extramarital ventures has
now become an urge
involvement. Whatever happens, will
add
it
to her central existence
Drang diversion from
for self-fulfilling
can be predicted that
this affair
instead of being a Sturm
und
it.
MARITAL ESCAPISM Most marriages leave much to be desired and some are oband sterile, even though the husband and wife
viously "blah"
enjoy other aspects of their lives cational pursuits
— which
— such
as their
work or
their avo-
are rewarding and "swinging." Rather
than face the bleakness of their marriage and rather than courageously arrange for a separation or a divorce, to avoid such difficult issues
and occupy themselves,
extramarital liaisons, which at least in lives
more
a pretty
way, did his wife, Marilyn. lawyer, gave
instead, with
some ways render
many
good existence and
He was an
talks to professional groups
know-how, and wrote
articles
so,
in
It
was
fill
creatively.
their marital "relationship,"
own
which hungered
life,
attended conferences, wrote articles, and had
each week than she could
her
and books explaining some
club activities as he was with his professional
lives
their
outstanding corporation
of his creative discoveries. She was just as busy with her
talks,
prefer
tolerable.
Seymour C. had
after his
many couples
The one
women's
she, too,
gave
much
less
time
blight
on
their
which had never been good.
included just about zero sex, and went on and on mainly be-
cause both wanted to keep up pretenses rather than admitting to their
parents,
their
children,
couldn't stand each other and right
and their friends that they just
had completely
failed to pick the
mates or to do anything about achieving even a reasonably
good adjustment
to each other.
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
90 So they both stuck
heads
the sand and carried on des-
were about breaking up
just as chicken as they
None of
riages.
in
mainly with people they knew socially and who
ultory affairs,
were
their
was very
these affairs
they were with partners
who were
mar-
their
satisfying (largely because
available rather than
easily
and all of them provided just enough sex release Seymour and Marilyn an excuse for not looking at the
truly desirable) to afford
emptiness of their marriage and not doing anything about breaking
up. Since both mates are physically
it
enough
and mentally
attractive
keep getting sex offers from other unsatisfied spouses,
to
they will probably keep doing what they are doing, in a similar low-level manner, forever, or until one of
them
drops
literally
dead and "frees" the other from his or her vacuous marital existence.
Only some fortunate accident or intensive psychotherapy
(from which both are stubborn refugees)
is
break
likely to
this
heavily set pattern of marital alienation and aimlessness.
SEXUAL DISTURBANCES Sexual disturbances are rather widespread in our society particularly in the
many
form of impotence or
frigidity
—
as
shown by
research studies, such as the Kinsey and the Masters and
Johnson surveys; as shown by many those of G.
shown by
Lombard
the
Kelly,
common
own
sex.
my own; and
as
gossip and sophisticated talk of innumera-
ble groups of ordinary males ings of their
clinical presentations, such as
Donald Hastings, and
and females, particularly
Husbands and wives could
try to
in
group-
understand
the philosophic core of their sex disturbances, change the irrational
and self-defeating value systems that usually cause them,
and almost always alleviate
shown and
I
their sexual inadequacies (as
I
have
The Art and Science of Love and Dr. Robert A. Harper have indicated in A Guide to Successful Marriage).
in
But instead of trying to understand the causes of their sexual shortcomings,
many husbands and wives
follow the line of least resis-
tance, decide to live with their "incompatibility" with each other,
DISTURBED REASONS FOR ADVENTURE and seek out nonmarital partners with
91
whom
they can operate
more
comfortably and sometimes more successfully. Thus, frigid wives, instead of working out their sex problems with their husbands, sometimes pick a lover or series of lovers with
whom
somewhat
they are
less frigid or
who can more
easily
tolerate their sexual disturbances. Impotent husbands or those
are fixated
on some form of sex deviation, rather than getting
source of their difficulties and overcoming them
who
to the
in their relations
with their wives, find prostitutes, mistresses, or homosexual partners with
whom
they can remain ''comfortably" hung up. In
many
instances, in fact, the spouse of the sexually disturbed individual
severely
blamed
has been
made
for his or her anomaly, to correct this
when
little
is
or no attempt
anomaly by working sexually with
this spouse.
Roger
was not exactly homosexual, but he couldn't stand
P.
typically feminine-looking females
and only went for those who
were small, boyish-looking, had slim hips, especially those who were practically this set
taste, since
When
he
first
met Mary, she seemed
— much
to her
to
own
fill
dis-
she always hated being told that she looked just like a
young boy and
He was
titless.
of requirements almost completely
that
no
real
so delighted that she
man would probably was the
ever go for her.
closest thing to a
boy that he
could find without really being one (for he was deathly afraid that
he might be homosexual, and horrified at the thought of almost
anyone being
in that
abnormal category) that he proposed
to her
only a short time after they met. She was so delighted that at least
one man would want to have her that she eagerly went to the altar,
even though she knew that
mating
At
in
many ways he was
not her
ideal.
first,
things were not bad between
had no trouble
in
Roger and Mary, and he
having intercourse with her three or four times a
week. But then she quickly had two children and began to develop
much more matronly appearance. Her hips and her breasts enmuch to her pride and joy and she looked almost undistinguishable from any other average housewife. What
a
larged considerably
—
—
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
92
new look did to Roger's sexual appetite for her was holy murHe was revolted by the mere sight of her breasts; almost retched when they embraced and he felt their newfound bloom against his chest; soon he was unable to get or maintain an erec-
that der.
whenever he was
tion
sex
life
dropped
in
any way reminded of those breasts. Their
to practically zero.
Roger was quite conscious of what the interference with
his sex
made somewhat strenuous efforts to induce back the voluptuous tide. He tried to get her to diet
desires was, and even
Mary
to turn
her bones showed through her skin; to wear the smallest bras-
till
siere that she possibly could, to pull in her breasts;
and
to dress
To no her new
consistently in an extremely masculine (or boyish) manner.
Her heart wasn't
avail.
the least in
(for she
it
still
liked
''womanliness"). She was never the most disciplined type of per-
son anyway, so her attempts to diet came to naught. Besides, she
knew
there
was something wrong with Roger and
tish
about female breasts wasn't the best thing
him
to cherish; so she resented the fact that he
something
to
in the
world for
would not
try to
do
it.
Roger refused
Impasse.
to
go for psychological help of any
and Mary just wouldn't give up her newfound feminine form.
sort,
If
overcome
that his anti-fe-
hadn't
it
been for their two children, divorce would have
quickly ensued. But instead of trying to do something about rid-
ding himself of his loathing for the typical feminine form, Roger
decided to stay married and to seek his boyish ideal elsewhere.
It
women
is
wasn't easy, since perhaps only one out of a hundred built the
way he "naturally"
liked.
Nothing daunted, Roger
an endless series of prostitutes, bar pickups, business
met
in the
tried
women
he
course of his work, his friends' wives, strangers he en-
countered on the street
— almost anyone he could
find
who more
or less met his physical ideal. Being persistent, he sometimes suc-
ceeded
in
both his quest and his conquest, and he soon held the
world's record for screwing the largest girls.
His main aim
that record, while
in life still
seems
number of
to be
Mary has given up
flat-chested
adding and adding to
sex just about completely
DISTURBED REASONS FOR ADVENTURE
93
and has become one of the most devoted mothers on
all
Long
Is-
land.
EXCITEMENT NEEDS Where
the healthy person, as
shown
the previous chapter,
in
has a distinct desire for adventure, novelty, and some degree of
excitement
in life
and may therefore be motivated to have extra-
marital affairs, the disturbed individual frequently has an inordi-
nate need for excitation.
He
or she becomes, for various reasons,
so jaded with almost every aspect of
found only by some form of blatant parties,
that
life
enjoyment can be
seeking, such as wild
thrill
bouts of drunkenness, compulsive moving around from job
to job, or drug-taking.
One of
the
modes of excitement-seeking
emotional disturbances for extramarital affairs. will
may
take
is
that the person with
that of incessantly searching
This will not cure basic jadedness, but
sometimes give surcease from pain, from incessant worrying,
and from feelings of utter emptiness for
at least a
moderate period
of time. Such affairs are almost ideal in this respect for they not
only require looking for
new
partners, going through
many compli-
and spending time
cations to get together with these partners,
in
the encounters; they often lead to extra complications (such as
running up debts and getting into difficulties with shylocks) that themselves become exciting and diverting. Sidonie K.,
if
she were really mainly interested in having a sex-
ually satisfying lover (her
husband was perfectly satisfactory
most respects, but just wasn't interested
in
in
sex) could probably
have discreetly arranged to take an afternoon (or even an evening) or two off every week, carry
on an
were
in
meet her boyfriend
in a motel,
and safely
him for as long as she wanted. But she figured out that since her husband was practically chained to his store in the city (thirty miles from their home) and her children them,
it
affair with
school
all
day and could only get home
would be novel and exciting
if
if
she drove to get
she entertained her lover
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
94
month in her own bedroom. He, as you might exdim view of having their get-togethers in this particu-
several times a pect, took a lar locale,
way.
that
and constantly
tried to argue her out of arranging things
But she insisted that she didn't
feel
comfortable
strange surroundings and that he had to see her in her or that was
To add in
it.
in
own home,
Having no other choice, he capitulated.
to the complications, he naturally couldn't
park his car
her driveway (what might the neighbors think!); he had to
sneak into and out of her place through the back door; he sometimes literally had to hide bell
in the closet
when someone rang her
while they were together; and once one of her children be-
came
ill
at
home by
school and was driven
the assistant principal,
while she and her boyfriend were joyously chasing each other
around the house donie,
though
in the
she
nude. Boy, was that an exciting day! Si-
might
never have consciously
thrived on that kind of danger.
mantly refused ever to see her
was forced
much
to continue to see
When in
her
admitted
it,
her lover thereafter ada-
own home
him under much
again,
and she
safer circumstances,
of the pleasure of their relationship vanished and she began
to think about replacing
band who seemed
him with her next-door neighbor's hus-
to be willing, right
under
his wife's
and her hus-
band's eyes, to get into a highly risky kind of affair with her.
To Be or Not
Be
to
an Extramarital Adventurer:
That
ET US SUPPOSE
(jM
\^^
You do
solidly
you are considering having an
that
not, at least for the
your marriage; you may,
the Question!
Is
in fact,
affair.
time being, want to break up
look forward to maintaining
it
and forever. But you have some important sexual or non-
sexual urges that are definitely not being met.
Maybe your spouse who just isn't
panion
most probably sire as a
will
is
great in bed but a rotten out-of-bed
interested in the
never be.
flatworm but
is
Maybe he
same things you or she has as
much
the kindest, most loving, best
com-
are,
and
sex de-
companion
you have ever known. Anyway, something seems to be lacking
in
you or your mate, and you think that an extramarital adventure (or
two or three) would make up for
hance, in
its
own way, your
more tolerable
You
until
you decide
to
I
do
gain than to lose?
Assuming
things up? Shall
honestly discuss
end the whole thing
I
I
it
(if ever).
Do I have more to whom shall I start my desires with my mate and it
at all?
decide yes, with
make some kind of arrangement
civilized adultery; or shall
tion
something and either en-
think and think about the matter and certain important
questions keep arising: "Shall
openly
this
marital existence or at least render
and quietly do
my
I
so
we can both commit
take no chances on hysterical opposi-
extramarital thing in secret?
To what
ex-
95
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
96
tent shall
I
seek extramarital adventure
if
decide to seek
I
it
at
all?''
Questions such as these inevitably arise and have to be begged
how you might most
or answered. Let us see
sanely go about an-
swering them for yourself.
Gauging and Analyzing Your Motives. going to consider having
motives really are.
It
is
you are seriously
If
affairs, try to figure
out what your main
easy to conclude that your mate
son with a great number of fine
traits
is
a per-
and advantages, and that
therefore you have no intention of leaving and looking for another
enormous degree of sexual
partner; but that you cannot stand the
deprivation that you endure with this mate, and that therefore you
own
simply must, for your
self-preservation, look for an outside
and "healthy" reason
In considering this perfectly "sane"
affair.
for seeking extramarital relations, however, into account (1) that
you haven't even
have you
first
tried, recently, to
taken
make
it
sexually with your spouse; (2) that you have been lusting mightily for several
months
after
someone
in
your
who seems
office
sexually receptive; and (3) that you really have
along quite beautifully with very
and
tial lust
little
sex for a
probably get along easily without
will
it
be
to
managed to get number of years
again after your
ini-
for this person in your office gets relieved?
In other words: Are you being truly honest with yourself about
your reasons for having an outside affair? Are you actually that deprived sexually? Aren't you mainly going for the short-range pleasure of making
it
enjoyably with the person in your office and
using that as a rationalization for the "fact" that you cannot any longer enjoy sex with your mate and that you absolutely "need" satisfaction elsewhere?
Not
that the urge to have
motive.
What
ment? Don't be your
office
immediate pleasure
are you living for, after in the least apologetic
who appears
all,
about
to be attracted to
if
the sensual gratification
an invidious
you may
that! If the
you
delicious individual you are likely to meet years;
is
but some kind of enjoy-
in
is
person
really the
the
in
most
next twenty
get with this person
is
— TO BE OR NOT TO BE AN ADVENTURER
97
managed
the thing you've truly craved and have never
now;
to
if
"physical"; is
up
getting into a relationship with this individual will pro-
—
vide ecstatic diversions of several kinds
person
to get
if it
"spiritual" as well as
seems pretty certain that having an
affair with this
not likely seriously to disrupt the other satisfactions of
your existence
— such
as those
you receive with your
coworkers, and your family members; erations are true, then
maybe you'd
thing
is:
your
better try to get this affair
going and take some of the risks involved
The main
friends,
these kinds of consid-
if all
in establishing
try not to fool yourself!
Try not
it.
to convince
yourself that you powerfully crave emotional rapport or spiritual
sustenance from the person with
whom you
are contemplating
having an affair when, to be honest about
it, you simply lust after immense boobs or his gigantic jocker. Conversely, try not to snow yourself into believing that you crave only your potential
her
partner's hot
little
body when you are
accepting relationship that you find
really longing for a
warm,
somewhat lacking with your
mate.
Whatever your goals are extramaritally, there is no reason to be to avoid acknowledging them to yourself, to
ashamed of them and
your possible partner, or (sometimes) to your mate. interested in outside of your marriage
deuce
is
wrong with
is
a
good
Such a goal may be
that?
you are what the
If all
fuck,
"trivial";
it
hardly be worth taking a lot of time and effort to achieve;
you
get
But
it
is
into various kinds of difficulties;
not shameful!
your humanness. in to this desire;
It is
You may
may be
a legitimate part of your desiring, of
— here
if
you give
it.
yourself for having certain extramarital
urges later in this chapter.
and reemphasize
may may
unachievable.
act idiotically, sometimes,
but you are hardly a nut for having
More about defaming
as
it
it
is
The main point I want to emphasize make yourself as fully conscious
that to
you can of your basic motives for extramarital relations
highly desirable before
Try not to pretend to yourself that your "real" motive it is
is
you decide whether or not to have them. is
A
when
actually Z.
How do
you gauge what your basic purposes are? By honest.
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
98
You seem
persistent self-questioning.
sonably okay but
still
to find your marriage rea-
and you find
distinctly lacking in excitement
yourself contemplating an affair with, say, a neighbor.
"Did
yourself:
I
ticed this neighbor
boring because
I
making eyes
want to
extramarital venture?
my
find
Am
me?
at
I
make
more
it
interesting?
so interested in having an affair with this neighbor
weren't making
lowing
me
self
I
if
it
me
so easy for
to
got rejected?
Is
it
me from
my
I
be
he or she
make advances and thereby alhard time I would give my-
really
my economic it
be that
hassles with I
want an
my
affair
looking at these hassles, instead of trying to do
something to solve them? part of
Would if
to avoid the exceptionally
mate that are bothering me, and could to divert
I
my marriage excuse my possible
finding
order to
so, in
it
Am
ask
no-
possibly trying to escape working at
I
marital relationship, to
You
marriage so unexciting before
truly find the
my
Is
dissatisfaction with
my
marriage
general negative feeling about myself, rather than a di-
rect result of the marital relationship?"
You can
ask yourself
of questions like these, to try to de-
lots
termine what are your real motives for contemplating having an affair.
may
Not
that
you
will always, just
immediately come up with the
tions,
well
come up with few
if
because you ask these quesright, insightful answers.
You
any clearcut answers. Or you may
discover "answers" that you later realize are pure fictions or rationalizations.
Looking honestly
ing your motives for adultery
whether or not to have an
is
into
no
affair.
your
own
heart and question-
surefire solution to the issue of
But
this
kind of self-querying
can often be instructive and useful. Dealing with Feelings of Shame and Guilt. Back to the issue we a few paragraphs ago: Suppose you discover what some of
left
your real motives for having an yourself for having such motives.
affair are
What can you do then? your shame and
Answer: Immediately undo
all
Am
certainly am.
I
serious about this?
I
and you cannot stand
ciples of rational-emotive psychology, all
guilt!
According
—
yes,
all
to the prin-
—
feelings of
TO BE OR NOT TO BE AN ADVENTURER
shame,
humiliation, embarrassment, and self-downing are
guilt,
Because shame and
legitimate.
one of which
And
sane.
99
is
il-
of two basic beliefs,
guilt arise out
often sane and the other of which
is
invariably in-
you recognize, deal with, and eliminate the
as soon as
insane belief, your guilt immediately vanishes.
Let
me
You
give you a typical example.
tionally obsessed with this
member
are, let us say,
of the other sex with
you have some kind of business dealing
(the
excep-
whom who
architect
is
building you a house, for instance, or the department store buyer
who comes to your office new products). You know and
in a
that he or she
while to look at your
by no means as bright
is
your mate and you suspect that
solid as
bed with
every once
person you would quickly
this
tire
if
you ever went
to
of him or her because,
although unusual physical attractiveness exists, you realize that there
is
much substance behind
not too
— what Activating event — you
At point A, then call the
it.
we
rational-emotive psychology
in
are in contact with this potential
extramarital partner and are thinking about having an affair with
him or
At point C, the emotional Consequence of what you feel very guilty.
her.
is
transpiring at A,
Being prone,
like
most humans,
what
tious conclusions about tell
yourself:
because lust
"Because
am
I
is
in
your
life,
or supersti-
you tend
it,
at
C,
A
to
A, and
must be the cause of C.
My
guilty."
arrant hogwash.
ing event, at point A, in itself affect
person you
make magical
to
happening
lust after this attractive person, at
guilty about
makes me
This
I
is
is
Why?
Because,
partly outside
first
of
all,
the Activat-
you and could not possibly
anything inside you. For the attractiveness of the
lust after is partly
an external happening, and
how can
an external occurrence (other than a physical blow that directly
impinges on your flesh) Second, point
A
it
is
make you
feel anything, including guilty?
obviously your reaction to what
that affects you,
is
and not the occurrence
transpiring at itself.
For
if
a
hundred people met the same attractive member of the other sex after
whom you
lust,
only a certain
number of them would
(a)
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
100
keep thinking about she objectively
is
this person,
more
and,
A
powerfully for their thoughts. ple
no matter how
attractive he or
condemn themselves
to the point, (b)
good many of these hundred peo-
would hardly obsess themselves about
this attractive person;
most of those who did so would probably never berate
and
themselves doing.
— and
make themselves
thereby
consequently cannot be point
It
guilty
A — this
and your thoughts about him or her
tiveness
—
you are
as
person's attrac-
—
makes you
that
guilty.
From where,
your Belief system about what your
cisely,
guilt
which generally
being obsessed with is
in
its
something
is
life. I
wish
I
I
is
hardly the
am making
this
were behaving differently and
proper perspective!"
of the other sex with
(c) is frustrating
into a
moderate
appropriate because there
is
whom you
you rigorously
and annoying; and
is
you
will
ring in your
that
I
am
(d)
would preferably be turned
an overwhelming fixation.
annoying
if
it is
better
if
If
you be-
you continue the obses-
be making a sane conclusion about what
is
occur-
point A, and you will feel appropriately sorry,
regretful, disappointed,
irrational
it is
is
has distinct disadvantages;
stick with the conclusion that
life, at
The insane
have business contacts
(b)
interest rather than
come unobsessed and
that
my
do business. Even
annoying that
an overreaction on your part;
sion,
I
empirical, observable evidence that your obsession with the
member (a)
like this: "I don't like
whom
is
your rational Be-
is
How
This sane or rational Belief (rB)
some
B
indubitably attractive to me, that
attractiveness so important! it
A. Or, more pre-
at
of which, as noted above, part of
first
person with
this
only thing that counts in
putting
happening
A — one
sane and the other insane. The
though he or she
is
stems from two important things that you are
convincing yourself about
lief (rB),
from B:
then, does your guilt spring? Obviously
and frustrated.
part of your Belief system,
Beliefs (iB's),
obsessed!
I
point B,
at
which are something
like:
is
your
''How awful
shouldn't be so thoroughly immersed in
thinking about this other person!
What an
idiot
I
am
for
making
TO BE OR NOT TO BE AN ADVENTURER his or her attractiveness so important!
for
behaving
This (a)
set
It
I
101
should be utterly
in this stupid fashion!"
of Beliefs
is
utterly irrational because:
not awful (awe-full) that you are obssessed;
is
damned
most inconvenient or disadvantageous; and there
is
it
at
nothing truly
is
horrible or terrible (except by arbitrary self-definition) about your
inconveniencing yourself in this manner.
There
(b)
is
no reason why you absolutely shouldn't be so
thoroughly immersed
in
thinking about this other person, although
there are several reasons
why
would be better
it
you were
if
not.
Shoulds and shouldn'ts are arbitrary, absolute rules of the universe (or of
really
some God) that you foolishly invent in your head; they have no objective existence. It would be betters can be em-
pirically
and
You
(c)
logically verified.
making the
are not an idiot for
other person so important; that
You
who
are at worst a person
idiotically.
Tomorrow
is
attractiveness of this
an arrant overgeneralization.
right
now
or the next day you
behaving stupidly or
is
may
behaving
start
less
stupidly in this respect.
Even
(d)
if
you are acting
in a
stupid fashion,
why should you
be utterly damned, or put into some kind of hell for so behaving?
Your stupid behavior
will itself
ing.
Why, over and above
fate
go out of
its
this,
be somewhat intrinsically penalizshould you go out of your way (or
Hades? What theo-
way)
to roast
guilt,
embarrassment, humiliation, or self-down-
you eternally
in
logical drivel!
Your shame, ing that
you
feel (at point
C) about your obsession
does not truly arise from that obsession.
It
your arbitrary and absolutistic self-castigations
and
if
arises, (at
(at
point A)
rather,
point B).
from
When
you tone down or eliminate these self-downings, you
will
immediately (so says the theory of rational-emotive psychology) begin to feel
unashamed and
well
sorrowful and disappointed.
If
still
feel
unguilty, even though
you may very
you are wise, therefore, you'd better go on to point D, which
consists of Disputing (challenging or questioning)
your irrational
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
102
Beliefs (iB's) at point B.
How
about is
member
this
the evidence
that
make
foolishly
that
it
awful that
am
I
obsessed
find attractive?
I
Where
shouldn't be so thoroughly immersed in
I
What
the proof that
is
damned
behaving
for
I
am
important?
his or her attractiveness
should be utterly
I
is
whom
of the other sex
thinking about him or her? I
can you do this? By vigorously and
''Why
persistently asking yourself,
an idiot
Who
if
says
in this stupid fash-
ion?"
you
If
own
actively,
irrational
achieve a
new
you
to say,
vigorously, persistently keep Disputing your
Beliefs,
you
come
will truly
wind up
will
Effect. This Effect
first
is,
to believe that
point
at
of it
all, is
E
—
that
is,
cognitive. That
is
not awful to be ob-
sessed and that there's no reason you shouldn't be; that you are
way you do; and that there is no why you should be punished for your silly behavior. Sec-
not a total idiot for acting the
reason
ond, you will have a behavioral Effect: you will lose your feelings of shame and guilt and feel only displeased or disappointed with
your behavior. Or,
in
other words, you will dislike what you are
doing and not yourself for doing therefore,
If,
you
feel guilty,
it.
ashamed, depressed, or otherwise
upset about your attraction to another person and your considering having an affair (at point A), quickly try to go after your guilt.
See what you are rationally telling yourself
(at
point B) to
yourself displeased and irrationally telling yourself to self guilty.
fect
make your-
Rigorously separate these two Beliefs; dispute your
rational Beliefs (iB's) persistently
make
make
sure that you arrive at a
ir-
and vehemently (point D), and
new philosophic and emotional
Ef-
(point E). Then, when you are no longer guilty about con-
sidering an affair, you will have a
able to
make
a
good decision about
much
better chance of being
it.
To Be or Not to Be. Let us assume that you are beginning to face your main motives about having an extramarital adventure and unashamedly a decision.
to accept these motives.
Now, how
shall
you make
it?
You
still
have to make
TO BE OR NOT TO BE AN ADVENTURER
Basically, along the
sion in your less
life:
same
lines that
103
you make any major deci-
namely, by use of a hedonistic calculus. For un-
you quite honestly and openly
figure out
some unabashed hedonistic make wise decisions.
the light of
unlikely to
Let us get a few things straight,
what paths
Human
first.
to take in
you are very
principle,
beings frequently
run their lives by myths and superstitions rather than by there are
some of
some hard-headed data they could use
the hard-headed realities of
You have humans may be
Fact 1: tually,
life
facts.
instead.
But
And
are these:
a distinctly time-limited existence. Evenable to live for a hundred, five hundred, a
thousand years, or even forever. But not right now! Practically
all
of them die by their seventies or eighties. You, too, are distinctly mortal.
Fact 2:
There
is
not an iota of evidence for any kind of after-
or conscious existence after death.
life
People, largely because
they refuse to face reality, keep looking for proof of immortality;
but
it is
almost certain (and
doesn't exist
and that they
at least exceptionally
will
never find
it.
probable) that
Even
kinds of immortality that have been hypothesized
the various
— such
which many devotees of Eastern religions tend to believe constructed in such a fashion that the "you"
who
are presumably transmigrated into your
new
one.
memory whatever of this previous existence, what in "you" can we really say that "you" immortally are?! Fact 3: alive unless
stead, live
as that in
—
are
reincarnated
is
does not remember anything about your previous
it
life
when you
Without any hell
kind of a
There is no real point in becoming and remaining you are doing more than just existing; and unless, in-
you are
really enjoying
your existence.
You do
not want to
only for the sake of living but for the sake of happy living,
and you'd therefore better do something about striving for a con-
same time, a reasonably enjoyable life. Though you will definitely die, you also, in
tinued, but at the
Fact 4: bility,
all
proba-
won't die today or tomorrow. Usually, you will live for sev-
enty years or so. This
means
that the satisfaction, happiness, or
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
104
enjoyment you
strive
had better come under the rubric of
for
You
long-range instead of short-range hedonism. live
want
definitely
to
today and have a ball; but you also want to live tomorrow and
continue to have a
ball. If the
overeating,
heavily
mode
can't
you arrange
is
to
and now and the
Some
live
today
—
—
say,
highly
is
morrow comes, who needs
it?
get your fair share of gratifications
to
today and also get a good
arrangement
which you
you from having much of a tomorrow or from
likely to prevent
being healthy and joyous when that
Why
in
and overdrinking
oversmoking,
many more
later?
To
strive for
such an
be devoted to long-range hedonism, to the here
future.
of the main facts of
then,
life,
would encourage you
to
conclude that you'd better survive, you'd better survive happily,
and that you'd better exert a certain amount of in
order for you to survive happily
volve hedonism, and there
is
being a frank hedonist. In
fact, if
donic,
would tend
I
emotional health.
If
to
nothing
wonder
Back see,
shameful about
you are anhedonic or anti-he-
you are not here
to the question of
in the least
for,
whether
for
some kind of
satisfaction
anyway?
to
be or not to be extramari-
adventurous. This can be sensibly answered, as far as
mainly
in
can
I
terms of a frank and honest hedonistic calculus.
This simply means: fair in
now
conclusions in-
seriously about the state of your
and advantage, what are you here
tally
self-discipline
later. All these
Is
it
worth
it?
What's the cost of having an
terms of your chief immediate goals (such as having a
af-
rip-
roaring sex or love encounter) and of your main general and future goals (such as retaining the financial, amative, security that
you have enjoyed)? Granting
that
and familial
hopping
into
bed
with your next-door neighbor or business associate would provide
immediate excitement and experiencing, what are the long-run sults likely to
be (especially
if
re-
and when your adultery becomes
known!)?
James Francis O'F. and John Jay M. were both mid-fortyish businessmen who were enormously attracted to their mid-twentyish secretaries. They knew that one easily arranged out-of-town confer-
TO BE OR NOT TO BE AN ADVENTURER
women
ence, in the course of which these
pany them, would break the
105
"had"
just
accom-
to
and be a prelude for a long
ice
series
of subsequent sexually oriented "conferences," "board meetings," "sales trips," et cetera.
But James Francis adored
was a devoted rose-grower, and kept thinking significant additions to his house,
swimming
in
his
have lived out of a suitcase as
and
his
just as easily
substantial
his
in
life,
terms of making
his land, his library,
John Jay, on the other hand, could
pool.
home
Long
Island
dwelling; and he frankly thought (at least to himself) that his three
teenage children were mainly a royal pain
in the ass.
After due cogitation, James Francis stopped himself from making any arrangements to take his secretary out of town,
still
qui-
her and almost always thought of her vivacious mouth and slim hips when he was dutifully having sex with his wife, and was both sorry and relieved when he learned, a few
etly lusted after
months ried
later, that
and
live a
concluded, "Fuck
tation,
get caught,
I'll
and schemed the
first
to get
mar-
it!
What do
I
really
have to lose?
If
we
my family and maybe live in a my secretary." He nicely plotted
probably just leave
small apartment in the city with
woman and
company
she was going to leave the
thousand miles away. John Jay, after similar cogi-
first
felt that
in
a long series of infidelities with this
he'd never had
time in years, his blasted
home
it
life
so
good and
was a
that, for the
little less
than intol-
erable.
So
you are considering extramarital adventure, honestly ask
if
yourself: "Is
it
worth
it?
What
probable disadvantages? Will ing
I
work
do, out;
my mate to
are the advantages really enjoy
it
— and —
today
the very
and, assum-
am I likely to still want it tomorrow? Suppose it doesn't how can I best get out of it? What are the chances of
actually discovering
result
I
if
that
what
is
discovery happens?
going on? and what
Can
I,
in
is
likely
terms of time,
money, energy, and other such important considerations, truly
af-
ford it?"
Ask tions.
yourself,
Do,
if
and perhaps keep asking yourself, these ques-
you can, a
little
practical research.
What
usually hap-
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
106
pens when other people
like
extramarital adventuring?
Would your
Are you really much different from them? What do your best friends (if you can safely talk to them about it) think of your making out well in your and horrified
if
you have
affairs?
children really be shocked
they discovered what you were doing?
Is
it
possi-
ble that, in spite of his or her seemingly ultraconventional stance,
your mate would actually accept your open adultery or would con-
done
if
it
he or she eventually discovered
ness associates likely to take
it? Is
it?
the person
How
are your busi-
you are considering
having the affair with truly mature and stable enough to play the extramarital
game with equanimity and
terribly upset (and
from becoming
to refrain
perhaps letting everyone know what you are
doing!)?
Be
practical! If
you are considering going into a new business,
buying a house, having another child, exchanging your car for a
new
one, or
making other important
you would nor-
decisions,
mally give a great deal of sober thought to the pros and cons
Why
volved.
should deciding whether or not to have an affair be
given less consideration? Virtually everything you do in
advantages ties
in-
— and
disadvantages.
Why
life
has
not consider these possibili-
before you actually plunge?
Shall
noted
in
You Be Honest with Your Spouse? The ideal affair, as I Sex Without Guilt a good many years ago, is one where
you can honestly and openly engage
in
it,
and then have
tell it
your spouse that you are about to
with his or her
way, you don't have to make up about being caught, can have
stories,
maximum
full
consent. In this
do not have
to
worry
truthfulness with your
mate and your extramarital partners, can arrange for the most convenient times to be away from home, engage
in
a
minimum
of
"disloyalty," give your mate equal rights and time to have any affairs that
he or she wants to have, sometimes manage to have
more intimate
relations than ever with your wife or husband,
and
otherwise gain unusual advantages and relatively few inconveniences. So
if
you are thinking seriously of approaching your mate
.
TO BE OR NOT TO BE AN ADVENTURER
107
strictly on the up and up, without any lies means consider doing so and think carefully about how you might sell him or her on the idea of such an above-
about having an affair or cavilings, by
all
board adulterous arrangement. however,
Consider,
disadvantages
the
that
when you openly broach adultery. For example: 1 You may be peremptorily turned down. not fatal, all,
since you need not
feel unjustly
you probably did lead your mate
may
materialize
This, of course,
is
deprived or angry (after
you would be
to believe that
completely faithful when you originally married); and, after being refused, tery.
you
can usually go quietly and commit secret adul-
However, your spouse may then be duly suspicious, and he
or she
may remain anxious and
tually carry 2.
still
on an
insecure whether or not you ac-
affair.
Your honesty may help ruin a marriage
wasn't the greatest in the world but really wasn't
Knowing now
up
that,
all
to
now,
that bad.
you are not content to be monogamous, your mate may think you a louse, fall out of love with you completely, that
dry up sexually, start frantically looking around for a
nent partner
who
is
friends, neighbors,
more
and
new perma-
inclined to be totally faithful, let your
relatives
know what
a "horrible" thing
you
proposed, or otherwise behave deplorably. If these things are quite likely to
happen,
is it
wise for you to be exceptionally honest with
him or her? 3.
Some
people, even though they do their best to try to accept
sexual honesty on the part of their mates, and even though they not in the least
become nasty
yet able to take
it.
Harry
J.,
nouncement
for example, that she
or vindictive about
seemed
it,
do
are just not as
to take calmly his wife's an-
had a lover and agreed that
it
was not any
reason for them to break up their marriage or to act any differently
toward each other than they had done before. But he kept
thinking that she was in her lover's arms whenever she was out of the house for only a
few minutes. He was sure that her inamorato
was much better
bed than himself (even though
in
this
was not
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
108
and he berated himself mercilessly for being such
true),
He became
partner.
a
poor
so obsessed about his wife's affair that he
paid less attention to his work and consequently got into constant fights with his partner.
home
the
that his
He
acted so anxious and depressed around
two children began
to
worry about him and
to
ask what was wrong with daddy. In cases like this,
you mate actual
where you think there
become
will
infidelity,
the question
black truth? Certainly
is
a
good chance that
severely disturbed about your possible or
it's
isn't
is:
a white
often better to
tell
lie
better than a
someone
the truth
about his homeliness, her lung cancer, or his wife's enjoying sex with other
mean
men
far
more than she does with him. But often doesn't
usually or always. Not everyone takes the truth in stride; in-
human
deed, perhaps only a minority of
beings do. Into which
segment of the human population do you place your mate respect? Before you open your
have an tion
and
4.
in
affair, don't
in this
mouth about your determination
you think you'd better ask yourself
to
this ques-
act accordingly?
Honest adultery-permitting arrangements often work better
theory than in practice. Lazlo
spent an entire year talking his
S.
wife into agreeing that they both could have one night a week off
from
their
marriage
in
order to look for and have relations with
other partners. She finally consented; and she stayed
Tuesdays with
their three-year-old son while he stayed
home on home on
Thursdays, and gave her the same kind of night off that she was giving
him on Tuesdays.
The trouble was consequently
the females he tried to have affairs with
was married and tended with him, his
men
to take a
she wanted to date were not in the least concerned about her
being legally tied to Lazlo; it,
was honestly adulterous, and
that while he
knew he dim view of getting involved wife was by no means similarly handicapped. The
all
since that
meant
in fact,
many
of them seemed to prefer
that she probably, wouldn't be interested in
marrying them! So Lazlo was getting practically nowhere outside affairs,
in
spite of his
wife's
in his
acceptance of his having
TO BE OR NOT TO BE AN ADVENTURER
109
them, while she was having the best sexual ball she ever had her
life.
in
This was by no means the way Lazlo had planned things,
and he soon began
to take a
much more
negative attitude toward
having an open and honest arrangement.
For many reasons such as
these, honesty
may
not be absolutely
the best policy in conducting your extramarital ventures. If you,
your mate, and your community can take that kind of honesty,
But
great!
if
some or
all
of you cannot, discretion can
better part of valor. Consider the situation
when you engage
you are
still
be the be in
likely to
aboveboard, civilized adultery; and guide
in
yourself in accordance with this situation and not merely in regard to
some Utopian
A
ideal.
confirmatory view of the lack of wisdom of being totally
honest with your mate in regard to your potential or actual delities
is
found
in the
infi-
book by George R. Bach and Peter Wyden,
The Intimate Enemy: Transparency must be tempered with
infinite tact in cases
sexual disloyalty, at least in most marriages. Over the years
of
we
found that only about 10 per cent of our trainee couples are able to live with total honesty in this delicate area.
covering up
infidelities,
then,
may become
The
act of
an act of love and
save the partner from the indignity of snooping and playing disattorney.
trict
At
who "know but
least this strategy
is
necessary for partners
don't want to know." For them, silence saves
them from sanctioning deception ('T don't want him to know that I know"). These loyalists want to look away, and one should not argue with them. For them it is a case of too much realism being too much of a good thing. Other authorities tend to agree that silence may often be golden
when one mate other
Winn,
is
is
engaged
an extramarital adventure and the
clinical professor of psychiatry at
cal Center, asks the
infidelity?" is
in
too vulnerable to be able to accept this affair. Dr. Harold
Temple University Medi-
question "Should a husband or wife confess
and answers: "In general, the response
'No.' " Dr.
Winn
to this question
points out that confession of this sort
may
well
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
110 relieve the guilt of the adulterer, but
other partner, and
may
may
not be taken well by the
actually be an act of conscious or uncon-
scious hostility against this partner. Dr. Jessie Bernard points out that
most "affairs" that are entered after marriage are
tasies in the
head of the spouse who engages
really fan-
them, and that
in
it is
usually unwise to confess these fantasies or the actual adventures to
which they may ultimately
lead.
Carleton B. Broderick, professor of family relations at Pennsylvania State University, comments:
Like any other remedy, confession of premarital or extramarital
...
affairs to a I
spouse
is
only helpful under certain conditions
have cases where such a confession
set marital
therapy
back several weeks and at least two instances where it disrupted the marriage completely. Indeed, the potential for damage is so real that 1 have become a conservative on this issue There is no simple rule of thumb that can govern all cases, but experi.
.
.
ence indicates that a conservative attitude toward confession
is
well justified.
Duke Uni-
Dr. Charles E. Llewellyn, professor of psychiatry at versity
Medical Center, adds his view:
Should a husband or wife confess
An
infidelity?
informal poll
of friends, secretaries, colleagues, and students yielded a unani-
mous "No," but many elaborated
their
answers
agree with the general statement, "No."
husband or wife should not confess he or she strongly feels
it
...
in
In
some form.
my
infidelity to the
necessary. Further,
I
I
opinion, a
other unless
recommend
that
the involved partner should discuss the situation with a physician, a marriage counselor, or
someone who
is
qualified to un-
derstand and work with the complexities of the situation and
meaning
to the potential confessor, to the spouse,
and
its
to the
marriage. Dr.
O. Spurgeon English, professor of psychiatry
University School of Medicine, strongly holds that
it
at is
Temple
often un-
wise for spouses to confess infidelity to each other, at least in this present benighted day and age:
TO BE OR NOT TO BE AN ADVENTURER
I
don't object to the role of a
111
may sound shocking
liar. It
for
me to say that, but I say it with this in mind: I think most great men and women have died with many secrets in their hearts that they couldn't share with anybody.
going to
live
and be of
and
social
live importantly,
I
think that
if
people are
occupy important positions
value they just can't share everything with
everybody. After devoting considerable thought and study to the problem of
having or not having ity
affairs,
Morton Hunt agrees with the major-
view that secrecy or discretion about such affairs
is
often very
advisable:
For the fagade of fidelity is immensely important to the ego and image of the deceived spouse: The same wife who will quietly live with suspicions for years may be either crushed or enraged if her husband openly admits his infidelities, and the wife who does know about and tolerate discreet infidelity may sue for all she can get if her husband grows careless. Which is why one veteran adulterer said, concerning the confrontation scene, "Deny! Lie! Say anything. She'll believe you because she wants to!" and another said, "Never admit a thing, but if you have to, tell him the least you possibly can. Resist the temptation to make a clean breast of it." Even a high-ranking clergyman agrees: Bishop Pike feels that where two lovers have decided an affair is justifiable, they may have an obligation to lie about it for the good of others. "Once a primary ethical decision has been made a particular way," he writes, "more often than not secondary ethical responsibilities (i.e., secrecy and deception) are ento the public
tailed."
The Choice of a Partner. Maybe marriages are not usually in heaven, but extramarital affairs alas usually are. That
— —
made is
by pure accident, and usually that of propinquity, two
to say,
people meet, one or both of
whom
are legally mated, and experi-
ence some degree of heavenly excitement. this
way, they will
Maybe
they've
known
kind of excitement before, or maybe they never have. Any-
last
feel
it
now
— and
practically forever.
falsely believe, in
most cases, that
Before they hardly
know what
it
has
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
112
happened, they are having lunch, phoning each other, and soon rolling beneath the coverlets together. this
Is
good? Not necessarily! One of the main reasons why
marriages are made so quickly and broken later
A
closely tied to propinquity. in
little
common
that they are so
is
male and a female have relatively
with each other, their sexual ideas and desires
are light years apart, and they really don't particularly care for
one another. But they keep meeting
in the
same
office, or in the
elevator of their apartment building, or on the bus going to work.
And
know each
because they get to
other and are less uneasy with
that kind of familiarity than they are in
new
pletely
emphasize
—
their
usually the
few points
woman
that unbreakable
then they
meeting and dating com-
people, they forget about their basic differences and
—
is
in
common.
Especially
if
one of them
pretty desperate for marriage
bachelorhood rears
somehow manage
its
and
feels
ugly head in the offing;
some degree of intimacy,
to gain
in-
cluding sexual intimacy, and wind up taking a mutual trip to city hall.
So
it
is
with affairs, too. Propinquity and immediate comfort
are the two
main reasons
high percentage of cases.
you
settle
for
this
kind
that induce lovers to get together in a
The question becomes, of easy-to-get-into
quently, alas, you don't have too
many
therefore: should
Fre-
relationship?
other choices. Melvin B.,
for example, wasn't terribly suspicious of his wife, Sue, but he did
know
her exact whereabouts almost
all
the time. Either she
taking care of their four-year-old daughter, or, at
when
the child
was
was
nursery school, she was serving as a part-time bookkeeper
in
the office of one of their oldest friends, Saul D. Theoretically, she
could have taken mornings off from work and had an affair on the side.
But since he called her regularly
ways there when she was supposed est suspicion of her
at
her office and she was
to be, he never
had the
al-
slight-
being unfaithful, even though he knew that he
no longer desired her sexually and had a hard time accurately, a soft time
—
—
or,
more
getting himself to have intercourse with
her more than once every month or two.
TO BE OR NOT TO BE AN ADVENTURER
who
Sue,
liked her married
but
life
113
felt that
she just couldn't
stand the state of near-abstinence that Melvin imposed on her,
would have gladly screwed the Fuller Brush man or any other likely candidate ble,
however,
she was there.
who came
in
was rather impossi-
to her door. This
view of her child's presence
at
home whenever
What with his prying curiosity and big mouth, Melknown about her affairs immediately. The only
vin would have
candidate she could think
likely
though he was past
had
his
his son
sixty, felt
of,
much
therefore,
like a father
own trepidation about his wife and who worked in the business) finding
was Saul
— even
toward her, and
children (especially
out what was really
going on behind the locked door of his office when he was supposedly closeted with Sue in an important business conference.
The odds were against Sue, but she persisted. She spent more money on sexy perfumes and low-cut bras that year than she had ever spent in her previous single
life.
She talked sexily
in front
of
up against him on every possible occasion,
Saul, kept brushing
and stopped wearing underthings beneath her exceptionally short skirts.
guilt
Although he did
about his
own
his best to resist
— — he
largely because of his
wife and ner husband
finally
succumbed.
Their "business" conferences became longer and more frequent,
and yet she was always available to answer the phone
husband called
in the
in case
her
midst of one of them.
The main point of under very limiting and
this case difficult
is
that Sue
was doing her best
circumstances: she really had very
little
leeway to have the kind of affair with the kind of lover she
truly
wanted. So she consciously compromised, as reasonable peo-
ple often will.
But compromise
is
by no means always sensible. Sue could
have, instead of carrying insisted that her
on her surreptitious
affair with Saul, (1)
husband give her more freedom
— or
else!
(2)
looked for another part-time job that would offer her better sexlove opportunities, (3) broken ious other alternatives.
—
up her marriage, or
(4) tried var-
The one she did choose was not too bad would soon be
particularly since she told herself that her child
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
114
old enough to give her considerably
other people, like Sue,
who
more freedom. But too many
crave extramarital adventures only
think of having them within the narrow confines of what
is
fairly
easily available.
Marion in
T.,
who happened
to be a close friend of Sue's
and was
a somewhat similarly restricted situation with her husband,
solved her problem quite differently. Even though she also had a
young
child, she deliberately took a full-time job selling printing
to businessmen,
many
of
whom
were attractive and more than
willing to have affairs. She used her salary to pay for a full-time
maid
to take care of her child
And
during the day.
with one of her single employed female friends to her apartment whenever Marion wanted to use
it
she arranged
make
available
during the morn-
ing or afternoon. She usually kept three or four steady lovers
her regular string and was exceptionally satisfied with her
even though her sex relations with her husband were
on
life,
(like Sue's)
minimal and she would have been bored to tears following only housewifely and motherly pursuits.
The point
is,
What do you
then:
tramarital adventure and what
You
are not Sue and
self.
Do
is
really
the best
want
way
in the
that
way of
you can
ex-
find it?
you are not Marion; you can be only your-
your desires outside the home mainly run to glorious sex,
romantic passion, genuine affection, great conversation, or what?
Give
this
matter some thought and experimentation.
whether you want mainly tional affair, or search for
when you
think you
Santa Claus
may
it.
around," or have a deeply emo-
your next mate, or anything
know what you
else.
Then,
are looking for, actively look!
accidentally provide you with exactly what you de-
sire extramaritally
on
to "fool
Discover
—
if
Seek and ye shall
you're exceptionally lucky! But don't count find!
Ground Rules for Civilized Extramarital Adventure
I
THINK
I
coined the term "civilized adultery" or "civilized
when
extramarital adventure" about a decade ago, ize that
much more
possible today than
affair with the full
1930s.
the late
I
was
began
was years ago
I
had
sort of
I
to
to real-
engage
had known
done
it
was an
in
myself way back
and amatively. Besides,
busy (doing research, no
it
for a long
living with a girl at that time
quite devoted to her sexually tionally
it
consent of your mate.
time that this was true, since in
I
Western mores were changing somewhat and that
I
and was
was excep-
on sexual libertarianism)
less,
and (ironically!) had practically no time for adventures outside our relationship.
my
knew a good many who had lots of time off during the day, and had problems of her own which made it highly desirable that
Not so
attractive
sexual
inamorata. She was unemployed,
males
she acquire
additional experience outside our double
being at least theoretically "free"
doing whatever she
At
—
first,
I
everyone tends to do
beloved couldn't find
ually, there
I
bed.
So,
consented to her
doing with other males.
had something of a rough time.
as practically
my
felt like
in this regard,
in this
me one hundred
wrongly concluded
I
connection
—
that
if
percent satisfactory sex-
must be something wrong with me, and that that was
pretty awful! Fortunately,
I
was already
(at the
age of twenty-five)
775
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
116
somewhat 1
was not
methods of psychotherapy on myself.
into using rational a therapist, nor
even intending to be one; but
background
a considerable
in
human
given thought to the philosophy of
So
figured out
I
— with
had had
I
philosophy, and had particularly happiness.
Marcus Aurelius,
the help of Epictetus,
Spinoza, Bertrand Russell, and several other sensible philosophers
—
that there
thing,
was no need
and that although
to upset oneself seriously
was highly dislikeable
it
to
about any-
have
my
sex-
some other male (especially when I might be in the mood to talk to her and make passes at her myself!), it was hardly catastrophic. It didn't really mean anything about me as a person, but mainly meant something about her and her tastes and love partner off with
preferences. Besides, as
I
also figured out after she
few times, and had come home straight
from somebody
vantages for me.
I
else's bed,
I
two or three
could
(if
I
many
And
I
make
wished) try to
Well, first
won
I
night
worked
I
with other
it
could work to change
and thereby help myself
and
myself a pretty hard time, and kept myself awake until she
her, let her get
I
thought to myself. "Here,
away with
all
I
in fairly short order.
partner stayed out until early morning,
returned. "Poor me!"
girls
in (grim!) practice.
that battle with myself,
my
a
was
I
could see whether sexual freedom, which
theoretically espoused, actually
The
it
morning
years later as The Case for Sex-
self-deprecating, nonsensical ideas,
considerably.
tried
her absence did have some ad-
and thereby enhance my own experiences.
my
had
in the
could work more steadily on the book
then doing (to be published ual Liberty).
at
I
I
gave
finally
act so nicely to
kinds of things (such as keeping the
house clean) that she had agreed to do as part of our living
to-
gether bargain; and then she not only seeks other sexual outlets,
but makes sex
life! If
little
effort to
work concertedly on bettering our own
only she did that, then her adding other lovers wouldn't
be so bad. But imagine! ing time with others!
— copping out on
What
us, first,
and then spend-
nerve!
How
really
worked myself up
could she do a thing like
that?"
For a couple of hours,
I
into quite a
GROUND RULES
117
self-pitying state. But then, philosopher that
days,
was no reason why, with her Besides,
nuttiness, she
had
that other experiences could probably only
tionship,
work
good rather than harm.
things out between us, as
the time she returned,
myself a
lot
rela-
she per-
if
at that; so outside affairs
I
might
have noted, was
worked on myself so well
therapy,
could
I
in
my
pre-rational
was several years away from even thinking
I
about becoming a therapist. But I
and our
that she didn't
had calmed myself down, and done
I
of good. This, as
therapy days, and
when
her,
sexually,
do us some good.
actually
By
do
was sure she could
I
But she wasn't persisting
sisted.
any different.
to be
was too bad
It
those
in
that there
was so avoidant and anxious,
figured out, she
I
was even
1
way she was, and
realized that, shit! that's the
I
much
was one of those occasions
it
that later on,
when
began
I
to
do
better help others with similar problems.
As a result of my sensible thinking, I was able to greet my paramour quite agreeably when she finally returned, be genuinely interested in her outside adventure (which she told tail
and which
somewhat
otherwise,
me
enabled
better),
her that very night than
me
understand her,
to
about
was
in control
that her varietism reflection of her
riously with
of
we normally
had.
I
sexual jealousy.
had very
own
my own
lived together
my
tastes life.
was able
and
and have more enjoyable sex with
With about two more repetitions of the same kind of truly
in de-
sexually
thing,
it
was mainly a
and problems, and didn't interfere
And
for the next six
to take
it
months
we had by
that
When we
with equanimity.
nally parted (for nonsexual reasons, since
I
figured out, correctly,
do with me;
to
little
I
se-
we fi-
then worked
out most of our sex problems with each other, and she actually
had benefited considerably from her outside that
I
had become
totally unjealous; but
the stage of discriminating clearly
jealousy.
And
adultery,
even when one-sided,
who make
this
I
affairs),
I
can't say
had certainly reached
between rational and irrational
had conclusively proved is
I
to myself that civilized
definitely feasible
kind of differentiation.
for people
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
118
RATIONAL AND IRRATIONAL JEALOUSY me expand on
Let
this point, since
is
it
usually crucial for the
establishment of anxiety-free, aboveboard extramarital adventures.
What we
call
jealousy or sex-love fearfulness almost always has, to
begin with, a distinctly sane or rational component.
If
you, for ex-
ample, love your mate and enjoy having sex relations with him or her,
you are rarely going
know
that he or she
affair with) If
you care
is
someone for
to be
else.
The reasons
someone, you
And
seriously jeopardized.
completely overjoyed when you
keenly interested
if
will not
in (or actually
having an
for this are pretty obvious.
want your relationship
this individual is
be
to
thoroughly enjoy-
ing sex, love, companionable, professional, or other intense partic-
more members of your own sex, why should you be deliriously happy about the relatively high probability of (1) your being alone when your partner is preoccupied with someipations with one or
one
else; (2) his or her interest in
(3) your being
at
you being considerably diluted;
times sexually deprived
hop-into-bed mood; (4) your having ing partnership than
less
when you
are in a
let's-
of a living-together, shar-
you previously had; and
(5)
your losing
this
partner entirely, in case he or she finds another consort more en-
make him or her
joyable or agreeable than you and decides to
the
main mate? Rationally and empirically, then,
when you know
mate has intense sex-love feelings for another, you are
that
your
likely to
be
jealous in the sense of concluding: 'T don't like this situation very
much.
I
wish he (or she) were devoted only to me. What a pain
the ass this
is,
in
some respects! Let me see how I can ceand make pretty sure that we become more
at least in
ment our relationship
exclusively devoted to each other or at least see that our relation-
ship
is
minimally jeopardized by any outside affairs."
This kind of jealousy
is
rational because
the logico-empirical observations and that
it it
is
is
usually based on
more or
less de-
priving or frustrating to have your beloved less intensely devoted
GROUND RULES to you, that
it
1
probably would be more satisfying
one hundred percent interested ship,
own
your
in
if
he or she were
one-to-one relation-
and that you well may lose him or her completely
more of
if
one or
the simultaneously ongoing affairs turns out to be unusu-
ally satisfying as
compared
You would be you ignored these form jealous of (or fact, if
19
to
your
own
pretty irrational realities
partnership.
and
ostrich-like, therefore,
and were not
irritated by)
if
any manner, shape, or
in
your mate's other relationships. In
you were completely unjealous, we would suspect
that
you
really didn't care very
much
sorbed
adventures yourself and therefore not that
in extramarital
for this partner,
interested in your original relationship, or
you were quite ab-
you were exceptionally
busy with nonsexual pursuits (such as business or
and conse-
art)
quently rather happy about having to devote less time and energy to
your mate. Rational jealousy, consequently,
likely that
it
truly care for
will
reality-based,
is
and eagerly look forward
un-
is
it
one
to steady contact with
another. Irrational jealousy, on the other hand,
When you
and
be reduced to near-zero when two individuals
is
quite different.
are intensely or insanely jealous of your consort's extra-
marital affairs, this: "Isn't
it
can't stand
it!
you are almost always believing something
awful that he or she
is
interested in
What an incompetent and what
lowing him or her to get so absorbed elsewhere! ungrateful louse
do a thing
like that to
someone
a slob
I
am
like
else!
I
for al-
And how can
that
me!"
Irrational jealousy, in other words,
is
one of the
common
forms
of emotional disturbance. And, in accordance with the theory and practice of rational-emotive psychology,
B-C scheme of is
practically
all
it
follows the regular
emotional upsets. At point
A
an Activating event: your beloved shows real interest in or
tention to another individual.
Consequence, which we usually
At point
you
feel
C
to
A — that
is,
you erro-
my mate is carrying on a hot makes me jealous and hurt."
neously contend that "Because
at-
an emotional
call intense jealousy, hurt, or rage.
Quite commonly, you falsely attribute
with So-and-so, that
C
A-
there
affair
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
120
Bullshit!
There
is
no magic by which any outside event, such
your
as
spouse's being intensely involved with another person, can wriggle its
way deep
your gut and hurt or upset you. There
into
doubt that he or she can, by various kinds of actions,
is
no
frustrate,
thwart, or deprive you: since you frequently want xyz satisfactions
from him or her and you are actually given xyz minus,
minus one hundred. So what you want you are not a sense, he or she
say, ten or
getting; and, in
arranging matters so that you are deprived or
is
balked. Therefore you can justifiably conclude: ''His or her actions are thwarting
my
desires; therefore,
am
I
being frustrated."
Intense jealousy, hurt, and emotional upset, however, are not
deprivation and frustration. They are your idiosyncratic reactions to
someone's blocking you.
And
since you have a distinct choice
of reactions, and since ninety-nine other people
same manner
in exactly the
as
who
you are also have
you.
Much more
it
is
choice and
we cannot
frequently react quite differently to frustration,
mately conclude that
are deprived
this
legiti-
the balking in itself ihat hurts or enrages
accurately stated: you choose to hurt or enrage
yourself about the circumvention of your desires that someone else (such
as
your mate)
is
He
arranging.
chooses to thwart you or not; but once
or she,
this
of course,
also
thwarting occurs, you
have a wide range of possible reactions, and you have considerable choice in taking rational or irrational pathways.
Your choice
is
at point
sensible set of Beliefs that listed a
— your
I
The
Belief system.
you could have chosen
few paragraphs back, namely: 'T don't
very much.
pain
B
is
rational or
the
same
as
I
like this situation
wish he (or she) were devoted only to me. What a
in the ass this
to believe this,
is,
at least in
and nothing but
some this,
respects!"
Had you chosen
you would have had a
intense feeling or emotional Consequence, at point C; but
not have been insane jealousy, hurt, or rage.
keen disappointment, sorrow,
regret,
It
fairly
would
would have been
annoyance, or
although such feelings can be very powerful
it
irritation.
at times,
And
they are not
GROUND RULES
121
by any means similar to feelings of hurt or rage. Indeed, they are significantly different.
What, then, caused your hurt and rage,
stemmed from your
rational Beliefs (iB's).
noted a few paragraphs back: "Isn't terested in
someone
and a slob
I
am
else!
they could not have
awful that he or she
it
can't stand
I
for allowing
And how
where!
if
The answer is: your irAnd they were? Most probably, what I also
rational Beliefs (rB's)?
it!
him or her
is
in-
What an incompetent absorbed
to get so
else-
can that ungrateful louse do a thing like that to
me!" Once you believe
this
kind of nonsense,
I
will practically
guarantee that you will feel insanely jealous, hurt, and angry.
Why
are these Beliefs arrant nonsense? Because they not only
have no empirical referent and not only are
derived
illogically
from your rational observations and Beliefs; they are
set
up
in
such a magical, tautological fashion that there seems to be no possibility
of their ever being included in a logico-empirical universe
of discourse.
They
are dogmatic, absolutistic, faith-unfounded-on-
which orthodox
fact statements, exactly like those in
religionists
devoutly believe, and they are probably totally unverified and unverifiable.
To show how (iB's) are,
unrealistic
and
you need only go on
chology, which logically follows ing your irrational Beliefs
and asking where tific
validity.
is
Thus,
—
D
irrational
Beliefs
of rational-emotive psy-
D
A-B-C.
its
consists of Disput-
or questioning and challenging them,
the evidence for if
these
idiotic
to the
you go on
them and what
is
their scien-
to D, or Disputing,
you would
question your magical Beliefs or assumptions as follows:
"Why
1.
else?"
thing
is
it
awful that
Answer: 'Tt clearly is
my mate
isn't!
interested in
painful, unpleasant, or inconvenient,
getting very interested in
means, second, that
someone
this thing is
else
Awful also means
(if
may
first,
which
someone
that
my
some-
beloved's
very well be. But
it
more than one hundred percent
painful, unpleasant, or inconvenient; be.
is
For awful means,
which nothing possibly could
I'm honest about
it)
that because
my
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
122
mate's having an affair with someone else
distinctly painful, un-
is
must
pleasant, or inconvenient, this pain absolutely should not,
not exist; and not,
is
it
awful that she
and
verse;
cause
I
can scienin the uni-
consequently,
something,
like
must
it
me
not
to claim that be-
Awfulness,
exist!
a pure devil, a demoniacal fiction, that
is
my
invent in
(as far as
a complete non sequitur for
is
it
don't
I
she should
no absolute shoulds, oughts, or musts
ought not do. But, obviously, there are
tifically ascertain)
me what
doing to
is
And by
head.
inventing
it,
I
will
foolishly
I
almost inevitably
make myself
feel 'awful.' So I'd better stop this asinine kind of
fictionalizing
and inventing!"
''Why can't
2.
I
stand
my
spouse's keenly wanting or actually
having an extramarital affair?" Answer: "I damned well can stand it!
may never it! When 1
I
lump
ing that
if
than
I
she has
because
can't.
I
am
am
insisting,
cent happiness feel utterly
my
of
'I
I
can't stand
I
may be
why
demanding get
if I
am
I
really contend-
Well, will I?
it.
it,
I
can't be
that
I
get total,
want.
I
Or am
And
I
I
I
this af-
happy
can't I? Because, childishly,
everything that
miserable
certainly can gracefully it!'
happy, with her having
less
with her refraining from Well,
it?
of course; but
it,
claim that
apart at the seams, die of
I'll fall
insisting that fair,
like
at all
think
I
one hundred per-
am
determined to
99 percent, 70 percent, or 30 percent
desires fulfilled. Well, that
is
my
choice: to be as happy as
possibly can be, considering the real frustrations involved with
mate's having an outside affair, or to be as utterly miserable as
can pigheadedly make myself. Shall
I
stupidly insist
on taking
I
my I
this
second choice? Hell, no!" 3.
for
"Where allowing
There
—
that
can't
my
is
the evidence that
my mate
be such evidence.
behavior
consequently
is
and that
this choice
is
am
an incompetent and a slob
It is
quite possible
Answer:
— even probable
rather incompetent or slobbish and that
my beloved is my behavior
also likely that
I
to get so absorbed elsewhere?"
choosing to have has
little
to
this affair.
do with
But
it
is
his or her choice,
motivated by a desire for variety, novelty,
or adventure that has virtually nothing to do with me.
I
could be
GROUND RULES
123
my mate
King Solomon or the Queen of Sheba, and feel like
my
pluralism prove
"Even suppose
am
/
merely proves, slobbish.
ineptitude or inadequacy?
that
clearly doesn't!
significant respects
wants another lover, too. Does
Of
An
incompetent or a slob
would mean
would always have
that (a)
behave
to
were
I
in this
is
a concept that
if
being that way.
hell for
were possible
competent
—
totally
None of
(c)
two
first
— namely,
way and would have
every
in
prove the
to
out of
little
who
that
"In what
I
would
human who would
condemnable person;
I
get I
would there-
would merely be
way
me
is
my
a
sex-love partner an ungrateful louse for
having an extramarital
like
all,
I
is
poor, unethical, or lousy behavior.
is;
but that hardly necessarily makes
it
really can't, as a
me
mate decides
till
human
I
someone
else,
why
is
it
so.
can prove
She or he
me about
some of my freedom of
would only indicate that
a rotten act
if
me my
too?
could prove undesirable actions
he or she kept lying to
it
I
being, absolutely promise to care for
death do us part; so
to care for
Answer:
affair?''
can't even prove that his or
her infidelity
if
in-
to continue to be so
that / think
took away
I
and that would be highly deplorable. But
life,
"In no way, whatever. First of
"Even
even
was
unfortunately consistently acts badly."
doing a thing to
and only
And
would hardly be condemnable or damnable.
I
fore be a totally rotten,
4.
should
I
these propositions,
hardly, except by any arbitrary theological definition,
person
in-
incompetent; (b)
manner; and
merely be an exceptionally handicapped very
is
were a slob or a
I
especially the second and the third, are really provable.
forever
It
be damned, denigrated as a human, and consigned to
rightfully
some kind of
if it
this
course not!
some of my acts are incompetent or fallible human, it would be incredible if I
variably a magical overgeneralization. For it
not
still
most, that
And, being a
no-goodnik
might
does his or her
It
some
deficient in
an incompetent or a slob?
at
did no such acts.
am
I
my mate
and that therefore prove that
I
How
being completely dedicated to me.
—
if,
this outside affair,
for example,
and thereby
action in responding to
his or her deeds,
it
—
that
but not person, are
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
124
unethical or reprehensible. So
can never legitimately refer to
I
personal lousehood, but merely to lousy behavior. While ior,
can be assessed or measured, he or she, as a
really can't be.
acts
I
am
And when
I
condemn
condemn me
for
my
behav-
human,
total
a person for this person's
and unfairly overgeneralizing
foolishly
doing when
I
it,
—
as
^just
am
I
stop that nutty
acts. I'd better
overgeneralizing and stick to merely measuring a partner's perfor-
mances and how much whether I
is
it
decide that
individual,
worth it
my
isn't
I
dislike them.
Then
I
can rationally decide
remaining intimately involved; and even
worth
it,
that hardly
whom
nor one with
I
if
makes my mate a lousy
could
have reasonably
not
friendly relations in the future." If,
this
by using the principles of rational-emotive psychology
manner, you retain some degree of rational, appropriate
ousy but
rid yourself of practically all irrational,
ousy about him or her, you can then practice, lized
extramarital
For you then
adventuring.
insensate jeal-
you wish,
if
in
jeal-
be
will
civi-
able
to
practice dislike without upsetting yourself about his or her affairs,
and consequently be able
to openly
acknowledge
their existence
and make the best kinds of arrangements and adjustments regarding them.
Many people may consider who love each other to achieve
it
utterly
a state
impractical for spouses
where they are
essentially
unjealous (or at least not insanely jealous) of one another; and rational-emotive psychology, which says that such a state
may be viewed
is
as an idealistic or Utopian philosophy.
possible,
A
similar
view has been independently expressed, however, by various Eastern sages, such as Krishnamurti,
who never heard
Krishnamurti's questioners asks: "Is
woman
to live together, to
it
of
RET. One of man and
possible for a
have sex and children, without
all
the
turmoil, bitterness, and conflict inherent in such a relationship? it
possible for there to be freedom on both sides?
I
don't
freedom that the husband or wife should constantly be having fairs
with someone
else.
People usually
come
Is
mean by af-
together and get
GROUND RULES
125
married because they
nature of this in-loveness
and
love,
in
fall
from the
is
that there
in
and tremendous
choice, pleasure, possessiveness,
start filled
is
desire,
The very
drive.
with the seeds of
conflict."
Krishnamurti replies: "Is that. I
Can't you
fall in
be?
it
someone and she loves me and we
love
perfectly straightforward
(When
aU.
Need
it?
I
say
to live together
we
—
much
very
I
and simple,
get married
don't
let's
I
get married
in that there
is
—
no
up tail,
and both be so
The
is
feeling of being in love
is
energy
everything
in
in love
as
were, necessarily
it
not in the feeling of being in love. utterly without conflict.
being in love. The loss of energy follows
that
—
intelligent
freedom and absence of a center that
is
for conflict? Conflict
loss of
is all
Can't one
in words.)
foHowing? Can't two people be
and so sensitive that there
that
conflict at
might just as well say we decide
get caught
have that without the other, without the
makes
question
love and not have a possessive relationship?
is
possessiveness,
^jealousy,
There
no
suspicion,
demand
doubt, the fear of losing that love, the constant
is
in the tail, in
for reas-
surance and security. Surely sexual relationship with
it must be possible to function in a someone you love without the nightmare
which usually follows. Of course Krishnamurti,
in
it
is."
answer to another question from one of
followers, also points out that loneliness, bleakness,
his
and wretched-
ness that you supposedly feel as a result of being in love actually existed before
you
ship but rather
Whatever
is
it
fell in love. is
the
"Your problem
happening inside you
any other conflict
at all,
is
not this relation-
problem of your own emptiness
drop
it
—
.
.
.
anger, depression, jealousy or
instantly.
Stop
it."
Krishnamurti seems to be saying that insensate jealousy, under any condition,
is
your
own problem and does
circumstances of your loving, being feelings else.
really
It
for
in love,
not stem from the
or having other deep
your spouse, your extramarital partner, or anyone
stems from your thoughts and feelings, over which you
have control. Consequently, as
we would
say
in
rational-
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
126
emotive psychology, you can change or eliminate
it.
You
are the
master of your fate and the captain of your soul. Always remember that!
AGREEING ON CIVILIZED ARRANGEMENTS Not every couple has the same that
why
is
among
there are so
the quite
tastes, preferences,
and habits;
different kinds of marriages, even
monogamous. Mr. and Mrs. A. do and even work long hours side by
everything together
same
many
—
practically side in the
business, while Mr. and Mrs. B. rarely see each other, since
Mr. B.
is
a sea captain
and
is
only
home about
three or four days
each month. Mr. and Mrs. C. spend about 100 hours a week together in their small one-room apartment; the D's live in separate
wings of a large house and see each other mainly E's
seem
at
meals; and the
each other dearly, but have a Connecticut home,
to love
where she and the children
live
most of the time, and a
New York
City apartment, where Mr. E. lives for five or six days a week. Just as these extremely different conditions can exist in a con-
ventional
monogamous
marriage, and both partners seem to be
happy with the way things are working
out, so can extramarital
arrangements be exceptionally diverse. Here are some of the ferent kinds of that
dif-
acknowledged and aboveboard adultery patterns
some people
I
currently
know (most of whom
are non-clients)
live by:
John and Susan K. have been together which they have been
John
to
have
affairs,
legally
for ten years, half of
married. Susan
on a casual
at
first
basis, with girls he
permitted
met
in the
course of his work as a photographer. She then began to worry
about his becoming overly attached to one of these highly attractive
and usually very young
girls,
so
now
she only permits him to
have sex-love relations with women, usually around her own age,
whom
she personally
knows and
is
friendly with
have sex with him as part of a threesome, ticipates.
in
and who usually
which she actively par-
— GROUND RULES
127
Joe and Stella F. allow each other one night out a week, always
same night so
the rule
is:
other
neither
that neither
is
is left
alone. Their
main
supposed to have sex with anyone
knows personally or
restrictive
whom
the
in business.
Ariel and Walter R. allow themselves extramarital affairs only
when they are able to locate a suitable couple with whom they can switch. They spend considerable time looking for such couples but they acand enjoy the adventures involved in finding them tually end up finding what they want only a few times a year.
—
Kurt and Joan T. have arranged to be completely faithful to each other when they are both
home
at
in
New
Haven. But when
— which he does about time — both he and Joan
Kurt goes off on one of his business trips five
times a year for several days at a
are
permitted to do anything they want to do sexually with any partner they find.
They usually enjoy
talking in detail with each other
about what happened to each of them when they were apart.
Bob and Caroline
get along well with each other
S.
children and usually enjoy each other's
company
and
their
considerably. But
they haven't been attracted to each other sexually for years. So they both are permitted to have any kind of outside affairs they wish, as long as they
do not spend inordinate amounts of time
doing so and as long as their friends, relatives, and children are kept
in the
dark (especially since they both hold high positions in
the field of education,
and
their
communities would take a glum
view of their private sex arrangements). Josephine and tle
Bob
R. have agreed that because
Bob
is
very
lit-
and desires intercourse perhaps a half-dozen
interested in sex
times a year, she will quietly continue her seven-year-long affair with her boss and
Bob
will
cooperate to see that there are no
hitches.
These are but a few of the many different kinds of arrangements that thousands of people make these days to commit open, civilized adultery. If
you are considering an arrangement of one of
these kinds with your mate, there
is
no reason why you may not
be able to work out, on a calm and amicable basis, a satisfactory
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
128
What
1
is
you want
of time that you and your
to allow each other for extramarital adventures?
member of the may be perfectly
to see a
twice a week, that
you want
of the factors to consider seriously are:
maximum amount
the
mate are willing If
Some
of ground rules.
set
same person
to see this
other sex regularly, once or satisfactory to your mate. If
five
may be
times a week, that
another thing entirely! Assuming you want to maintain some kind of regular married
life,
and
truly be
devoted to a meaningful
tionship and partnership,
how much time
you
and love relations?
to give to outside sex
How
2.
tically
is it
open do you want your arrangement
everyone you know be aware of
it
rela-
feasible for either of
be? Shall prac-
to
(and some of the conse-
quences be damned!)? Shall certain people, such as your children
and you and your mate's parents, be kept lots
know?
of other people
cally all
Shall
in the
you keep
it
dark, even though
secret
from
practi-
your friends and associates, and make sure that you and
your mate only have your married individuals) or
affairs with safe
in safe
people (such as other
places (such as areas
more than
a
hundred miles from your home)? Questions like these are eminently practical, and had better be
asked and answered. Because no matter
would prefer
to
how much
be open and honest with the
as with each other, can
you
way
benighted day and age?
in this still largely
really afford to
for example, will there be repercussions
your uptight neighbors
insist
the two of you
entire world, as well
conduct your
lives this
you are honest,
If
on the job? Will some of
that their children boycott yours?
The degree of upon may vary enormously, depending
Will you and your spouse be socially penalized?
public honesty you agree
on the answers you give 3.
What degree of
to
some of
these hard-headed questions.
sexual and love permissiveness
you and your marital partner
to give each other?
is it
You may
on complete sexual leeway for each of you, but does
may man? Or
become pregnant,
wise for
this
she wants
agree
mean by
that the wife
feel free to
another
that the husband can be free to have sex with
prostitutes or with
if
homosexual males who are highly
to,
likely
to
GROUND RULES
129
have venereal diseases? Or that only two orgasms a week he
with another
More
is
if
husband can generally have
the
to be permitted to have both of
them
woman?
importantly: what about love?
Men
can often have adul-
terous affairs, especially on a one-night-stand basis, without be-
coming even mildly attached
to their extramarital partners; but
whom
women
tend mainly to want sex with those
and
become emotionally involved with those with whom they
have
to
sex. If
you are a
wife,
you may
easily give
they are fond of
your husband per-
mission to fuck almost anything in sight; but what
keeps thinking about one of these fuckable
husband, you
may
not really
much
school. In fact,
if
you are a
If
your wife
romanti-
is
one of the children she teaches
cally involved with the father of
for her
care
he loves and
if
women?
you may think that that kind of attachment
is
in
good
and helps her be a better wife and mother. But suppose she
wants to copulate only with her lover and feels unfaithful to him
when she enjoys you sexually? What
are
you going
to
do about
that kind of situation? 4.
What
is
mate the gory
your policy going to be about delineating to your details of
course, politely avoid
all
your affairs with others?
— and merely
such details
You let
can, of
each other
know that you are having outside affairs, without specifying with whom, where, why, or how you are having them. But that may tend to interfere with the honest and intimate communication be-
tween the two of you leave you and your
much to hide!). You can, on the
—
^just
having surreptitious affairs
as
mate with
relatively
little
to talk
may
about (and
too
did with your lover,
other hand,
how
tell
your mate exactly what you
what you learned from the experience, what feelings of love you had for this other person,
the future,
may
his or her sexuality really sent you,
what kind of a partner you intend
and so on. But
to look for in
his or her self-disparaging tendencies
some of may seriously boombetter ways of confiding
not be able to take this kind of forthrightness, and
your most innocent remarks and descriptions erang.
You can experiment, and look
for
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
130
(and not confiding) out, to
it
may have
in the future.
But once a revealing statement
come. Jim V. quite innocently remarked to
"Boy,
simply couldn't stand the
I
is
on your mate for a long time
a deleterious effect
girl after
wife,
his
we had been
Sally,
together
Was she stupid! But what big, firm tits she had! who had always felt very inadequate because of her
for thirty minutes.
Yum!"
Sally,
small, flabby breasts, took that last self
enormously with
had opened 5.
his
remark
and hurt her-
to heart
Jim only discovered years
it.
later that
he
mouth much too wide.
What about
logistics?
mate: "Okay, dear.
If
It
seems
you want
to
relatively easy to say to
have an
by
affair,
all
your
means
have one. As long as you don't spend too much time away from
home,
me.
that's fine with
And
I,
following the same rules, will
probably do the same." But where, when, how, considering that both of you are married and hardly have a place of your
which
own
to
to take anyone, are such extramarital adventures actually
going to occur?
Georgia C. said that she didn't mind anything her husband did sexually
with
another
woman anywhere
woman
near their
cially did not sleep with her
But when she found out
—
as
long as he didn't take the
own home, and as long as he espein their own bed. He entirely agreed.
later that his
once-a-week jaunts were
him over a hundred dollars a month, mainly for hotel rooms, she was utterly appalled. They just couldn't afford that
costing
kind of expense! She voluntarily agreed to go out visiting one night a
week and
let
him use
their
own premises
for his affairs.
Joan D. had an even harder time arranging to get together with her lover regularly, even though her husband relationship and offered no objections.
money problems
— he was
a
knew
all
about their
Not only did they have
bank clerk with
a wife
and
five chil-
dren and definitely couldn't afford to pay for a hotel room or an
apartment
— but
she couldn't take him to her home, because the
neighbors would soon get suspicious and think her a
slut;
and she
couldn't go to his place, since his family was always there. Fortunately, her
most cooperative husband had an
office with a sofa-
GROUND RULES
131
bed, where she could comfortably see her lover; that arrangement
worked out
fine.
Anyway: agreements on arrangements often have between spouses who are engaging
how
made
to be
No
in civilized adultery.
matter
collaborative they are, extramarital adventures require a time
and a place, and sometimes both these factors have to be explicitly discussed and settled.
NEGOTIATIONS AND RENEGOTIATIONS Although most people may not realize marry, their continuing relationship
usually a matter of contin-
is
and renegotiations. The husband
ual negotiations
because he's married his wife
ple, that just
is
feels, for
supposed
with him whenever he has the slightest wish to have
covers
(often
to
horror,
his
but
when she
gives
it
on demand
it
is
it
to
exam-
have sex
but he dis-
it;
with
ultimate
at certain
times and
usually
reconciliation) that she only wants to have that
when they
point
at the
it
hardly the kind of sex he
imagined having before they were wed. Or the wife believes that her husband will be heartily interested in her doings after marriage as he
some
was before, and she
things,
is
not at
plaints,
and that he
did
day
all
all
—
interested only in
life,
both mates
smooth (though not necessarily same. All a such rules,
rules
for
man and is
—
if
the
ecstatic)
civilized
they don't divorce or
wife really know,
in
relation
when they
are
originally
the
make
and perhaps exception-
with exclusive one-to-one mating.
like in regard to sex-love
a relatively
manner.
extramarital
that they are not too content,
ally displeased,
com-
what he
renegotiate their original understandings and
unspoken agreements, and the marriage goes on
Ground
in
After learning, the hard way, some of
at the office.
murder each other
is
wants her to be wrapped up
really
these facts of marital
finds that he
attentive (except negatively) to her
What
they do
pluralism they can largely only guess at
because they haven't had that kind of experience within the marital
framework. They both may have dated several people
at a
time
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
132
before they married; but that
a different thing from having va-
is
rietism with marriage.
So they dream up some kind of
set
of goals and ground rules.
Occasionally, these work perfectly from the
start,
subsequent hassles. More frequently, there
are.
L.,
agreed that they would have affairs together by
instance,
for
and there are no
Jane and Jim
switching with other couples, because they believed that otherwise they would be worried about
and would
feel that their
whom
the other partner
was dating,
marriage might be jeopardized. But
in
the course of several months of active seeking they couldn't find a single couple willing to switch
where the wife was satisfactory
Jim and the husband satisfactory trated that they gave
up
to Jane.
on
entirely
this
They became
to
so frus-
arrangement and began to
look for partners individually. This worked out
much
better, so
new arrangement. managed to find several couples to The trouble was that Maria got hung up on one of the
they kept to the
Ron
V. and his wife, Maria,
switch with.
husbands while he merely found the wife a but essentially a bore. in
a row,
When
Ron decided
quently,
same thing happened three times women he was likely to meet draggy while the men Maria was
the
meet were much brighter and more this
couple,
good sex partner
that the
through switching were pretty likely to
fairly
too,
started
attractive.
Conse-
making individual dates and
stopped switching.
may add to or subtract from the permissiveness When Ron V.'s wife, Maria, became particuemotionally with one of the men I just mentioned,
Renegotiations
of an arrangement. larly involved
Ron
felt that their
marriage was really endangered, and he insisted
on a new stipulation affairs
in their
were out and had
get under way.
But then,
to
agreement: namely, that intense love
be stopped shortly after they began to
after they
had stopped the switching and
turned to individual dating, and after he met a
he really cared, even though he
still
no intention of breaking up with the love pluralism
was
woman
for
whom
cared more for Maria and had
her, he thought that he realized
just as legitimate as sex pluralism,
and he
133
GROUND RULES
rescinded the renegotiated agreement about intense involvements
and allowed Maria
to take
up again with the man
to
whom
she
had become intensely attached. Renegotiations are also desirable, at times, in regard to other
Tom van F. origido just about anything
aspects of a civilized extramarital arrangement. nally told his wife, Delia, that she could
she wanted extramaritally, since he just didn't give a shit about
what other people thought of him
in
case they saw that he was
being cuckolded. But he found that Delia began to get a reputation in
town of being highly promiscuous, and
his accounting practice
dropped considerably. People frequently inferred, quite wrongly,
was a very weak individual to let his wife run around the way she did, and they falsely concluded that he therefore might not serve them well as a strong, assertive accountant. When he
that he
discovered, through his partners, what was happening, he immediately renegotiated his
arrangement with Delia and got her to agree
would thereafter be much more discreet about her
that she
affairs
and would largely confine them to out-of-town appointments.
Some aboveboard
affairs are eventually renegotiated out of ex-
more facts and fewer fictions become known. Peter J. had little
regard to their work-
istence, as
in
ings
difficulty
wife,
own marriage was
for other partners, since their
sex
in
talking his
Myra, into their each having a night out every week, all
to look
right but their
was pretty boring. She excitedly took advantage of her
life
new opportunities
weeks and found them
for several
interesting
enough. But then she began to feel that sex companionship alone
was simply not enough, that most of the men she went with were losers
who
the time ing out
weren't even worth being with a single time, and that
and energy she had
to
expend
in
meeting them and find-
what duds they were simply wasn't worth
it.
So she began
home on her ''night off" and letting Peter do whatever he wanted to do. When, after a while, he too got tired of running around town looking for new partners, and when Myra began to
staying
get fed
up with the inebriated
home every Thursday,
state in
after a night
which he generally returned mainly spent
in
bars,
they
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
134
both agreed to abrogate the old agreement and to have their extramarital affairs irregularly and spontaneously whenever they hap-
pened
to occur.
SETTLEMENT OF DISAGREEMENTS Suppose
husband and wife want
a
have an honest arrange-
to
ment but cannot agree on terms. What do they do? Dennis Q. was willing to allow his wife, Marsha, to have extramarital ventures as
long as she (1) didn't stay out able kind of
man
with
and
rious trouble,
whom
all
night, (2) picked a safe, respect-
she was not likely to get into any se-
affairs only and didn't become Marsha wanted more than this but at terms. As the months passed, she became se-
(3)
had casual
too emotionally involved. first
settled for these
riously
place
enamored of
all
a gambler.
She not only wanted
to stay at his
night but also wanted, at least occasionally, to go
away
with him for weekends. Dennis yelled murder and wanted to end the whole arrangement or else divorce her.
What couple
to
do? Fortunately, Dennis and Marsha knew a sensible
who themselves had had some experience
whom
with civilized
up about their problem. In talking things out with this couple, it became clear that Dennis was perhaps too demanding, especially in the way he practically wanted to handpick the type of lovers that Marsha got involved adultery and to
they could open
good pomt: When she got
with; but that he did have at least one
emotionally involved, Marsha had to devote to
him and
little
their relationship.
time or energy remaining
A
compromise was
ulti-
mately reached, with the help of the discussions with their friends:
Marsha could
pair
up with
practically
anyone she wished, and
could even at times spend nights or weekends with him, but was to refrain
from becoming too deeply involved with any of her
amoratos or divorce
if
else to
in-
admit that she was and to give Dennis an easy
he wanted one.
On
this
new
basis, their
arrangement
continued satisfactorily.
Suppose no kind or wise friend
is
available to help arbitrate
GROUND RULES disagreements.
135
You and your
ican Arbitration Association
and ask
good lawyer necessarily called
comes so profound you
that
likely to receive
for a settlement!
for, unless
you want
much
AmerNor is a
wife can't very well go to the
your disagreement be-
to seek legal separation.
Nor
are
help from your friendly neighborhood
clergymen (though, with the church progressing considerably these days, this possibility
is
What
getting to be not too far-fetched!).
then?
may be prejudiced, of course, mend professional aid in the form I
this
I
generally would recom-
of a psychologist, psychiatrist,
worker, or marriage counselor. Not that the
psychiatric social
members of
but
profession are completely objective and open-
minded; they frequently
aren't.
They may have
their
own
fish to
and be imbued with nutty psychoanalytic ideas about your
fry
ideas of having extramarital adventures necessarily
stemming from
the need to emulate the pathological infidelities of your parents.
Or they may have that marriage
is
the goody-goody marriage counselor premise
a sacred institution that cannot be successfully
Or they may be in the bag who hold that all one-to-one mari-
followed in an unconventional fashion. with the encounter-type leaders
arrangements are too restrictive and decadent and that only
tal
communal marriage,
or something of that sort,
out well and to bring about the
Coming
is
likely to
work
Revolution.
Well, screw that!
Therapists and counselors can easily have
own problems
(and, in fact, often got into their profession
their
because they do!). They are hardly Holy
Men
or Wise Philoso-
phers. Nonetheless, they are often the best thing available for
riage-appraisal. pist
So
if
you can locate a
who has had some
first-hand
mar-
sensible, experienced thera-
knowledge of marriage, who
follows a reasonably rational therapeutic theory, and
who can
help
you and your mate with some of your possible personality and lationship problems, as well as help
pros and cons of a civilized adultery arrangement that would specifically for
both of you, by
all
re-
you objectively consider the
work
means make some appointments
with him or her and go over your arrangement problems in his or
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
136
her office. Almost always, you will see this therapist jointly, at for
least
some of
And by
the sessions.
hearing your stories and
your attitudes, and highlighting what each of you would really like to get out of
life,
is
it
quite possible that this therapist or coun-
selor will be able to be of considerable help to you.
SOME BASIC RULES FOR MAKING GROUND RULES The
you and your mate
rules that
and even-
finally arrive at
depend, naturally, on your personal inclinations,
tually stick to
and
feelings, beliefs,
No one
habits.
can very well make them for
you, and no one can clearly predict whether they will work out well or badly. fully,
To make and
renegotiate these rules
more
success-
however, there are a few principles that you might seriously
consider:
one out
that they don't.
two
your own feelings. Don't
Start with
1
rule
know
try
an arrangement or
because others have told you to do so or insisted
just
better than you. Perhaps they do; probably they
For they are not you; and you and your spouse are the only
you's, really,
agreement.
How
who
are
do you
making and maintaining
kind of an
this
about exclusive and nonexclusive
feel
marriage? What do you sincerely like and dislike about the tionship you have had
up
you could improve upon
to
now?
In
"I'm not sure what feel."
I
want.
You do know
Crap!
what ways do you believe
(or, for that matter,
marital state? Don't be vague! Don't I
let
really don't
—
if
you
worsen) your present
yourself get
know.
I
it
2.
Don't
let
— and
I
really ask yourself.
Indeed,
— but
you are it.
But
yourself be overly influenced by what others think
By all means be practical: harm yourself and your family in openly live in "sin" with some mem-
don't do what would obviously serious
with:
how
find out.
or by what you think they think.
some
tell
or scared that you won't be able to get
you do know! Ask yourself
—
away
can't
you probably know perfectly well what you want afraid to go after
rela-
way
—
like, say,
GROUND RULES
137
when you
ber of the other sex
are a clergyman in a conservative
But don't refrain from doing what you
sect.
really
want
nose
his or her
Think about and discover the
at you.
down
real disad-
vantages of displeasing others before you run your whole
around what they
will think
do
to
merely because someone somewhere at some time will look
life
and do about your having extramari-
adventures.
tal
3.
As
far as
you can, experiment. As noted previously
in this
know what civilized adultery is like till And of the many kinds and degrees of it
chapter, you'll never really
you
try
in
it
some form.
that exist, you'll never discover
what modes are good for you and
your spouse until you try one or more of them and get some facts
your theories. Experiment. Change your ex-
to support or refute
periment when desirable. Revise your thinking. Keep experimenting
and keep revising your views
have one
life,
but you have
if this
many
possibilities of careers, specific
jobs, groups of friends, recreations,
the course of that
life.
seems desirable. You only
and sex-love arrangements
in
Experimentially discover what's best for
you and your mate. 4.
Don't
make
absolute promises to your mate or to any of
your lovers, and don't be afraid to admit that your feelings can
and do change radically over the years. Sure you were certain,
when you
first
fell
in love with
your wife or husband, that you
would intensely love him or her forever and would not even think of sex-love relationships with someone else. Well,
let's
face
it:
you
were deluded. Sure you were postitive that you couldn't possibly
monogamous
maintain
relationship with your spouse and that you
indubitably had to have affairs on the side in order to tolerate
may have been
marriage. Well, you
Whatever you strongly
feel
today
quite deluded about that, too.
may
or
may
not be the
tomorrow. Let your sex-love partners know your feelings
if
that way.
votion
you
And
now
will. if
But don't assume that they
will
real,
same
gut-level
always remain
you promise some person undying, exclusive de-
don't be
ashamed
to admit, later, that
you no longer
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
138
feel that
way. Being disloyal to another certainly has
own
your
tages, but being disloyal to
its
disadvan-
feelings can be the worst
thing you can do to yourself. 5.
Watch your damned
you have been married for a
member of
tive
may feel very flattering, when good many years, to have an attrac-
ego!
the other sex
It
show obvious
interest in
you and
covertly or overtly suggest that you have an affair together. But
is
that flattery worth the losses and hassles that will probably go with
having that affair
in
after
maner?
a civilized, honest
ego-building to have your mate
It
may
also be
exclusively devoted to you,
still
he or she has known your worst points for
lo these past de-
cades. But will that kind of ego-aggrandizing really get you what
you want, especially otherwise limited?
if
If
self-rating tendencies
he or she
you are
is
sexually, conversationally, or
truly wise,
and train yourself
you be
to
will
work on your
much
less affected
by what others think of you, and how they "build you up," so that
you
finally discover
what you would
truly like to
do most
in
your
earthly existence. 6.
Don't cavalierly assume that you have only one major mari-
choice. Just because you and your mate have always lived monogamously doesn't mean that you have to continue doing so
tal
forever. Just because
ing role doesn't
mean
you have rarely that
it
conditions. Just because
all
is
lied or
played a dissimulat-
wise to continue this pattern under
you decide
mean
to
engage
in civilized ex-
you have to continue to do so or to do so under the terms of your original agreement with your mate. There are almost always other alternatives to what you
tramarital relations doesn't
are
now
doing: whether they be having affairs, stopping having af-
fairs, getting it,
that
a divorce, et cetera.
and look for practical
When you
alternatives!
are dissatisfied, admit
Etiquette and Techniques
for Extramarital Adventure
'NFORTUNATELY,
most liaisons that take place today are
not arranged on the honest basis discussed in the previous chapter,
many
are engaged
in
quite
where husbands and wives agree
illicitly
and dishonestly. Even
to swing,
have adulterous relations when they
and mainly (or only)
literally
accompany each
other to a rendezvous with another couple or group of couples, they cannot necessarily be completely open, at least at the start,
with their outside partners; they are forced, instead, to creet
and suitable overtures
make
dis-
to these partners to get things going.
What, therefore, are the best kinds of techniques and procedures to employ
if
you decide
to
have a discreet
affair or if
and your mate want to swing together without getting into culty
in
frankly,
you
diffi-
your somewhat narrow-minded community? No one, knows too many of the answers since the subject, utterly
tabooed
till recently, has hardly been adequately researched. Until more information is gathered about secret or semi-secret affairs, and accumulated evidence about what works and what does not is
published,
many important
questions
will
go unanswered.
But
don't despair:
all is not lost. Although full materials for a textbook of extramarital etiquette and technique do not yet exist, novelists,
autobiographers, and students of sexual mores have given us
some
salient
information; their findings will be outlined in this
chapter.
139
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
140
HOW TO MEET EXTRAMARITAL PARTNERS The main ways
to
meet extramarital partners are not remark-
ably different from those for meeting premarital partners
which
have previously outlined,
I
the Single ing.
The
Man and The
"secret" of
it
in detail, in
Intelligent
all is
Woman's Guide
Joseph
years,
J.
and Sandra
S.
to arrange a liaison.
this parit
does
are an excellent example of what not
They have known each other
have somehow (fumblingly!) arranged
—
Manhunt-
even more so than
were unusually attracted to each other from the
casions ing
to
And
forms of sex-love encountering.
for other
do
— and
books. Sex and
persistent assertiveness.
ticularly goes for extramarital seeking,
to
my
when
that
is,
their respective
nothing but
to get together
for five
start,
and
on four oc-
mates were out of town. But noth-
talk, talk, talk
—
ever occurred between
them.
On
their last date, they almost
made
it.
Ostensibly, they got to-
gether at Sandra's apartment so that she could literally!
— her
etchings.
show him
—
yes,
So he saw her etchings (scads of them!)
and they discussed them (and the kitchen sink) ad nauseam. But neither had the guts to make an overt move. Had he even put his arm around her waist, as they sat near each other on the sofa, she would have ripped her own clothes off in a minute. Had she taken his hand,
he would have feverishly kissed
her body. But
they did was gab
all
—
it
— and then
themselves, or their feelings for each other. got
the rest of
not even about sex, or about
And
that, of course,
—
as the old prov-
them nowhere.
As
it
will!
Nothing ventured, nothing gained
erb truly goeth.
And
another corny truth: actions speak louder
than words; even words speak louder than words stances.
Words about
sex, love,
in
many
in-
marriage, us, our relations with
our mates, our amative goals and aspirations are much more to the point than words about
art,
music, science, and the state of the
world. Joseph and Sandra were both very bright and sophisticated;
ETIQUETTE AND TECHNIQUES
141
but their bright talk largely obfuscated the real issues between
them.
What But
to
do?
you are
if
No
rule
best for everyone under
is
all
conditions.
on having extramarital adventures, here are
intent
some general precepts you can adapt to individual circumstances: 1. Talk relevantly! If you are interested in your neighbor's spouse, a coworker at the office, the person you are conversing with on a plane, or any other individual, get the conversation
around
Not during the
to sex-love topics.
off, just as
ritory: talk
you would do
in a
first
few minutes! Start
premarital encounter, in neutral ter-
about the weather, jobs, hobbies, sports,
anything else that
is
w/isexy.
Show regard
and
politics,
for the other individual
as a person, and not merely as a potential bedmate. Indicate to
him or her and 2.
you are
that
really interested in his or her personality
space.
life
Then
and
get to sex
love!
Be
honest: disclose yourself. Talk
about your views on sexuality, romance, marriage, extramarital fairs,
to
divorce, and so forth. Tell your partner what you
do
to
from experiencing
how
it;
own it
sex -love history;
about doing
in
potential partner
you are and
What has he
at
or she
concluded from these adventures? thought
in the future?
regard, the better
Take
life?
if you possiwhat you learned
helped you to get to where you're
Interspersedly, ask about the other.
been through
3.
af-
like
enhance your amative existence. Volunteer,
bly can, something of your
today.
would
to
The more information you
likely to time
get in this
your specific passes
at this
win his or her acceptance.
a physical plunge! If the occasion possibly arises, hold
hands; put your arms around the other person; kiss; embrace.
Sometimes,
this is not possible: public
sort of thing,
and you have
circumstances preclude this
to use purely verbal
means
to get the
other individual to a place where physical contact can take place.
But usually you can manage some kind of a touching connection,
and a single contact of
this sort
can often
tell
you more about
his
or her receptivity to having an affair than can thousands of verbal interchanges.
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
142
Do some
4.
you choose person
open at
in a
plotting and
make
to
hallway
at a
to public view, in
any moment, or
scheming about the time and place
a physical overture. If
in
crowded
an open
any other
you
briefly try to kiss a
party, in an automobile that
office that
someone
else
may
is
enter
fairly public place, the reception
you get may be more influenced by the surrounding conditions
A
than by this person's intrinsic responsiveness.
me
counseled told
whom
that her boss, with
whom
secretary
I
she was madly in
love, first kissed her impulsively in a hotel lobby,
when
they met
there to attend a business meeting. She was so surprised and so
would be seen by some of
afraid that they
(not to mention his wife, that she quickly
cheeks.
He was
their business associates
who sometimes frequented
so certain, by this rebuff, that she wanted to have
nothing to do with him sexually that
it
took him an entire year,
make a second pass at when and where you can best make
plus four swigs of Scotch, to
thinking to
little
ical
that hotel!)
his lips to brush her
withdrew and hardly allowed
her.
the
So give a phys-
first
overture to your would-be lover.
All the foregoing points are easy to plot and execute are not emotionally blocked. But
how
dead, no matter
you
if
agile a planner
are,
—
//
you are practically
and schemer you may be
tically
is
immensely eased when you are
and emotionally prepared for many
members of
the other sex in
whom you
rejections.
Face
in
when
other respects. For making sex-love proposals, particularly
you are already married,
you
realis-
it:
most
are interested will refuse
you for a number of different reasons: because you are married, because you are only partially available, because you are tain
ways not
If,
their
therefore,
cup of
love, et cetera.
you allow yourself
rejections, the inevitable will
cepted. For
if,
in
in cer-
your own
a fuckup for being refused,
to
be seriously hurt by such
happen: you won't even
silly eyes,
you make
you are a it,
by
try to
be ac-
fool, a failure, or
this very view,
much
too risky for you to start anything. In accordance with the principles of rational-emotive psychol-
ogy, define the situation and yourself
much more
sanely and real-
ETIQUETTE AND TECHNIQUES
istically.
// is
bad for being
too bad
marital partner able; but
is
it
if
rejected.
may
143
So-and-so rejects you; but you are never
To be
refused by a highly desirable extra-
well be distinctly unfortunate, sad,
awful, horrible, and catastrophic.
You
reaction to his or her rejection. If you
it
want
utterly control
to control
your
own
tions constructively, read carefully the other sections of this
dealing with
full
other books,
How
so,
rarely control another per-
you do
son's accepting or rejecting you, but
and deplor-
make
never, unless you idiotically choose to
your reac-
book
self-acceptance, as well as such books as to Live With a Neurotic,
my
Reason and Emotion
in
Psychotherapy, Growth Through Reason, and (with Dr. Robert A.
A Guide
Harper)
and A Guide
to Rational Living
to Successful
Marriage.
Assuming
that
you are tackling the problem of self-acceptance
you can
successfully,
easily find, in
most American and European
places where you can meet extramarital partners. For the
cities,
main answer
— Everywhere!
You can
in the course of professional
and busi-
to the question.
meet them through friends,
Where?
is
ness contacts, at social affairs, at organized classes, at lectures and
seminars, at meetings and conventions, and even in church!
Best of
all,
as
I
have stoutly maintained for years (and
found that the world
For
is
slowly catching up to me)
you have the guts
if
to
is
I
have
the pickup.
speak to attractive members of the
other sex in buses, on trains, on park benches, at meetings, in hotel lobbies,
tacts.
in bars,
and
in
scores of other easily accessible
you have available an almost unlimited supply of new con-
places,
How,
in the
long run, could you go wrong
when faced with
such vast horizons for encountering?
As
point out in The Intelligent
I
ing, there are several fine art
to
Manhunt-
of the pickup:
(1)
It is
(2)
It
is
unquestionably the fastest technique ever invented. highly selective, since you only try to get together with
someone who (3)
Woman's Guide
unique advantages to meeting others by the
You
is
obviously, at least at
first
blush, attractive to you.
tend to get better customers, because
if
you actively
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
144
and boldly seek out partners
way your chances of
this
getting the
kind of person with the calibre of looks, brains, character, and
much
other traits that you want are
better than
you use more
if
passive encountering techniques. (4)
1
he art and science of picking up
available (5)
— even
at
morning
three in the
Because your potential supply
and because good selection works selling yourself)
(6)
is
(like
single in
the other sex
minute you have
an all-night cafeteria!
practically inexhaustible,
almost every other form of
on the law of averages, the pickup method
one most divinely calculated willing to take
members of
do almost any
gives you something to
to get
you what you want
is
the
you are
if
enough chances.
This method can be used
in
conjunction with or
in
addition
to all the other techniques of finding a suitable sex-love partner.
So stop the crap! lover,
and you don't
you
If
really
live at the
want
to find an
Sahara desert, you can almost invariably do so
//you are willing
riod of time,
you stubbornly refuse
is
tively seeking als,
in a
to hurt yourself is
will
you
by rejections, and especially true
ready to get off her ass to get on her
married male
reasonable pe-
to assert yourself, if
most available search routes! This female who
extramarital
North Pole or the middle of the
if
ass.
persist, // if
you
try
you are a For an ac-
normally get many sex-love refus-
while an assertively looking female will almost always get
many more
acceptances.
To
contend, therefore, that conditions
and circumstances prevent you from finding an agreeable lover usually unmitigated hogwash.
and do something about
You prevent
is
yourself! Face that
it!
SEEKING AND ENCOUNTERING OTHER SWINGERS The procedures
in the previous section of this chapter largely
apply to your going out by yourself, with your mate's consent or without
it,
to find a sex-love partner.
Suppose, however, you and
your spouse want to swing together and want to get
in
touch with
ETIQUETTE AND TECHNIQUES
who
Other couples
145
How
are similarly interested.
would you go
about doing this?
Much
material on this score will be found in various writings
on mate-swapping, particularly the books by the Breedloves, Gil-
and Herbert
bert D. Bartell,
Even more
and Paul M. Rubenstein.
F. Margolis
relevant material
is
contained in the book, Sex
for
Is
Giving: the Swing to Extramarital Fun, by John Webster. Just as I
point out, above, that assertion and risk-taking are the key to
regular extramarital getting together, Webster notes that "things
do not
'just
happen'; as
I
said,
Even when two couples
someone has
to
make them happen."
get together for the sole purpose of
mate-swapping, he indicates, they do not automatically move into different
rooms
in the
house and get down to business. One of the
mates, such as one of the husbands, had better forcefully ask one
of the other mates,
"Would you
like to take a tour of the apart-
ment with me?" and vigorously lead her
room. Then at room can also make an overt pass at the one who is remaining with him or her. I remember a comedy of errors that two couples I know got into. They met together to go to dinner, a show, and some mate-
least
one of the mates
left in, say,
into another
the living
swapping (and, possibly, orgiastic group beautifully
—
until they got to
on interminably
—
Everything went
one of the couple's homes, about
midnight, and began to talk and drink. ing went
sex).
albeit
The drinking and
on a high
the talk-
But
intellectual level.
nothing else happened. Finally, one of the males led the wife of the other male into the
bedroom of
the apartment; the other male
promptly kissed the other wife. But by
this
time the two
women
were so soused and sexually uninterested that the whole thing flat.
A
little
fell
desultory necking, and nothing more, took place, and
who
the evening soon
came
were so angry
themselves and each other for not making moves
at
to a halt, with four disappointed people
sooner that they were ashamed to get together again, and never did.
The
best laid
So, please,
—
or unlaid
— plans
somebody make
a
.
move!
.
.
If
!
you
get together with
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
146
your spouse and another couple, don't wait for things spontaneously to click. They probably never
will!
aforethought, take one of the
members of
and do something. Or,
will, start
of you are
still
fat (or thin)
ass
if
you
together in the
With lack of malice
the other couple aside
something when the four
same room. But don't
and expect the "inevitable"
to
sit
happen.
on your
Make
it
happen!
You may and places
seek out other swinging couples in a variety of ways
— such
as through social gatherings of your
own
local
groups, through swingers' clubs, through contacts at liberal bars,
through advertisements
in
swinging or sex magazines, or through
other means. John Webster, an old hand at this game, takes a
dim
view of any kind of mail contacts:
One means by which swingers sometimes meet one another it is a method not at all recommended by the author is
— and
—
through the aid of the postman. The daily newspapers often carry thinly disguised ads placed by couples
after
The underground
who
are seeking
column column of not-in-the-least-disguised ads by swingers search-
the friendship of others.
press boasts
ing for swingers. In addition, there are several special publications
— some with
nationwide circulation
— devoted
exclusively
and by swingers. The response to all such ads must necessarily be by mail. Unhappily, and in violation of citizens' rights to privacy, the postal authorities have occasionally made a practice of interfering with the exchange of correspondence among persons interested in social sex. At best, the penpal approach could lead to new and worthwhile acquaintances. At worst, it is a perilous undertaking which could lead to exposure and persecution, official and unofficial. Some few of the people we know made their first contacts by mail and, while none report having encountered governmental interference, the results have been less than rewarding in most instances. What has actually occurred with one or two exceptions in each case is that the people met through letter writing have proven to be somewhat unattractive; often, they have been
to the quest of, for,
—
—
ETIQUETTE AND TECHNIQUES
who have
couples
147
more
resorted to the mails because the
direct
person-to-person relationships have not been available.
Here again, risk-taking assertiveness most helpful.
If
will
you and your spouse want
probably prove to be to swing,
if
you
indi-
vidually or collectively talk to potential couples about sex, adul-
and swinging, you
tery,
things your
way and
keep running into people who see it.
In these face-to-face en-
moreover, you find whether you are attracted to the
counters,
other individuals, tionally,
will
are willing to try
how
well
you can
get along with
them conversa-
and what kinds of personalities they have. Long before
anything sexual actually takes place, you can easily withdraw from the foursome,
So seek
and seek suitable partners elsewhere.
— open your
big trap!
— and ye
Perhaps one
shall find.
American couples today has had some kind of mate-swapping experience, and possibly one out of five is willing to have it if the right other couple comes along and the subject can be approached acceptably. Especially when you are away from out of twenty
home
(for
example, on a vacation) and when the couples you and
mem-
your mate might approach are never likely to be intimate bers of your social or business circle,
perhaps
may
to gain
you have nothing
by trying for a mate-switching
well find that this particular one, or any other
just not
time
much
your thing, and that you'd better give up
in the future.
You
tried?
But how would you know
to lose affair.
you may
and
You
try, is
this kind of pas-
until
you actually
won't!
THE ETIQUETTE OF EXTRAMARITAL SECRECY As noted previously
in this
book,
it
is
often wise, for one rea-
son or another, to maintain a good deal of secrecy about your ex-
Even if you are engaging in civilized aduland your own mate freely allows you to have almost any
tramarital adventures. tery,
kind of sex-love relations you want with outsiders, you find
it
desirable or necessary to keep
some of your
still
may
affairs private:
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
148
because your lover objects to openness, because business or professional complications
would ensue because of
partner's boyfriend or girlfriend
lationship were
When
known, or
secrecy of this sort
is
Although, again, not very
profit
much
to the
New
research has been done and test
one proce-
in
her pamphlet. The
Etiquette, has a chapter,
"A
in
expertise in the field of extramarital adventure,
his
Cosmo
Philosophy
of Considerate Adultery." Drawing on works such as these and
own
re-
by knowing and follow-
Morton Hunt has some pages
kind of secrecy etiquette.
Guide
your
careful thought has been given to this
little
book. The Affair, and Gael Greene, Girl's
if
wise, there are various rules that
few controlled experiments have been arranged to dure over another, a
because your
for a variety of other sensible reasons.
have been worked out that you could ing.
it,
would seriously object
let
my
me make
a
few remarks.
Public Meetings. Watch or design, in public places!
when you get together, by accident You may think that your little looks of it
love and understanding will go completely unheeded by others
but will they?
You may
thoroughly enjoy, even get a great egotist-
away with, you or the soft-spoken words that ical
kick out of getting
But no one has learned how
the surreptitious looks between
are only for each others' ears.
to look magically without being seen
or whisper without behind heard
—
as
I
regularly
my
tell
Friday
night
workshop audiences
New
York, when they think they can superspecially whisper to
each other without
what
my and
Rational Living,
their neighbors hearing them!
you can get away with your "secret" glances
tainly,
when
at the Institute for
others are around
—
for a while! But for
how
Cer-
each other
And
long?
at
risk?
Gael Greene wisely notes, "the unbreakable rule tion."
that
at
in
if
But then, contradicting her own
you meet your lover
away with
it:
in
is
.
.
.
discre-
rule, she strongly implies
public places, you can usually get
ETIQUETTE AND TECHNIQUES
149
There are hundreds of reasons why a man or woman might on the street, in the shadowy recesses of a be seen about town rooftop bar, at the movies, in Saks' fur department with a
—
mysterious
He may
—
unknown companion of the opposite
sex.
be her furrier, her brother, a
her broker. Just
client,
because the giggly creature with old Teddy only half-wrapped
in
is
slightly tipsy
and
mauve Banlon doesn't mean she (when Lottie is down with a virus),
slinky
couldn't be his sister-in-law
or an out-of-town client.
Say hello. Shake hands. Your friend will introduce her companion. With or without a simple, not too self-conscious, expla-
and
nation. Don't stand around; don't leer. Say hello
Very is:
nice; very polite; but
don't be seen in public,
lover. Sure,
if
still
very foolish!
how about
it
if
are
you
she always in town? or her?
How come
can't
sister-in-law.
be with your in-law?
you be having an
Why
if
want your
But
he or
him
you are always mixing business with pleasure? arise in the
they keep meeting you with your "in-law."
Better by far: avoid public places with your beloved. really
is
affair with
These are only a few of the questions that may easily
minds of others
with your
the third or fourth time? Sure your
likely to
Why
it,
you meet the same person
companion can be your brother-in-law or your
how chummy
far better plan
you can possibly avoid
you can get away with
once or twice. But
The
leave.
affair to
remain
secret,
keep
it
so!
If
you
You damned
well don't have to dine out, go to the movies, take a walk, or go
shopping with him or her. Stop the wishful thinking. Stop feeding yourself horseshit. Sooner or later, you probably will get caught.
what you
Is that
really
want?
Telephoning. As contrasted with the public meeting, using the
when you have a secret lover. What about your mate, your office people, your telephone operator, or anyone else who may be listening to the call?
telephone seems exceptionally safe
But
is
Sure, is
it?
you can pretend, for the sake of these
listeners, that the call
impersonal or has to do with your work. But are they really
fooled?
Do
they believe what you want them to believe?
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
150
Be
Discuss this phone problem with your lover and
realistic!
make some wise arrangements about 1)
(
Such
it.
as:
Call minimally.
Prearrange some signals
(2)
(e.g.,
pretending to be a business
when you call) so that your lover knows that phone right away and has an excuse to be called.
associate the
is
you on
Don't use your special signaling system (like pretending
(3)
you
that the call
know you
just received
have
Don't
(4)
to
wrong number) too
a
often.
phone conversations when others
have your lover refuse your
up quickly, or otherwise
call,
wisely putting up
is
or to
hang
Understand that he or she
act "rudely."
well be restricted and
(6)
is
extended
are on the phone: long calls naturally breed suspicion.
Be prepared
(5)
may
it
Try vocal disguises, such as accents,
at
some
pretense.
times; but don't
abuse them, for they, too, can arouse suspicion! (7)
Watch what you
say,
even
in
a whisper, over the phone.
Voices can carry remarkably well, when you think that they (8)
can't!
Don't be a smartass, and think that you can keep getting
away with phoning your beloved when relative
is
his or her mate, friend, or
—
You may be able to do this a few times may not! Assume the worst; if you are going
around.
then again, you
a conspirator, be a
Written
and,
to
be
good one!
Communications. Be careful what you write! More
people have probably been discovered
in their
extramarital rela-
tions as a result of a letter, a note, an item written in a pocket tele-
phone
directory, or
flushed out
in
some other
bit
of writing than have been
any other way. Some mates,
in particular,
regularly
go through the pockets of their spouses to check on anything they
can find there. Recently,
I
have had female
clients
who were
de-
tected by their husbands because they kept in their pocketbooks
postcards or letters they wrote but hadn't mailed, notes to themselves about ers,
what transpired on
and telephone numbers on
their last meetings with their lov-
slips of paper.
not overly suspicious, don't be careless.
Watch
Even it!
if
your mate
is
ETIQUETTE AND TECHNIQUES
If
151
you must communicate with your lover by writing, take
proper precautions. Arrange to receive mail only
mark
and have the sender clearly a post-office
box
to
Completely destroy
Personal. If
it
it
your
at
office,
feasible, rent
is
which your respondents can address
all letters.
love letters you receive, and have your cor-
all
respondents do likewise. Even a perfectly "safe" place, such as a locked drawer at your
—
office,
someone
else.
One man
know used
I
when he went on box
and when she ignored
when
if
your desk
is
—
it
is
office
given to
the "safest" place of
all
to
his personal safe de-
a prolonged trip, he
some papers
to find
had
to allow
that his attorney
his instructions to get only those
papers and to touch nothing else ine his surprise
you are away from the
from a long-time mistress
his wife to get into the
desired,
if
you change your job, or
if
store his letters posit box. But
not be as good as you think
happen
since strange things can
for a while, or
may
in the
box, he was cooked. Imag-
his wife mailed to
him
a
few of the more
in-
criminating letters she had taken from the box!
Even
Secret Meeting Places.
marital
you
partner,
if
you have a very willing extra-
frequently
have
will
arranging for a suitable meeting place. lutely safe: cars
some
you are using the
office; a friend's
room
up
its
specifically for
your
affair has
places are obviously
Hunt sagely observes, simplest and cheapest
in is
in their
in the
or apartment that you keep
real dangers.
more dangerous than
Morton "One of the
others.
the automobile, but most people find that in their
youth seems thoroughly
in-
adulthood. The lack of space, the fugitive atmo-
nubby or leathery texture of the
seats,
automobile seem tawdry and degrading. Nor
tirely safe;
on you when
in
regard to the use of cars,
what served them well enough sphere, even the
in
abso-
apartment has obvious draw-
backs; and even a regular rented
adequate
is
can be observed; you can be seen getting to and
from a hotel or motel room; someone can break
Some
difficulty
No arrangement
not only does
it
involve the risk of being
others, including the police, but
it
is
make
sex
the car en-
come upon by
has neither plumbing nor hot
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
152
water to help one get rid of the evidence before going home. The car ers,
moreover,
itself,
crumpled
lipstick
is
weeks
later."
Whatever arrangements you make
(1) ple,
wrong shade of
tissues or cigarette butts with the
on them have a remarkable way of appearing from under
the seats days or
some
match-box cov-
a clue-collector: bobbypins,
sensible precautions
Try not
you can
for a place to meet, here are
take:
One
to enter the place together.
of you, for exam-
can take a motel room, and then the other can
what room the (2)
first
names
False
disadvantages)
ment (3)
if
one
is in,
and go directly
to that
call, find
are often useful (though they have their
you are registering
in a hotel
out
room.
own
or renting an apart-
for sexual purposes.
Impress on your lover the advisability of secrecy and of
being totally unsqueamish about getting together
in
a motel
room
or some other "unromantic" place. (4)
With
a
new
partner, try to start off in a rented or bor-
rowed apartment, rather than your partner, especially
if
a public hotel or motel. Then,
she
when
a female, gets used to this kind
is
of arrangement and to the fact that you are going to keep getting
may be able to tolerate less desirable places. To avoid suspicion, when you use a motel bring along the proper accouterments, such as some light luggage that makes it
together, she (5)
seem more
likely that
you are staying
you
really are
for the entire night or
two you actually intend
to stay).
on a
trip together
and that
day (instead of the hour or
Motels or large hotels are usually
better than small hotels, since you or your partner can more easily get into your (6)
If
room without being seen by anyone
you are
really trying to
keep your
or from your neighbors, avoid using your vous!
Your
at
affair
the desk.
from your mate
own home
as a rendez-
lover or his or her car can easily be spotted by prying
eyes. (7)
Wherever you
go, consider
some simple precautions. Your away from the apartment or
car can be parked several blocks
room you
are using.
Your
office partners
can be told that you are
ETIQUETTE AND TECHNIQUES collaborating on a
barge
in late at
153
book with Mr. or Mrs. So-and-so,
in case they
him or
night and find you alone with
her.
Your
mate can be given some legitimate reason for your being alone with your lover (who
supposedly an out-of-town buyer, a co-
is
worker, or something else of that
Think of these kinds of
sort).
excuses beforehand, and don't wait until you are
caught
literally
in
the act!
Arranging Opportune Times. Arranging to be with your lover at
opportune times
may have
is
often not easy, because either or both of you
keep your
to
affair a secret
from outsiders, especially
your mates, and that means that excuses will have to be made for being away from the
home
when you
or the office
Some people have ready-made reasons
for being away, since they
go out of town often, are out of the office engaged of selling, are
members of
often, or otherwise
get together.
some form
in
clubs or groups that get together fairly
have something to do that
is
legitimate and
cannot easily be checked on.
Most
adulterers,
arranged,
niently
ments.
If
however, do not have their
and therefore have
to
make
lives
you cannot use one of the above excuses
from your family, you may
fairly easily
so conve-
special
dream one
arrange-
to be
up.
away
You can
join a club (e.g., a chess club) or a sports or card-playing group.
On
a regular basis,
you can be a member of a
class (any adult ed-
ucation class will do), or a therapy group, or a seminar, or a dance or sketching group, or a men's or
women's organization, or any
other aggregation that meets once a week, once a month, or on
any other steady basis. More irregularly, you can make use of (actually or in
your imagination) business appointments, college
unions, lectures or concerts that your mate terested
in,
stag
and
hen
parties,
is
fishing
conventions, political campaigns, et cetera.
re-
not likely to be intrips,
out-of-town
Naturally,
some of
these "events" are likely to arouse your mate's suspicions; but the
more creative you are likely to accept
in
concocting them, the more he or she
your concoctions.
is
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
154
Tuesday
example, supposedly took an
for
R.,
Lillian
art
class
every
night at a regular artist's studio. Actually, she went there sketches.
And
every Tuesday, having saved them up and stored them at a
girl-
about once a month and worked feverishly
to her
some
home
friend's apartment, she faithfully brought
showed them
at
a few of
them and
husband, Daniel. Her productivity was such
he never suspected that three out of four Tuesdays she was
that
actually at her lover's apartment, engaging in quite another
of
form
art!
The Virtue of Lying. Lying is definitely immoral and evil. It away another person's freedom of action. Just as you would
takes
ordinarily not want to be lied to yourself truth
this or that decision lie to
—
since
you could more adequately decide what
— you
if
you knew the
do about making
to
are doing an unethical thing
when you
your spouse or nonmarital partner about the outside affairs
you are having. Carrying on a surreptitious
affair, therefore,
and other disadvantages. You may well of the dissimulation outlined
feel
has distinct moral
squeamish about some
in this chapter,
fiendishly clever advice given by other writers
or about
on
some of
this subject,
the
such
as Gael Greene's philosophy of considerate adultery:
The
ideal extramarital adventure
discretion
week or a
—
man from Omaha you met
the
cabana boy
ister
—
in
terms of potential for
the visiting author-lecturer
is
who
is
leaving next
during a convention. Or
which you don't belong. Or your minwith more to lose from exposure not always thoughtfully disciplined or
at a club to
or analyst
— someone
than you. Alas, lust
is
disciplinable.
Never involve your children as accomplices or covers. Never your lover on the telephone if anyone is present, even a
talk to
two-year-old. If
asked,
If
caught,
Lie,
lie. lie.
Never admit anything. Never accept exposure.
embroider, improvise, deny. Be convincing.
ETIQUETTE AND TECHNIQUES Very
clever, very practical, but
So be as queasy
you
as
And
prevarication.
ing
155
will
still
unethical and unsatisfying.
about extramarital affairs that involve
only resort to them
in a
pinch,
when
truth-tell-
would obviously do much more harm.
Better yet, even while you're lying, ing.
Your mate,
He
straight.
us assume,
let
work
for eventual truth-tell-
exceptionally vulnerable and
is
or she would never, you are sure, really accept your
having any extramarital adventures, even though your relationship
would not be seriously endangered thereby. What, never? Well,
al-
most never. Don't necessarily give up. Continue, even
if
it
takes years, to
your mate to accept honest, civilized adultery. Talk to
try to get
him or her
in
general, without necessarily confessing your
own
strong desires. Bring up instances of your respectable friends and relatives
who have
ture of marriage
practiced honesty successfully. Discuss the fu-
and the possibility that almost everyone, even-
tually, will accept pluralism
tionship.
Try
to get
along with an intense one-to-one rela-
your mate to experiment with various "safe"
forms of extramarital adventure, such as couple-swapping, can, so that he or she
is
if
you
able to understand affairs in general and
not be nonplussed by them.
Honesty not,
right
doesn't that if
is
is
the best policy;
now, be able to
mean
you never
that
too bad;
it
may be
you can, now or
if
effect
that.
it
will. If
it
is
feasible.
You may
with your spouse. But that
you must, for the present,
wiser to do so than to
in the future,
Work, work, work on
and when
be truthful, that
tell is
lie,
the truth. But far preferable.
Overcoming Emotional Problems
About Extramarital Adventure
L
HAVE
in
already discussed one of the main problems that arises
connection with extramarital
sane jealousy.
problems
—
what
But
about
anxiety,
especially
affairs,
namely, irrational or
some of
the
depression,
guilt,
in-
other
common
and
hostility?
What can you do to prevent them from arising in the first place or how can you deal with them successfully when they do arise? Let us see.
OVERCOMING ANXIETY Perhaps the most as
common
you might expect,
this
of emotional upsets
connection with extramarital adventures.
about (1) letting your mate fairs; (2)
anxiety, and,
know
that
You may
you would
in
be anxious
like to
have
af-
being caught red-handed in case you decide to carry on
an affair surreptitiously; friends,
is
kind of feeling frequently arises
(3)
and associates even
being discovered by certain relatives, if
you are having an aboveboard
affair
with your mate's consent; (4) picking the wrong person or persons with
whom
criticized
to
have an outside relationship;
by your lover, or
nonsexual ways; and
failing
(6) letting
your
with other important aspects of your
your relations with your children.
156
(5)
him or her
in
being rejected or various sexual or
affairs interfere too seriously life,
such as your business or
OVERCOMING EMOTIONAL PROBLEMS Fortunately,
157
these forms of anxiety, and any other form you
all
can possibly experience or invent, are simple to understand though
this
kind of understanding will not make
undo your anxiety and eventually not least
cal
you
easy for you to
to experience
it
it,
will at
provide you with the possibility of minimizing or eliminating
Does rational-emotive therapy (RET,
it.
it
if
and even
psychology;
of rational-emotive
principles
the
learn
human
answers for
for short) provide magi-
disturbances? Definitely not! But
comprehensible, and effective
—
if
you are willing
to
clear,
it is
work
using
at
it!
The model used
RET
in
always basically the same; so that
is
you are anxious about anything you can
good
effect.
model
is
the
employ
this
model
if
to
As I showed in the case of intense jealously, the A-B-C method of fathoming what you are doing to
make yourself Sinx'ious and rational Beliefs (iB's)
—
to
the use of point
make
D
— Disputing your
ir-
and perma-
yourself, temporarily
unpanicked again.
nently,
As
still
usual,
you
You
are,
quence.
start
we
with
will
C
— your
disturbed emotional Conse-
assume, anxious, insecure, overconcerned,
some aspect of having extramarital affairs. Since you know that there is an A an Activating event. For
or panicked about
C
exists,
—
you are not anxious about nothing; and so-called free-floating anxiety is
almost entirely a myth that psychologists and psychiatrists
invent
when
they cannot clearly zero in (or get you to zero
whatever you are anxious about. So
let
us assume that there
A, an Activating event, and that you can persistently
And you
and
intently
"Wouldn't
it
is
to
be terrible
keep asking yourself:
if
is
affair;
more
illustrate:
but this
an
you look
"
if
—
!"
form of the
All you have to
whatever you are anxious
What would be
terrible if?"
Ususally within a few minutes you will discover what this what
To
on
it.
to locate the Activating event, or
about,
fairly easily,
can. For just about any anxiety takes the
irrational Belief,
do
enough, find
in)
is.
you know that you are anxious about having an
is
specifically,
a vague perception
your anxiety
is
and you are not sure by what,
being aroused. So you ask your-
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
158
"Now, what do
self,
think would be terrible in connection with
I
And you soon come up
this desired or actual affair?"
statements or Beliefs
found out that
maybe
really care for
I
me from
stop
"Wouldn't
like:
my
be terrible
it
it
be terrible
I
children
came home
early
and
would
that
dis-
couldn't bear
That would be horrible!" Or: "Wouldn't
to face him.
my
it!
hell
husband
lover's
covers what's going on and raises a fuss about
if
And
affair.
my
if
self-
my mate
She would raise
lover!
continuing with the
be awful!" Or: "Wouldn't
with
if
it
be terrible
one day and found me with an-
other man! They'd probably be shocked and would begin to hate
me.
And
would be catastrophic!"
that
you now have zeroed
All right,
in
on
at least part
of the Acti-
vating event: namely, your mate, your lover's husband, or your
some aspects of your
children might discover
affair that
you have
been keeping from them, and these persons would be shocked and of you for engaging
critical
you are having
it.
am
my
affair.
who I
emotional Consequence of
According
Now to
quite fortunately to take the
manner
discovers
me might
I
which
in
might be
dis-
well be horrified
That's clearly the Activating event about which
anxious. At point C,
vating event.
the affair in the
So you now have, "At point A,
covered, and the person
about
in
feel upset
my
and panicked; and
believing something about the Acti-
what's going on at point B,
RET
—
theory, what
is
First,
my
going on
invariably obvious, for
same forms.
I
that's the
you have a
it
Belief system?" at
point
B
is
almost always seems
empir-
rational, sensible,
am discovered having an extramarital affair, and if the person who discovers me is horrified about it, that would be unfortunate and unpleasant. I wouldn't like I am concerned lest this discovery occur; and I'd better do my best to ically validateable Belief: "If
I
it.
prevent with
—
its
happening!"
this set
If
you stayed rigorously with
nounced negative feeling but
What would
— and only
of rational Beliefs (rB's), you would have a pro-
it
it
definitely
wouldn't be anxiety.
be? Obviously, concern or caution about being
discovered, and sorrow, displeasure, irritation, or annoyance
were discovered.
if
you
OVERCOMING EMOTIONAL PROBLEMS
—
This Belief ful if it
that
it
would be
you were discovered
—
you,
harm you
you, or even
and pain-
distinctly unfortunate
normally rational or sensible because
is
simply would be. At that very
you a verbal hard time; and
159
least,
at the
your discoverer would give
most, he or she might boycott
physically, get others to take noxious actions against
kill
you.
And
these kinds of hassles are, of course,
unfortunate or painful. You'd certainly be crazy to like them, to
Your
cheer about them, or to be indifferent to them.
quence
—
rational Be-
Conse-
therefore, leads to your appropriate emotional
lief (rB),
at
point
C
—of
feelings of concern or caution,
somewhat negative emotions, but those serving and wisely considering what
is
which are
you go back
that help
transpiring at point
to ob-
A
(the
Activating event), and doing something to change, ameliorate, or
prevent
it.
Unfortunately, you rarely stay with your rational Belief; and practically never,
I
contend,
if
you actually
C, anxiety, over-
feel, at
concern, or panic. These feelings are quite ^appropriate to the
unpleasant Activating event that ety or
may occur
overconcern does not merely
eventuality and induce
you
alert
or
to try to forestall
you obsessively aware of danger.
It
occurring. Anxi-
is
you it.
to
an unpleasant
Rather,
it
makes
centers you on yourself, and
your imagined worthlessness adequately.
It
cused on your real
problem
in case you fail to meet this danger makes you feel so upset and confused (and so fo-
own
that
anxiety or panic
is is
gut) that
you are much
occurring at A.
less able to solve the
To make
matters even worse,
frequently such an uncomfortable feeling that
you become almost completely focused on are so panicked about being panicked that
it,
your symptom; you
you even forget about
problem (that is, "How do I prevent So-and-so from knowing about my affair or how do I handle his or her reactions if
the original
it is
discovered?") and get into the vicious circle of ruminating ob-
sessively
and confusedly about your panic.
Anxiety,
overconcern,
and panic, moreover, usually include
strong elements of self-condemnation. ful,
you not only think that
it
is
When you
terrible that
are overly fear-
you have
this painful
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
160
possibility or actuality, at point
A; but also that you are an awful
person for not being able to handle solve
And when you
it.
quickly and perfectly and
it
are berating yourself for anything, includ-
ing having an affair or not being able to deal beautifully with
consequences, you almost always get so absorbed
you are much
handle any
less able to
in that
its
bag that
life difficulty.
For many such reasons, anxiety or overconcern (rather than caution or concern) are dysfunctional emotions that almost always
do much more harm than good. And they are
noted above,
not, as
caused by your rational Beliefs (rB's) that the results of the discovery of your affair might well be highly unfortunate and un-
They
pleasant.
So-and-so! if
nation of
my I
horrible
it
if
is
out and
were discovered by
I
I
cannot; and
sure
I
likely to
I
What
can't give a
a
worm
add
to this
to feel this
sit-
therefore deserve to suffer!"
I
of utterly nonsensical state-
list
"Look how panicked
lulus:
I
good expla-
should be able to handle this kind of
behavior!
am
few more
a
me
he or she finds
Soon you are ments
be terrible
it
couldn't bear his or her censure!
I
would be
uation; but
are caused, instead, by the decidedly irrational Be-
"Wouldn't
(iB's):
liefs
I
am
getting!
How
way! I'm an utter idiot for feeling
like
this and not being able to handle myself!"
Well, that does
it.
If
you devoutly believed
in
only one of these
hypotheses, you would begin to feel utterly panicked and misera-
you believe
ble; if
effective.
quitur:
my
Whereupon, you asininely
it
is
awful. If
my
what usually happens
insist that
ient);
of them, you are incredibly upset and
make up
still
in-
another non se-
"Because I'm feeling so awful about being discovered
affair,
that's
in all
something
is
feelings in
tell
me
feel
have you; and then you
it
is,
it
is!"
in
And
regard to awfulizing: you foolishly
awful (when
it's
palpably only inconven-
your body then automatically reacts
you consequently
that
to this crazy belief
and
depressed, nauseated, panicked, or what illogically use
"proof" of the validity of your foolish,
your feeling as indubitable still
utterly groundless (and
essentially unprovable) hypothesis.
This
is
exactly what happens in the case of fanatic religionists.
OVERCOMING EMOTIONAL PROBLEMS They dogmatically
161
insist that there is a
God and
he especially
that
loves them; they consequently intensely feel this God's love; then
they are completely convinced that they have proved the existence
God
of the like
they originally hypothesized. Emotional disturbance,
dogmatic
religion,
is
a bigoted and rigid insistence and puerile
demandingness. Because the individual with neurosis
more
oughly feels that that
loving
it
is,
While the
is.
it
commands
with psychosis)
so,
who
deity
and then
that
something be
on
side
his
— and
and hence happy about
(falsely) deified
who
is
some kind of
he consequently feels this "fact"
with neurotic or psychotic thinking usually invents hating devil
even
he thor-
falsely uses his feeling as evidence
religionist occasionally invents
is
(or,
so,
—
the person
some kind of damned and
against him; consequently he feels
hence miserable. Both are absolutistic and mislead; but the for-
mer has than the
latter.
Anyway: you are not anxious bility that
point A). ious.
some ways,
a less troublesome disturbance, at least in
you
will
Your own
you want
If
(at
point C) because of the possi-
be criticized and scorned about your Belief system (at point B)
to eliminate
is
affair (at
making you anx-
your anxiety (while
still
retaining
your concern), you can immediately, once you are aware of feeling it,
go on to D, which consists of Disputing,
tice,
your irrational Beliefs.
You can
in
theory and in prac-
dispute these Beliefs as fol-
lows: 1.
"Why would
it
be terrible
if I
were discovered by So-and-
so?" Answer: "It wouldn't be! Nothing entire universe, unless real hassle if
2.
it's
"Where
But a hassle
the evidence that
is
he or she discovered
if
any!
Of course
hurt
it.
I
and stones
me
all
is
my
it
a hassle;
would be a
It
is.
affair
and was
it's
dis-
not terrible
a hassle!"
sure
Sticks
really terrible in the
foolishly insist that
So-and-so found out about
pleased and irate about
because
I
is
that
could bear
my it,
I
couldn't bear So-and-so's cen-
adultery?" Answer: "There
no matter how much
I
isn't
disliked
it.
my bones, but So-and-so's names can't much. And even if he or she throws sticks and will
break
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
162
Stones, or otherwise sees that
I
am
actually handicapped for hav-
me
ing this affair (by, for example, penalizing
can bear
painful consequences; but
"What makes me
3.
my
ity to
spouse and
can stand what
I
worm
a
don't like!"
I
my
So-and-so discovers
if
infidel-
good explanation of my behav-
can't give a
I
still
I
possible
its
Answer: "Nothing does! There are no human worms
ior?"
my
foolish
Even and weak (as
foolish
and weak person.
including me!
I
financially),
never like So-and-so's wrath and
Til
that.
if it
behavior regarding this adultery
may be), that My traits may stink;
possibly
make me
doesn't
but
is
/ don't.
a
Unless
mistakenly see myself diS a stinker!" 4.
"Why
should
I
be able to handle
So-and-so and not be deserve to suffer
why
son
would be better respects, well.
that the
if I
it
I
error-prone
human
whether
I
this mess. If
being,
succeed
I
in
handling
in
that
Powers That Be are going
making
is
I
I
(at
//
some
it,
be determined
to
will only accept
—
too
to put
me
myself as an
can then take a situation
handling
bad
that's
have to punish myself or
like this in
well or not."
it
The contention of rational-emotive psychology Dispute
although
inevitably, in
obviously won't handle everything
mean
doesn't
it
What makes me
situation,
this
Being a human who
fallible,
it?
poorly?" Answer: "There's no rea-
mess up completely
bad! But
into hell for
stride,
handle
did.
if I
weak and
And
damned
if I
should be able to handle
I
with
this negative situation
the least thrown by
in
that
is
if
you
point D) your irrational Beliefs (iB's) about what
occurring to you at point diately tend to
A
(the Activating event),
become unanxious and
will
you
will
is
imme-
merely remain con-
cerned. If you keep on Disputing these Beliefs in a similar man-
you
ner,
will ultimately reach a point
happens again, you
where, when the same thing
will automatically tend to
be
When
he
much
less
anx-
ious.
A me
case in point
is
that of
for psychotherapy he
Jonathan O.
was on the verge,
vous breakdown. Certainly he was
in
first
as he put
came it,
to see
of a ner-
an acute state of panic most
of the time. Although he had his wife's
full
permission to have ex-
OVERCOMING EMOTIONAL PROBLEMS
163
tramarital affairs and although she herself had them, from time to
Roman
with his consent, he was terribly afraid that his
time,
Catholic grandmother would find out and would disinherit him. Since she might leave him almost a quarter of a million dollars, he
was
much money.
of losing so
terrified
one of his even
if
But, he said, he
(who happened, of
attached to his present mistress
was quite
things, to be
all
cousins) and could not possibly break up with her,
first
his inheritance
was jeopardized.
out of this horrible bind?
How
How
could he
could he possibly get
make himself
less
anx-
ious?
The way of his bind
want
things were, Jonathan couldn't easily get himself out
—
give her
up
that
up
to give
didn't
want
grandmother never found out about the
his
if
He
to say, out of his conflict situation.
is
his partner in adultery; he especially didn't
to
affair;
and he had no way of making sure that the grandmother would not find out, nor of knowing for certain that she would disinherit
him
if
she did. So he kept taking the chance that she would not
discover the affair, and he worried and worried and worried that
some day she would
learn about
Jonathan's rational highly unfortunate
doing sexually.
if
And
it.
usual
as
—was
that
would be
it
grandmother discovered what he was
was
this
be utterly catastrophic to actively
gerated and
his
—
true:
it
probably would be. His
however, was quite different: namely, that
tional Belief,
him
Belief
if
Dispute
silly.
First of
all,
his
he soon saw that
it
irra-
would
when
she discovered his affair. But
this Belief,
it
I
grandmother might discover
deep dark secret and raise a fuss about
—
it
got
was exaghis
without disinheriting
made
him. Second, after she initially
became
—upset about
might well become reconciled to
(as
his adultery, she
people frequently do). Third,
would
lose
money
woman
friend.
worst
if
—
he
— he
still
Fourth, even
lost his
grandmother's approval,
still
if
he
lost his
his
if
he
it
wife and his
came
the very worst
herself
him he only
she did disinherit
would have both if
she was going to leave him, and
he
if
or, rather,
to the very
lost the
money
wife and his lover,
could survive and be reasonably happy. For these would be
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
164
only highly unpleasant events
As long
his entire existence.
in his life;
they would not sabotage
as he accepted these
grim events and
condemn himself for failing to ward them off (by, for giving up his beloved and thereby preventing voluntarily example, refused to
his
grandmother from finding out about
could
these, he might (ironically enough!)
he
their relationship),
find all kinds of other enjoyments;
still
and
he looked for
if
wind up with a new
situation
that was even more productive of pleasure and joy than his pre-
sent state of being.
When tually
Jonathan started Disputing his irrational Beliefs, he even-
ended up with a new philosophical
E, namely:
about
my
''It
would be undesirable
—
no matter how unfortunate I
panic vanished.
else) is in
my
life,
can find other enjoyments and lead a reaif
my grandmother
and see what
then,
it,
something
this (or
sonably happy existence. So face
found out
undesirable. Actually, all it would be more than unfortunate in the universe, and
is
the chances are that
result or Effect, at point
my grandmother
but that's
affair,
there's nothing that
I'll
if
He continued
I
finds out
can do about
to see his
woman
it."
—
tough!
His state of
friend,
and was
exceptionally happy with this state of affairs.
OVERCOMING GUILT Guilt, as
you might expect,
having extramarital
affairs;
one of the prime deterrents
more than
tinue but gives the individuals a great deal of discomforts
is
who
that,
it
to
allows them to con-
are extramaritally adventurous
and a dearth of joy. More
affairs that
otherwise might have been thoroughly satisfying have been ruined
by intense feelings of
guilt
than have been blocked by almost any
other factor.
Mary
J.
was a good case
very attracted to her
in point.
sexual and was getting married, bility"
to
their
Her husband pretended to be actually was homo-
when they married, but first,
to display
community and, second,
which was highly
staid
and conventional,
to
his
"respecta-
convince his firm,
that he
was a
solid citi-
OVERCOMING EMOTIONAL PROBLEMS zen whose wife would participate
Mary was shocked (in the
in the
company's
social affairs.
to learn, after five years of sexual deprivation
course of which he screwed her,
times), that he felt that
165
at
most, ten or twelve
was homosexual. But she nonetheless
him and
liked
he was an excellent father and provider for her and their
two very young children. So she wanted to remain married, but she also wanted to have a steady sex part,
he would have been very happy
keep her off his back
life. if
She knew
that, for his
she had affairs
—
if
just to
(or, rather, his front).
But Mary was enormously guilty every time she did go to bed with another man. First of
most
all
all,
wrong because alfelt she was wives. Second, adultery was against she
deemed
this
her lovers were already married, and she
making them
disloyal to their
her religion. She had been reared as a Catholic and although she
had become liberalized enough to accept adultery on the part of her Catholic friends, she couldn't bring herself to think that allright for her. Third, she
come public gossip and
was afraid
that she
that her affairs
it
was
would be-
would be considered the town
whore.
Mary thought that I would go along with her views and teach her how to be happy though practically abstinent. She wanted to learn how to be conWith such "good reasons"
tent with little or
my and
no
sex,
to feel guilty,
and since she had learned, from reading
Dr. Robert A. Harper's book,
rational-emotive therapy
ing, that in
A Guide
to Rational Liv-
we generally
are in favor of
long-range hedonism and self-discipline, she wanted to to
augment
To
her surprise,
I
demurred.
I
explained that
deed show clients how to be more disciplined discipline
is
not believe
in
RET we
in discipline
per
se.
life,
If
in-
— but only when
the
We
do
used for practical, happiness-giving purpose.
seriously disrupt her marriage, part of her
know how
that side of her personality.
her extramarital affairs would
which she considered
to
be a fine
then she would be foolish to have such affairs, and
should discipline herself to do without them. But
if,
as
seemed
to
be the case, such affairs would not interfere with her marital rela-
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
166
tions
and might indeed aid them (since she would then stop pres-
was no
suring her husband to keep having sex with her), then there
becoming
particular point in refraining from them, and thereby over-d'iscipUncd.
"But what about the question of their wives? Don't
"Yes, you do," the wives in any
owe
I
replied, "//
1
my
taking
my
these wives anything?"
lovers
Mary
away from
asked.
you are intimately involved with
way; or //you are
really
men
persuading these
to
break up otherwise good relationships and you would rather not
do
this
because you wouldn't want some other
women
to persuade
your husband to break up an otherwise good relationship with you. But
is
either of these eventualities actually true?
"No," said Mary.
"I
friendly with any of the
going to bed with. with a
man who
wasn't having ing with
my
"So you
And
have to admit that they
women whose husbands I
aren't. I
I
am
not
have considered
wouldn't even dream of having an affair
wasn't already largely estranged from his wife or
some kind of sex
difficulties with her, as
I
am
hav-
husband." really aren't
harming, as
it
were, any of these wives?"
"No."
"Then why
can't
you seriously consider having sex with
their
husbands?" "Well, to bly
tell
the truth,
harm anybody
in
I
guess
I
believe that
any way. Even
if
1
shouldn't possi-
I'm not really interfering
with a man's marriage, but his wife might be slightly annoyed by, say, his being out with
me one
night instead of being with her,
immediately think that I'm immensely doing her
in,
and
I
1
feel
guilty about that."
"In other words, you
no one
at
any time.
demand
Is that
that
you absolutely,
"That's more than right! That's just
way, and
still
utterly
harm
right?" it!
I've
always been that
am."
"But why do you have
to be?
Suppose you were harming somewould be a bad deed
one's wife by having an affair with him. That
—
certainly
from her frame of reference. But you're saying
to your-
OVERCOMING EMOTIONAL PROBLEMS absolutely never should do a
self: 'I
"And deeds
am
saying that.
1
bad deed. Because then I'm a
"
completely, utterly roiiQn person.' 'i definitely
167
am!"
thereby destroying yourself.
at times.
It is
You
have
really
someone
a choice of you or
else.
do bad
to
And
if
you
always choose hurting yourself and not hurting him or her, then who's going to choose not hurting you?
everyone thinks and
everyone
is
respect, the
in this
acts,
Do you
really think that
way you
do, that
only interested, or mainly interested, in not hurting
you?" "No, of course
not.
I
that they're all vicious
can see that people are not that way. Not
and nasty. But they
just don't care that
much about me." "Then why should you care so much about hurting them? It's nice not to harm them. It's great to be considerate and kind. But not to harm them at all, in any way is that practicable?"
—
"Hmmm. I
but
No. Not
kept helping it
really. In fact,
Mary
to see that
hardly was necessary.
And
hardly it
at all!"
was good not
that
it
was
fine to
to
harm
others,
be considerate;
but not to be overconsiderate of others and u nder considQvaiQ of
As
herself.
I
did so, she spontaneously saw that her holier-than-
thou Catholicism and horror of public gossip were really subheadings
under the same general perfectionistic theme. As she said
after a
few sessions of rational-emotive therapy:
"I can see
now why
really don't believe
it;
I've
used the Catholicism as an excuse.
I
but I've kept that part of the belief that says
that all unconventional sex acts are bad. Because, truthfully,
what
would people think of me, if I committed such acts? And what would their gossip be about me? The Catholicism is a rationalization. /
a
must be beyond reproach.
I
must not harm anyone, must be
good Catholic, must not be gossiped about
perfect,
— because
beyond doing what other people cavalierly do
criticized for doing!
It's all
the
same
nobility crap!
/
I
must be
— and
get
must be the
only one in heaven, while the rest of you unnoble mortals stay undistinguished on earth or roast in hell.
My
Catholicism merely
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
168
my own nobility-seeking am a Mohammedan! I
bolstered
Catholic as
I
Tm
views.
just use
really
some of
as
good a
the Catholic
horscshit that will presumably ennoble me!"
The more Mary gave up trying to be noble, great, perfect, anmore she lost her guilt. She tried one extramarital affair,
gelic, the
made
huge mistake
a
couldn't
work
out but also had a
it
her
selecting
in
little
partner,
and not only
who
fracas with his wife,
suspected her of ''running around" with the husband. She was only
momentarily tically
no
back by
set
guilt or
this
double unpleasantness, and
shame about
prac-
felt
either her poor selection or the
wife's upset. She got out of that affair
and
one
tried another. This
did work out very well (especially since her lover's wife, coinci-
was
dentally enough,
woman), and she
is,
partly lesbian
my
to
Meanwhile, her marriage
and was hung up on another
knowledge,
continuing with
still
it.
better than ever; her children have
is
learned to accept her goings and comings with equanimity (every
once lover;
while she spends the whole night or weekend with her
in a
and for the
first
time
in
her
life
she
is
beginning to accept
herself fully and also her odd, but hardly heinous,
life.
OVERCOMING DEPRESSION Depression exactly the
usually tied
is
same
thing.
It
up with anxiety and
irrational elements: self-downing
these can wreak a dreadful
Typical
is
guilt but
is
not
usually includes at least two important
and
self-pity. Either or
both of
toll.
Robert U., who had an
affair with a
married neigh-
bor and was criticized severely by his two married daughters beill; (2) some of the members of community suspected what was going on between him and
cause (1) his wife was quite
sweetheart; and (3) the far
below
son with
woman
his educational
whom
and
woman,
Delia,
his
was, according to the daughters,
social level
and not the kind of per-
he should have anything to do. Although his
tionship with this
the
was about the
best thing that
rela-
had
ever happened to him (his wife had suffered from severe heart
— OVERCOMING EMOTIONAL PROBLEMS was almost
trouble for fifteen years and
own
because of her
169
him
entirely neglectful of
problems), he was severely depressed about
it
and went into a tailspin the day following almost every encounter he had with Delia.
While Mary, whose case we
examined, was plagued by one
just
major irrational idea that was making her guilty and upset namely, the notion that she should be above reproach of any kind
and was a base person philosophies.
He
own
ought
to
social class,
first,
— Robert had
that he should
among
several insane
do the
his sick wife; second, that he
subject of any gossip
his
she were not
believed,
and have respect for third, that he
if
the people of his
community; and,
woman
have close relations only with a
who could
Like Mary, he consequently
felt
thing"
''right
must not be the in
not be criticized by his daughters.
very guilty because he was having
woman
an affair that he should not have, was having
it
with a
whom
in
such a manner
he ought not care
down
as to bring
for,
criticism
and was having
and gossip on
his
it
head that he ought
not be inspiring.
To make
matters worse, Robert believed that he would always
do the kind of
''rotten" things that
he was doing, and that conse-
quently he would always be a "rotten person."
Like most de-
pressed individuals, he thought that his condition was not only
bad
— but
that
it
was hopeless. There was something so bad about
himself, he believed, that he could not possibly ever change his
crummy ways and
act better. Therefore he
would perennially be
reprehensible.
him and
Third, Robert believed that the world was unfair to that he
was an exceptionally
pitiable, helpless creature
who could
not cope with this unfairness. His wife "unfairly" had been
years and had given
him
neighbors "unfairly" did not accept the fact that, for the in his life,
ill
for
practically nothing during that time. His first
time
he had found some real measure of sex-love happiness;
and they were meanly gossiping about him and trying to put an end to his joy. His daughters "unfairly" were looking at Delia's lack of education
and class
status,
and not
at the fact that
she was
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
170
remarkably kind and understanding and had a rare kind of "education" of her own. Robert was underlyingly enraged at these "un-
which means
fairnesses":
and occasionally
self,
to
that he insisted
and commanded
(to
him-
Delia) that they should not exist; that
people, including his daughters, ou^^ht not be the bitably are. But his rage soon died:
slaught of self-pity, the feeling that
way
they indu-
was smothered in an oninevitably must he rough on
it
life
him, and that he had no strong inner resources with which to cope with
adversities.
its
A
At point
and blocked
Robert was sorely opposed
(the Activating event),
in
continuing with the best
human
relationship he had
ever known. At point rB (his rational Belief), he held that this blocking, this frustration, was unfortunate, unpleasant, and pain-
At point
ful.
iB (his irrational Belief), he absolutistically insisted
was awful,
that the blocking
that he couldn't stand
that
it,
would
it
horribly continue forever, that this kind of unfairness must not
and that a poor shlemiel
exist,
happy
like
himself just could not live hap-
rough world and could not be
pily in such a horribly
any degree
in
such circumstances. Consequently, he was severely de-
in
pressed. I
have worked with Robert
pute, as vigorously
system.
have used three main approaches
I
cedures. Cognitively,
what
his
tently.
main
To
major
them.
"1. to
—
He /
I
I
in the
RET
pro-
listing
and how he could Dispute or challenge
full respect for
Why
such as the respect of others,
And
in
following paper:
ful to her. Disputing: (a)
advantages?
emo-
and to Dispute them consis-
must do what others, including
do and have
to Dis-
the cognitive,
gave him a homework assignment of
irrationalities
turned
—
have shown him how to see very clearly
irrational Beliefs are
this end,
D
his irrational Belief
and behavior therapy that are usually combined
tive,
his
helping him go on to
at
and persistently as he can,
aren't they
if
my
sick wife
must I
my
do
I?
It
daughters, expect
and be
me
entirely faith-
has certain advantages,
so; but
do
I
really
need these
outweighed by the disadvantages of
OVERCOMING EMOTIONAL PROBLEMS up my
giving
171
Would people truly respect me if 1 were I doubt it; many of them probably re-
affair? (b)
completely monogamous? spect
time
me more this way, in my life. I sort of
for being fairly independent for the first
my
think even
way, though they won't exactly admit ers'
respect?
nice to have
It's
may go
tages that
with
it
it
—
daughters feel a
Anyway, do
it.
— but does
Do
spect?
my own
I? Isn't
head for myself
my own.
have
—
that
mean
But do
that 1
need
I
supposedly need
my own
even need
I
am
I
enjoying myself and
— whatever
and enjoying?
Why
justification? (d)
bag?
I
if
thereby put her could.
I
I
that
—
is!
alive
Do
let
my
my
self-
wife the same
silly
do anything mean and nasty
to
—
I
to
couldn't
unless she foolishly thought
could deprive her of companionship (which
what), or of sex
self
myself be, without any
having respect for
as a person
my
being alive
did such things, acted badly to her,
down
need
I
and capable of
need to assess
I
the time to justify
all
merely
I
am
I
Do
well, that's it?
can't
Isn't
know
just
and don't want
like her
But even
her.
—
the hell that
re-
worthy of living for
doing the right things and earning the respect of others? 1
Ob-
it?
respect actually an egoistic pat on the
a signal to myself that
that kind of crap? Can't
need oth-
especially the practical advan-
viously not! (c) Isn't respect a bowl of shit? others' respect to
I
little this
I
I
do, some-
(which she doesn't want anyway, and would
rather
I
got elsewhere), or of
(which
I
don't).
But
if I
did
all
money and
other material things
these things, that
would
have
really
away some would be poor behavior on my
nothing to do with respecting her, but only with taking
enjoyments from her. Well, that but
part,
"2.
/
it
wouldn't show that she's a louse
should be having an affair with a
higher social level than
might be better class
what
if
I
did
is
want and what
the
women
her
in
I've
I've
known,
these respects.
level,
And
if
of
/
I
sort of
whom
I'm
am!
woman who is on Why should I?
doubt
it.
Delia seems to give
never had from
all
that
Disputing:
Delia.
— though
and her educational I
— or
my
a It
Despite her
me
just
about
wife or any other of
have been distinctly above
making
a mistake about this
could actually get a better lover than Delia, that's too bad.
I'll
and risk
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
172
A
it!
mistake
about making
self
"3.
the
just a mistake,
is
Because
wrong woman
who
I
my-
don't have to castigate
it.
am
I
and
to
doing
do
it
this
bad thing
to
my
with, that proves that I
wife and picking
am
a bad person
do these things forever. Disputing: The hell am not a bad person, no matter how many mistakes
will stupidly
does!
I
make. As Dr.
Ellis says,
and
think Jesus sort of said
I
it
too,
it I
am
I
human being who frequently will do the wrong things do many right things. I really should because of my fallibility, keep acting badly on many occasions. And I will, for this reason, perpetually do some or many wrong things, but a fallible
but
who
will also
not necessarily because
I
have done them before.
most errors and not do them again. for
me
—
pick one
as
my
who
"4.
/
I
can't
can
still
better for
make me
me
in the future.
My
—
I
the
I
can correct
wrong woman
find this out
past
and
and present
repeat them forever.
Just cannot cope with this miserable, unfair world. Dis-
puting: Shit,
pacify
is
wife really was, too
is
mistakes don't
Delia
If
can't!
I
make my
my
I
can't change this miserable world too
wife better, raise Delia's social status right now,
daughters completely, or get
stop gossiping. But these things.
much.
I
my
envious neighbors to
can have an enjoyable time,
They may
all
for myself in spite of the
remain pretty bad; but
way
in spite /
can do
of
all
a lot
they are."
Cognitively, Robert kept working along these lines, during our
individual and group sessions, in his outside
life,
and through
his
homework assignments. Emotively, I was able to help him by putting him in one of my regular therapy groups and having him attend one of the Marathon Weekends of Rational Encounter which the Institute for
Advanced Study
several times each year at
its
in
Rational Psychotherapy gives
New York
City headquarters and in
various other parts of the United States and Canada. In both these
group
settings,
some of them fairs
he met in
(to his surprise) other
very similar circumstances,
males and females,
who were having
af-
and were feeling unguilty and undepressed. They directly and
OVERCOMING EMOTIONAL PROBLEMS some of
evocatively Disputed
duced him
some of
to
his irrational Beliefs.
own
their
173
They
intro-
adulterous friends. They warmly
accepted him even though some of them thought that he was making a mistake about the kind of fair.
They got
into
some
woman
he was choosing for his af-
histrionic encounters
uations with him, which dramatized for
some of
his problems.
how he was
And
him
and role-playing
sit-
alternate solutions to
they otherwise emotively emphasized
needlessly flagellating himself and refusing to push
through convention-shattering approaches to his Behaviorally,
I
difficulties.
and Robert's regular therapy group gave him
homework assignments that helped him change his ways, modeled some new solutions for him, and forced him into assertion-taking procedures that enabled him to become familiar with activity
other ways of doing things.
We
demonstrated, with two females
how he could handle some
situa-
to take risks of rejection in the
group
the group playing his daughters, tions with them.
We
got
him
in
which demonstrated that doing something foolish or being rejected by others need not be a horrible experience. date other
women
We
induced him to
than Delia, so that he could see exactly what
her advantages and disadvantages, on a comparative basis, actually were.
We
encouraged him to stop avoiding certain
difficult life
situations— such as having Thanksgiving Day dinner with
members of
his large family
the
all
circle— so that he could prove
to
himself that he could face them, handle them, and not upset himself
about some of their unfortunate ways.
After several months of rational-emotive therapy, Robert
felt
unguilty and undepressed most of the time, had only minor occasional setbacks,
and started spreading the
his friends, relatives,
RET
philosophy
among
and business associates. He did so well that
he was able to influence one of his daughters, the more difficult of the two, to change her basic
condemning
and Delia, and to leave her own husband,
attitudes, to accept to
whom
him
she had been
unhappily married for several years! He has also been able to help
some other members of his highly religious, absolutistic family become less dogmatic, to accept his behavior, to be happier
to in
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
174
their
bers
own who
right,
and
more
to accept the other,
rigid family
mem-
persisted in staying in their emotional and attitudinal
ruts.
OVERCOMING HOSTILITY Feelings of deep-seated hostility about extramarital affairs are
common
our culture. The individual,
in
in particular,
who
is
sex-
ually or amatively dissatisfied with his or her marital relationship
frequently hates the spouse
who "makes" him
or her adulterously
inclined; or hates the partner for having an affair (while he or she
usually
not); or resents the
is
mate who
blocking him or her
is
from carrying on extramarital arrangements; or loathes the lover
whom
with
husband
the wife or
these
forms of
much
less
hostility
is
tend to
having sex-love relations. All
make
extramarital
adventures
appetizing than they otherwise would be. Sometimes, in
fact,
they encourage
Such
hostility
more
adultery, often they lead to divorce.
invariably unnecessary;
is
it
could be minimized or
eliminated.
Does rational-emotive psychology contend
resentment, rage, and fury are illegitimate?
tility,
affairs
had
— assuming
Yes
And
does
it
spe-
hold that anger and hostility regarding any aspect of hav-
cifically
ing
that all anger, hos-
(and
better
and
be
can)
definitely
that the terms anger
eradicated?
hostility are accurately
and clearly defined.
The dictionary Webster's
"A
feeling that
etc.:
it
as:
nism."
not very helpful with this kind of definition,
may
Dictionary, for example, defines anger as:
result
from
injury, mistreatment, opposition,
usually shows itself in a desire to hit out at something or
someone ity
is
New World
else;
"A
wrath; indignation; rage; ire."
feeling of enmity,
To make
sion as: "1. an
matters
still
ill
And
defines hostil-
antago-
worse, the dictionary defines aggres-
unprovoked attack or invasion.
habit of being aggressive (that
is,
gress; starting fights or quarrels. 2.
bold and active; pushing)."
it
will, unfriendliness, etc.;
1.
2.
the practice or
aggressing or inclined to ag-
full
of enterprise and intiative;
OVERCOMING EMOTIONAL PROBLEMS
175
These definitions are not helpful because they include two tinct entities,
even contradictory. The irritation, or
dis-
which partially overlap and are partially separate or element
first
composed of
is
annoyance with conditions that
exist
displeasure,
and calm deter-
mination and effort to change these conditions (sometimes, even,
by force and violence) so that you get more of what you want and less
of what you do not want in
life.
This element could be more
discriminatingly labeled or defined as assertiveness, initiative-taking, or
determination.
The second element
in anger, hostility, or aggression contains
demandingness, intolerance, grandiosity, or godlike commandingThis
ness.
is
a heated, overdetermined, absolutistic, enraged insis-
tence that displeasing, irritating, and annoying conditions should not,
ought not, must not exist and that they have to be immedi-
ately changed. This element,
chology holds),
is
contend (and rational-emotive psy-
I
the essence of anger, and since
perfectionism and magic and since vast
it
it
is
based on
leads to poor results in the
majority of instances (including the needless sidetracking,
confusion, low-level thinking, encouraging of hostility in others,
and feelings of pain
in one's
own
gut),
it
invariably mistaken
is
and unproductive.
Not that anger never works.
you
If
idiotically
enrage yourself
against a person, a group, or a social system (instead of sanely de-
termining to try to change the obnoxious behavior of that person, group, or system), you
An
infuriated
may
prizefighter
occasionally get good practical results.
sometimes
knocks out his opponent; a lynch
lands
mob once
a in a
haymaker while
events that lead to a desirable change in legal procedures. large,
and
stirs
however, while calm determination helps change your
and the world
in highly desirable
ther the short or long run, to least to
bring about
Take
much
harm along with
Having
five
—
life
ei-
or at
the good.
the fairly typical case of Joan de S. Joan's
exceptionally busy with his sexually.
ways, excited rage tends, in
do more harm than good
needless
up
By and
husband was
work and neglected her amatively and
young children, she
felt
economically depen-
dent on him, and although she would have been delighted to have
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
176
an
would
one man
especially with
affair,
tracted, she
was
raise hell
terribly afraid to
do
ulcer,
and was sent
me
to see
benefited considerably from
anger
whom
knowing
she was highly atthat her
and probably immediately divorce her
So she boiled with unexpressed
out.
to so,
lust
if
husband he found
and hatred, developed an
by her internist (who had himself
RET
and
rid himself of his
extreme
at his wife).
Joan's upsetness, as
was able
I
show her
to
at
an
RET
work-
shop, clearly did not stem from her husband's frustrating her sex-
and refusing to
ually
let
her have an affair, at point A. She was
convincing herself, rationally,
point B:
at
"How
annoying! Here
he hardly wants me, or for that matter any woman, sexually; but instead of letting
me
have an
which would help me im-
affair,
mensely and deprive him of nothing (and even relieve him of the pressure
keep putting on him
I
he asininely won't
it),
let
have sex when he doesn't want
to
me do it because of B again, she was
a bother!" Then, at point
''How awful! He's he
restrict
satisfy It
me
terribly unfair;
me from having
What
irrationally whining:
and he shouldn't
be!
How
dare
an affair when he won't do anything to
himself! That fascist!"
wasn't very difficult to show Joan what she was telling her-
self at B, her Belief system.
to
his false pride.
one of the workshops
Study
in
in
She was a school counselor who came
RET
which the
Institute for
Advanced
Rational Psychotherapy holds several times a year for
professionals, and she brought
members of our
RET
panel
up her problem to me and the other when we were demonstrating our
methods. In addition, quite a few members of the professional audience asked her questions and
made
she had been futilely participating
suggestions to her. Although
in
psychoanalytic therapy for
the last two years and although she had
become even more
in-
censed at her husband after attending some encounter, Gestalt,
and bioenergetic groups recently, she was able less
than an hour that
we
to differentiate, in
talked with her, her rational Beliefs (her
strong preferences that her husband give her more extramarital
leeway) from her irrational Beliefs (her absolutistic demands that
he do
so).
OVERCOMING EMOTIONAL PROBLEMS
What
177
more, we got her to challenge these demands vigor-
is
was able
ously. ''Why," she restricting me?''
Now
to ask herself,
she could see that
it
''is
awful that he
it
obviously wasn't;
merely damned disadvantageous and inconvenient.
we again
reason," fairly
got her to ask herself,
"why he
it
was
there any
shouldn't un-
keep her away from having outside affairs?" She could see
was no reason why he shouldn't, although there were
that there
why
several good reasons
me
dare he restrict to
"Was
is
me
satisfy
would be nicer
it
for having an affair
if
he didn't.
"How
when he won't do anything
himself?" she questioned herself. She answered,
"With no trouble
at all!
Of
course, he could dare
do what he
is
doing; anyone can easily do what they do!"
RET
with the help of the
Finally,
members, Joan asked
herself,
"Why
is
panel and the workshop
my husband
a fascist for
way?" And she concluded, "Of course he He's merely an individual who, in this and a few other re-
acting in this unfair isn't!
spects,
is
acting fascistically
human, anything but fascist leanings.
But that doesn't make him, a
just that: a
total
human. He's a human with some I induce him to think less
Tough! Now, how can
fascistically or else find
As
.
a result of this
some other solution?"
workshop experience, Joan immediately qui-
down and soon lost most of her hostility to her husAs she reported two months later at another workshop in same professional series, she felt good about her husband for
eted herself
band. this
the
first
time in the
the way, she traits,
too,
last
two years.
remembered
that he
Now
that her anger
had many good and enjoyable
and that they had much more
spouses. Because she
made
was out of
in
common
than most
herself unangry and refused to anger
work out a more satisfactory sexcompanion relationship with her husband that, even though it wasn't ideal, enabled her to live successfully with him and to have herself again,
Joan was able
to
only occasional extramarital thoughts and feelings. She found that
much of her aduherous obsession had been fanned by her hostility; once that diminished she became unobsessed. Similarly, many other husbands and wives have used RET principles to dispel their feelings of intense anger at their mates or
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
178
and thereby to enhance their extramarital adventures or to
lovers,
make them
and presumably to
steam, Rather,
it
way
unnecessary. For the rational-emotive
courage people to express their
to
is
feel
show them
own
stances, create their
hostility,
better
is
not to en-
thereby to blow off
and become
less
hostile.
that they,
and not outside circum-
rage; that they
do so by devoutly holding
to childish, grandiose philosophies;
and that they can surrender
and change these philosophies and thus lose their feelings of anger.
To acknowledge
than to deny it
—
that
one that
is,
it
one's anger and to express
and repress
it.
But
the feeling of anger
—
to is
acknowledge by
it
it
is
far better
and get
rid
far the better solution
will eventually lead to rarely feeling
it
at all
of
and
even when
obnoxious and frustrating events occur. "The world stinks and had better change! it!"
is
And
I
am
therefore going to do
should change!"
is
best to change it
an angry, puerile, and often passive-aggressive
attitude that rarely helps to
change the world or oneself.
Hostility, then, helps create unneccessary it
my
an assertive, activist attitude. "The world stinks and
helps sabotage civilized, sane adultery.
If
and foolish adultery;
you are going
to
have
extramarital adventures, have them determinedly and assertively,
because you have good reasons for wanting them and adding to
your pleasurable existence. Don't have them against others or against yourself.
Special Problems
Women
of
JL HEORETICALLY, women easily
engage
in extramarital
in
our culture can much more
adventures than men, and they can
For
enjoy adultery with fewer disadvantages. Theoretically!
though husbands
who have
affairs certainly have hassles
ample, taking time off from their work, spending
women
with
whom
al-
for ex-
money on
the
they go to bed, and risking their wives' resort-
ing to an economically punitive divorce
have
—
many problems of
their
own
if
they're caught
in getting
— wives
away with outside
sex-love interests.
SEXISM
AND THE DOUBLE STANDARD
For one thing, we
still
largely hold to a double standard of sex
men much more leeway Husbands, in a good many
around when
morality that gives
to run
they're married.
social circles, are al-
most supposed to have girlfriends, lovers, and mistresses. At conventions,
men
are expected to screw. Respectable businesses often
arrange for call girls or other easily available date large-scale male buyers
who
women
are willing (as
gerly are) to accept sexual favors.
to
many
accommo-
of them ea-
Clubs, athletic groups, bars,
card games, and other facilities that largely cater to males frequently provide accessible
women. Clubs and groups, on
the other
179
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
180
hand, that are predominantly female rarely encourage or provide
good studs
for their habituees.
When, moreover, women are known to engage in affairs, and particularly in a somewhat promiscuous manner, they are censured and scorned far more than their male counterparts. An unusually attractive
my
and competent matron of
acquaintance
members of her community
ostracized by most
discriminateness, but her husband, too,
is
at
not only
down upon
looked
having such a "whore" for a wife. Ironically,
town while she stayed sedately
is
for her sexual in-
if
for
he ran around
home, he would probably be en-
many members of their community! Female adulterers, like this woman, are considered ''easy marks," even though they may be, quite selectively, trying out a number of male partners in order to find one or a few who are especially bright and attractive. Men who behave similarly are admired for wading through a sizable number of women in order to vied and looked up to by
finally
By
end up with a "good" one. the
same token, pregnancy and
viewed very to. If
the risk of pregnancy are
accordance with which sex one belongs
differently, in
you are a male, no one, including your own
seriously
if
you
fail to
ceptive measures or
mate pregnant.
If
wife, takes
it
too
be intelligently rigorous about using contra-
if
you foolishly get a
other than your
girl
you are a female, everyone, notably your hus-
band, demands that you use absolutely surefire methods of birth control in your affairs; and
by your lover, there
Once
again:
if
is
if
you goof and somehow get pregnant
usually hell to pay.
own
your
children
are having extramarital adventures, as a flaming horror
those things,"
if
if
you are a
somehow
it
is
discover that you
very likely to be viewed
woman and
you are a man. For your
as,
"Oh,
well,
one of
children to find out in
the former case that
you have become pregnant by someone other
than their father
almost equivalent to your committing armed
is
robbery or murder; but
if
they discover that you, their father, has
begotten a child out of wedlock, that tirely
kosher but hardly the worst crime
Let's face
it,
then:
if
you are a
is
considered to be not en-
in the world.
woman who
lives
in
today's
— WOMEN
SPECIAL PROBLEMS OF
conventional
you'd
society,
181
becoming public knowledge than
mean
doesn't
—
be a
little
much more
you happen
if
to
seriously
your
or, especially,
affairs
be a man. This
you must never, never have extramarital adven-
that
must always keep them deep, dark
tures; or ter
think
better
about the possibility of your affair
more
many
careful, in
But you'd bet-
secrets.
instances, about publicizing
them.
become much
a whale of a good idea to
It's
less vulnerable
than you naturally are (and normally likely to be), especially
you are adulterously
inclined.
even when you are pretty sure that these are
others' opinions,
be distinctly adverse. This
likely to
is
where, once again, you can
be appreciably helped by using the rational-emotive method. doesn't teach you that
when
less
if
For then you need not be cowed by
is
it
RET
supremely unimportant and meaning-
when they go around speakdamned well isn't! Negative flak
others do not accept you or
ing negatively about you. For
it
from members of your social group, from business or professional associates, or
from family members can be one grand botheration.
Malvina A., who cared as
anyone her
own
little
with
as
knew
propensity for carrying on affairs, because she had been
married once before and found
devoted to her
sively
what people thought of her
for
ever met, nevertheless found this to be true. She
I
first
him and they had
it
most onerous
a pretty
and
his sisters
kind of thing, she
remain exclu-
good sex relationship. So she
usually had at least one other affair going, too; his cousins
to
husband, even though she liked living
and when he (and
and his aunts) took a dim view of
wound up happily
Her second marriage was more
this
divorced. realistic.
She frankly told her
husband. Josh, that she was likely to embark on extramarital adventures and, since he had similar inclinations himself, he was
more than willing
to agree that they
would practice
civilized, no-
bones-about-it adultery.
Everything worked out
fine, at first
—
until her
law and her neighbors started complaining. gave a
fig
for entire
what Josh
did,
No
even when he holed up
weekends with one of the
single
new mother-inone, apparently,
at the local
women
in
motel
town. But
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
182
everyone seemed to care about Malvina's "infidelity." She was os-
Only the men talked
tentatiously avoided in the local supermarket. to her at
community gatherings and
parties
— and then had
to ac-
count for their conduct to their wives when the gatherings were
The women
over.
her mother-in-law's bridge club and church
at
groups seemed to have no animated topic of conversation other than Malvina and her sexual doings.
Here, then, was "male chauvinism" stoutly applied by a vocif-
erous female contingent.
Few
of the males
what Malvina did, and would have had screwed her ass off their wives
in
city hall
in
little
town
objection had she
park on a sunny afternoon. But
and sweethearts cared enormously
— probably wonderSome
ing which of their partners might next be Malvina's. also, in their secret thoughts,
their
own
when they were
of them
envied her the freedom granted by
her husband and had no intention of letting her get sort of thing
really cared
away with
that
watched and supervised by
closely
mates.
Eventually, this mass female censure of Malvina got to her
husband.
He was
his
main
the
man who
clients let
Josh began to
what Malvina
a stockbroker,
began objecting "that
feel
and when some of the wives of to their being so
woman" do whatever
the pressure.
chummy
with
she wanted sexually.
Personally, he
still
didn't care
him equal leeway and six-year-old daughter. But he felt that he had
did, as long as she granted
didn't neglect their
to start insisting that she
be
much more
discreet about her affairs
When even that didn't work too well town suspected the most innocent move she
than she had been before. (since the
women
in
made, and were apt ones) he began to
about her
to guess correctly
become upset over
innocent
less
the practical disadvantages
of the extramarital plan they had agreed upon. I
worked with both Malvina and Josh on was exceptionally hostile about
lems. She
other
women
and began to feel
in
town, but she also
to hate herself as well.
let
their criticism affect her
He was
ashamed of everyone's knowing
their emotional prob-
the opposition of the
not hostile, but did start that his wife
was near-
WOMEN
SPECIAL PROBLEMS OF
183
promiscuous and feeling sorry for him as a "cuckolded" male.
was able believe
—
that
got
I
much,
him
in
I
in
really
mean to be,
to
go back to
at least in the
women
— and
town
in
she was hardly the louse they made her out
and
spite of their censoriousness
and
women
to persuade her to accept the other
town
to believe
I
his prior attitude of not caring very
downing himself, if other men and him and thought he was a weakling who
sense of
pitied
couldn't control his vixen of a wife. In spite of the great emotional gains that both of practical matters
community that it became advisable for Josh to get transfer him to another city where they had a branch. over
in this
new
them made,
had already reached such a sorry pass
locale,
Malvina and Josh continued
in their
his firm to
Starting
all
their honest
extramarital arrangement but this time conducted themselves in a
considerably more discreet manner. Practically fairs
own community were even these ventures. in
all
Malvina's af-
were confined to out-of-town encounters, and males from her
New
I
rigorously excluded from participation in see both of
them occasionally when they are
me this is working much home town. They
York, and from what they
(but publicly secret) adultery
previous openness in their old
tell
bad that public opinion, and especially the
kind of civilized better than their feel that
still
it
is
too
existing double
standard of morality that makes females more beholden to this
opinion than
is
true of males, forces
them
be so cautious, but
to
they accept this limitation and largely stick to their spite of
own
bents in
it.
LIMITATIONS OF
HOME AND FAMILY
TIES
Theoretically, as noted at the beginning of this chapter, are freer than
men
to
engage
in extramarital
women
adventures, because
The mother of children who
are in ju-
nior high, high school, or college often has all afternoon
and much
they often have
more
time.
of the morning to herself, while her husband
some kind of
nine-to-five job
— can
—
especially
rarely get
if
he has
away from work
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
184
during
time and would be hard put to have an affair even
this
he had a most willing female partner
who
herself
was
if
easily avail-
able.
In practice, however, things don't often theoretically should. is
available for outside affairs, the
meet are not
free.
When
man
They have regular
have wives or sweethearts peccadillos.
work out
is,
(especially
if
way they
who
or
men
woman
she would like to
jobs, live at a distance, or
are closely watching their possible
and
suitable partners are ready
willing, there
often no convenient place in which to get together.
own home
the
At the times during the day when the
The woman's world
to say the least, not the best location in the
she has prying neighbors
better than to get
some
"dirt"
on
her!).
is
who would
like
nothing
The man's home may be
accessible to his wife, lover, friends, etc. Hotels or motels
may be
too expensive, too dangerous, or too unappetizing (particularly to the
woman). And
cars, beaches, parks,
open places certainly have
questions about what to do and with easily answered, at times, the issue of
harder to
country copses, and other
their great limitations!
whom where
to
do
to
do
So although the it
it
may be fairly may be much
settle.
Most women, moreover, are much more beholden
to their chil-
dren and other family members than are their husbands. In our society,
it
is
conventionally accepted that the father of the family
spends fixed hours completely away from the home
— and
these
hours, as in the case of a busy dentist, store owner, or insurance
salesman,
may
morning
well be from eight in the
eleven at night. During this period the
man
is
ten or
until
expected to be,
at
most, in occasional telephone communication with his children
and family, and sometimes he hardly even has any contact with
them and nobody seems to care very much. Not so his wife! Even if she has a part-time or she
is
usually counted
upon
to
with her children (particularly
remain
calls; to
contact
when they have any kind of
cal or emotional problem); to be at
band's
full-time job,
in fairly consistent
home
physi-
regularly for her hus-
run family errands that no one would even think of
.
WOMEN
SPECIAL PROBLEMS OF
asking the
man
185
of the house to do; to be in somewhat regular and
close contact with the
members of her
original family, especially
her mother and sisters; to baby-sit for the children of her friends, relatives,
and her own;
to help her family with their
problems con-
cerning homework, school, clothes, camp, chauffeuring, dating, partying, and so on; to erly
fed,
bathed,
make
sure that everyone at
home
is
prop-
medically attended, and otherwise
well-slept,
taken care of physically; and to be responsible for a hundred other things that she
may
or
may
Under these conditions, tal life
may be
not have her husband help her with.
is
it
hardly surprising that her extramari-
seriously curtailed, even
ous objections to her having
it
and
if
her husband has no seri-
she
if
able to find suitable
is
partners.
What can be done about
this?
Many
of the
women
I
have seen,
both professionally and as friends, have been able to carry on extramarital arrangements in spite of the limitations that their life
home
and that society generally impose on them, but they have often
had
to
work very hard
at
overcoming these
restrictions.
To sum-
marize some of their experiences and the conclusions to be drawn
from these experiences, by home and family dard ideologies that
I
ties, still
would say
that
some of
as well as by all
women who
are limited
the double stan-
too frequently prevail in our culture,
can think seriously about some of these ameliorative methods:
Try
1
him
to get the full cooperation of
to agree that if
freely allow
use
you
to
you allow him engage
in
your husband. Ideally, get
have outside
to
them, too
—
affairs,
some measure of discretion and don't do anything too
(such as spend too 2.
If
much money)
in the
you can't get your husband's
ilized adultery,
you frequently can
full
get
he will
as long as both of
you
foolish
course of these
affairs.
consent to engage
in civ-
him
to grant
you
a notable
degree of general independence that will appreciably help you to
You can
engage
in secret affairs.
outside
employment; you can teach your children largely
insist that
he allow you to have to take
care of themselves; you can join clubs, classes, or groups that you regularly attend without him; or take nights or even
weekends off
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
186
by yourself to do anything (such as going to the theater
you
that
like to do; or
go on
in
town)
or vacations without
trips, cruises,
may get him and your famhaving you around on many occasions and possibly
him; and do various other things that ily
used to not
abet your finding suitable partners for extramarital adventures.
Work on your own shame and
3.
about your desires to be
guilt
women,
as
have great practical problems
in
than a hundred percent monogamous. Although
less
noted so far
in
this
chapter,
carrying on affairs, their main limitations posed. Even
if
tend to be self-im-
a wife gives, say, a regular piano lesson to a very
man
attractive single
his
in
own apartment and
follow her inclination to have an nity,
still
she could easily
him with
affair with
utter
impu-
she will tend to find innumerable excuses for not doing so
on the piano bench. Your main bar-
until he practically rapes her rier to extramarital joy,
consequently,
tations but internal ideas;
and
is
usually not external limi-
these, fortunately, are entirely in
your control. Work on these ideas when they are productive of needless guilt and shame, and cifically
show yourself
that unless
you spe-
and unfairly harm yourself, your husband, your family, or
your adulterous partner, there
is
frequently no good reason for re-
fraining from having a fairly easily arrangeable affair that
most probably add considerably add 4.
to
your
life
would
and even, sometimes,
your marriage.
Don't catastrophize or awfulize about possible negative con-
sequences.
Of course you
practically always take risks
yourself with potential troubles
mate's that
to
is
full
when you
consent, nonmarital relations. But what
likely to
and involve
have, even with your is
the worst
happen? Will divorce certainly ensue? Will you be
run out of town on a rail? Will your children loathe you? Will
your lover despise you and leave you these extreme things truly likely to
after a while?
Suppose they do. Must you then be an vidual, woefully self-hating, rest
of your
life?
and unable
Ask yourself
Are any of
happen? utterly miserable indi-
to
have any joy for the
these questions and you will see, in
the process, that most probably
you are enormously exaggerating
WOMEN
SPECIAL PROBLEMS OF
187
the consequences of having an affair and being unpleasantly dis-
covered
in
and that you are certainly immensely exaggerating
it,
For you almost entirely control the
the emotional consequences.
even though you by no means fully control the former. You,
latter,
as
—
show my
continually
I
own
your
clients, are in the saddle as far as
and you can therefore drive yourself
feelings are concerned,
—
where you wish. Watch your whining about your special handicaps as a woman. Join Women's Lib, if you wish, and see very clearly that or not drive yourself
5.
you actually are discriminated against unjustly and
knowledge
fully that
advantages
(e.g.,
even though wives
Ac-
nastily.
our culture have certain
in
they can frequently be supported economically
without having to work at unpleasant jobs), these very "advantages" have severe concomitant handicaps (e.g.,
women
don't have
the incentive to prepare themselves for vitally absorbing lifetime
vocations). But this does not
merely a handicap;
mined
to
overcome
it
is
more you
that
it
And
is
awful.
the
A
handicap
more you
that handicap, to whatever degree
stead of endlessly whining the
mean
not a horror.
you can,
and wailing about being plagued by
are likely to reduce
is
are deterinit,
it.
WOMAN'S TENDENCY TO FUSE SEX AND LOVE One
of the main reasons
ing extramarital affairs
why women have such
and love relations be combined this
tendency
women,
in
has
many
its
clearcut
and
benefits of strongly
are fairly evident. People after
one
in
total
advantages,
or most instances, an
guilt, hostility, inhibition,
The
trouble enjoy-
their strong propensity to insist that sex
is
package. Although it
certainly
causes
enormous amount of
pain,
inertia.
cementing amative and sexual urges
who
care for each other, as well as lust
each other's bodies, tend to be kind and considerate; want to
be together
much
tionships; are
are in
of the time; form cooperative partnership rela-
more than
some kind of
willing to offer support
difficulty;
know
when
their
mates
pretty well that they will have
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
188
ongoing, continuing relations for some time to come; are forgiving of each other's failings; go out of their
way
one another
to please
sexually; tend to be part of a regular socially accepting group; offer each other various other wide-ranging kinds of help port.
Loving
is
enjoyable in
its
own
right;
it
and
and sup-
usually engenders re-
turned love, which also brings distinct benefits; and
frequently
it
enhances sex relations, which on a nonloving basis can easily be-
come monotonous and
boring.
But the necessity to
tie
sex and love together, and rarely or
never even to consider enjoying the former without the
(1)
ment
latter, also
immense disadvantages. For example:
entails
Since sexual desire
would be
is
and amative involve-
easily aroused
on a highly romantic plane)
(especially
terribly sex-starved if
we waited
not,
is
for a
most of us
mutual amour be-
we allowed ourselves to have sex. (2) Some individuals never love intensely or never love a member of the other sex who also is highly enamored of them.
fore
Are these people (3)
love, is
remain abstinent
to
all
their lives?
Although sex may usually be better or more enjoyable with
may
it
also be exceptionally satisfying without
waiting for the
full
loaf to be available,
why
it.
While one
refrain rigorously
from eating half a loaf? (4)
Loving one person and copulating with that person may be
preferable to having sex with that
one can often arrange
to
same person without
have sex-love relations with
having sex without love with B, C, and D.
Why
A
love.
But
while also
should one seek
only the former and not the latter relations, too? (5)
Waiting to have sex after one loves may easily help one
become
antagonistic to individuals
who want
sex without love; and
one may therefore become more hating than loving. hand, freely having sex without love usually case of leads
to
women
—
helps one to
long-term
—
become more open
relationships
On
the other
especially in the
and marriages
to loving
that
and
otherwise
would never have occurred.
Many
married
women
falsely
convince themselves that they
WOMEN
SPECIAL PROBLEMS OF
189
cannot possibly have outside affairs on a nonloving basis. Susan cared for her husband but was lucky
more than once
a
month
—
to
P.
have intercourse with him
partly because he wasn't very highly
sexed and partly because he was terribly afraid of performing
badly
in
Being very
bed.
attractive,
she had
other men, some of whom would have been
many
offers
from
ideal partners for her
because they were very sexy and so devoted to their wives and
would probably not have allowed themselves
families that they
become
stickily
involved
with
her.
But she
insisted
that
to
she
couldn't possibly have sex with any of her admirers; she did not love
them and sex without love was "absolutely meaningless" and
"utterly joyless" to her.
For several years Susan stuck dogmatically
Then one of her male
whom
years but with
friends,
whom
to this hypothesis.
she had sexually teased for
she had done nothing more than embrace ar-
when she had a few drinks too many, deHe came to call on her one night when her husband was away on a sales trip, deliberately plied her
dently at several parties
cided that enough was enough.
with several
stiff
drinks from the bottle of brandy he had brought
along for the occasion, and ripped her clothes fought like a proverbial tiger, but
when he
off.
At
just refused to
first
she
remove
powerful hand from her crotch and defied her to scream and wake her two sleeping young children, she relaxed in his arms and before she knew it was passionately kissing him back. As she had his
to
admit to herself the next day,
it
was the greatest fuck, by
she'd ever had; and though she liked didn't love
him
him
well enough, she clearly
at all.
That taught Susan a lesson. Within the next leapt several times before she loved,
and had
each time. With her fourth partner,
much
loved after
—
in fact, a
together with
far,
him
at
six
months, she
a real ball in
bed
to her surprise,
she
couple of months after
— she
kept getting
one of the local motels. Although she mainly
confined her extramarital adventures to her relationship with him, she found even then occasional delight in sandwiching in a non-
loved partner.
By excitedly
telling her tale to several other
ma-
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
190
community, and
trons in her
when
were
insisting that they
full
of crap
they kept holding to the proposition that they could not ever
enjoy sex outside the realm of a loving partnership, Susan became
one of the main influences
in
helping the adultery rate
county to climb to one of the highest rates Union. From a dogmatic believer
swung
nothing-without-love, she
in
any county
in the doctrine
her
in
in the
of sex-can-be-
to an almost fanatic belief in the
sex-with-or-without-love-can-be-great creed.
This doesn't mean that every wife affair is
and
holding out for having
is
it
got something
more out of
considering having an
with someone she truly loves is
quite right: for in her par-
find that they can roll in
affair unless she
than sex or even sex-friendship. Even
it
better not forget, forego sleeping with physically
attractive sex partners because they
want more than sex alone, and
do better things with
the hay. So
they honestly find sex arbitrarily
is
would hardly be worth having the
many men, we'd
pleasant
it
Sometimes she
necessarily wrong.
ticular case
who
their time than
women who
much more
have a most
hold out for love because
satisfying that
way
are not to be
viewed as being screwy about their non-screwing. Some
of them are and some of them are not. If
sex, tic?
that
you are debating with yourself whether or not
have loveless
how do you know whether your insistence to refrain is neuroBy asking yourself several significant questions: Do 1 think sex without love is disgusting? Would I consider myself a
worthless individual I
to
if I
had an
affair
mainly or only for sex?
Do
men who
try to get me into bed when I know me? Would I be enormously ashamed my mother or my woman friends knew that 1 was seeing So-
absolutely loathe
that they don't really care for if
and-so largely because he
is
a great lover? If your
these and similar questions, then there
is
a
answer
good chance
is
yes to
that
your
views on sex without love are not merely the result of your strong preferences and selective choosing but of your self-denigrating tendencies to look for the kind of affairs that you should have to respect yourself If this
is
so,
and
and
this
in
order
to
have others think of you as a good person.
is
what's mainly blocking you from finding
— WOMEN
SPECIAL PROBLEMS OF
191
you possibly can use pro-
satisfactory extramarital relationships, fessional help. Fast!
WHEN A WOMAN GETS OLDER An enormous number
of problems of
closely linked to the aging process.
As
women I
in
our society are
noted in The American
Sexual Tragedy almost two decades ago, our
women
are obsessed
with the beatification of beauty and with clothes. But the latter obsession has decreased the
somewhat
in recent years
young people, who are now frequently
its
certainly
Women's Lib may
while beauty worship has not waned.
chant
—
among
in the blue jeans set
rightfully
guts out about the unfairness and puerility of males view-
ing females mainly as sex objects rather than as persons to be ex-
As long
plored in depth and related to as personalities.
as
women
themselves overemphasize the great "virtue" of perennial youth
and unwrinkled beauty, the male's propensity to give enormous importance to their physical assets (rather than the tributes) will
rest of their at-
be distinctly encouraged.
Many women
defensively deny that they are overconcerned
about aging, but they indirectly display their uptightness in this respect in a variety of subtle
shown
in the
and not so subtle ways. They
having sex without love
—
partly because they are afraid that
they do so they will not be attractive at that time, if a
want
to
insist,
as
previous section of this chapter, on rarely or never
man
when they
doesn't greatly love
if
are older and that,
them he
will not
even
go near them sexually. They not only, before they com-
fortably take off their clothes
and
his interest
and hop into bed with a male, want
love, but they also often
that he will always, undyingly love
undying devotion by being willing to
demand
a near-guarantee
— and
that he prove this
live with
them permanently
them
or legally marry them.
This
is
often so because, at bottom, they are panicked at the
thought of being alone and sexually undesired
— and
when
when they
are older
their physical attractiveness will, realistically speak-
192
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
ing,
be minimal. They deliberately eschew going into certain pro-
fessions (such as medicine) that
prepare
would take them many years
to
because they are horrified at the prospect of being
for,
"too old" when they are ready for love and marriage to compete with the females
manhunting
at
who have more time
to devote themselves to
younger ages. They often deliberately have children
they don't particularly want, almost immediately after they are
married,
in
order to hold their husbands, or they deliberately re-
from having children, on the supposition that having them
frain
help ruin
will
their'
tractive to their
youthful looks and thereby
make them
less at-
mates or to other men.
The overemphasis
that
women
place on youth and beauty
is
ex-
pectably mirrored in their attitudes toward extramarital affairs.
soon as they are older
— which
they are past the age of thirty
many
to
—
of them
in
as
As
soon as
they tend to view themselves as
being out of the running for such affairs
was interested
means
— because any man who
sex and love would presumably go for a
woman
in
her early twenties. By the same token, they tend to believe that
if
they have reached the horribly advanced age of, say, thirty-
eight,
and they have been pretty
rigidly
monogamous up
time, they simply have to start an affair soon
—
for
to that
what man,
in
heaven's name, would even think of being interested in an old bag past forty?
A
wife's attitude
adventures
toward her husband carrying on extramarital
also significantly influenced, in probably the great
is
majority of instances, by her view of the aging process. She might
be quite willing to have an open arrangement with her husband for
them both
to
spend a reasonable amount of time having out-
side sex-love relations, but she
up with a woman who
is
almost positive that he will end
is
ten or
more years younger than she
while she will only be able to find if
she finds anyone at
Josephine five,
men who
is,
are practically senile,
all.
P. stoutly held this belief for years.
She was
had been married since the age of seventeen, and
thirty-
in spite
of
her attractiveness viewed herself as an antiquated mother of four
WOMEN
SPECIAL PROBLEMS OF
Her
children.
193
thirty-six-year-old
Tom,
husband,
she
always
thought of as being perennially youthful and easily able to attract
any
he wanted
girl
horrified
who had passed
when he suggested
tionships and only agreed, at
with other couples
woman would
puberty. She was therefore
that they both first,
who were
if
have extramarital
rela-
they could arrange to switch
their
own
ages;
then the other
not be younger and more attractive than she and
little chance that Tom would become unduly enamored of this woman and neglectful of her. The switching arrangements, for one reason or another, never seemed to work out well. Josephine was about to suggest that they give up the whole idea of extramarital affairs when she began to
there
would be
men
notice that several of the younger
worked seemed At
first
to
law office where she
be more than willing to have affairs with her.
she thought that she was fooling herself, and that they
were merely interested
in
work one night
late at
in the
junior partners
harmless
to help out
who had
flirtations.
But when she stayed
one of the twenty-nine-year-old
an important case to try in court the
fol-
lowing week, she had to admit that his mind was more on her than
on the
legal business they
were supposed
to
be polishing off
to-
gether.
A
couple of hours and a few ardent looks and declarations
later,
Josephine decided that maybe the office sofa did look
more
inviting than her
hardbacked secretarial
chair. After
much some
handholding and necking, and some seemingly sincere comments
much
by the junior partner that he
women
like her to his
preferred
mature-looking
skinny and skimpy twenty-one-year-old wife
(whose doll-like quality Josephine had been silently admiring for
many months, wrongly assuming
that
it
was sexually more arous-
ing to her husband), she decided to risk taking off
clothes and letting
him
see
what her "old" body
Instead of being horrified, he
some of her
really looked like.
was genuinely delighted with
its
roundness and softness; and Josephine had with him, right there
on the sofa, one of the best physical encounters she had ever
known
in
her whole
life.
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
194
After a
more experimenting with another young member
little
of her firm, she began to see that she did not necessarily have to think in terms of lovers well past the age of forty and that,
wanted men,
to,
this,
husband could
this
men
It
felt
mean
problem today tures?
younger women.
avail himself of
she took an entirely different view of her husband's
having affairs and
Does
she
she could avail herself of a good selection of younger
just as her
Learning
if
if
considerably less jeopardized.
that
mature and older
women
have no
really
they want to participate in extramarital adven-
Even though younger ashamed to
certainly doesn't; they often do.
are often available to them, they are frequently
men
have anything sexually to do with these younger. They think interested in
them
— and
sexually,
often wrongly
—
just because they are
that such
and could not possibly
men
like
are only
them
other way; that the younger men who do go for them would
soon have any woman, and have no interest
and that because they are older,
in
them
their partners are
in
any
just as
specifically;
bound
to
want
only an ephemeral involvement and could not ever care for them
on any prolonged basis. They also worry, of course, about what others would think of their having affairs with men five or more years younger than they are. They are afraid that their woman friends, in particular, will think they are foolish; are "robbing the cradle"; are allowing
themselves to be exploited sexually; will be envious and jealous; will point out that they are shortsightedly
are horny and easily available, not those in their
own
going for the
who would
men who
care for them
right.
Women who
are getting
on
in
years and thinking about extra-
marital experiences also have reality problems.
They frequently some
are less physically attractive than they previously were; and
potential male partners will be turned off by this fact. Like most
women, they tend
to
want
energetic, alive, bright,
number of such males
to
have relationships with men who are
and competent. Although a considerable exist,
they are definitely in the minority,
and they are frequently sought
after
by many females. Conse-
SPECIAL PROBLEMS OF
woman's
quently, an older limited,
and she may
are by no
WOMEN ability to land
find that
means the ones
Men sometimes
195
such a partner
most males who tend
is
often
go for her
to
that she prefers.
women "dangerous"
find older
lovers.
as
If
they go to bed with a young female, they figure that she
may
yet have any great stake in a purely sexual relationship
and can
therefore have one with impunity.
more
careful about her choices
An
older
and only
woman presumably
they
men know that may soon reject
is
someone who truly some time to come.
selects
cares for her and will continue to do so for
Since
not
they will not belong in this category and that
her and thereby contribute to her sorrow or
hurt, they feel safer, in
many
cases, having nothing to
do with her
sexually and seeking only younger companions.
Some
of the impediments that older
imaginations; but
ful
women
find to having af-
mainly fantasies of their overly vivid and fear-
fairs are therefore
some of them
are real and
do
In
exist.
view
of these fantasized and realistic handicaps, what can an older
woman do when
she wants to engage in extramarital adventures?
Here are some suggestions: Don't either minimize or overemphasize the problems of
1.
physical attractiveness and aging. Face the fact that, by and large,
you
will not
be as delectable to
and
forties, fifties,
sixties as
many men when you
you were when you were
are in your
your teens
in
and twenties. This may be partially a hangup of the culture and
Hollywood and TV-type knowledge It's
And
it.
it
ideals.
isn't
But
it
is
so,
its
and you'd better ac-
awful, terrible, or horrible that
it
is
so.
merely, at worst, a handicap, a bother, or an inconvenience.
Aging has certain
lots
aches
of other inconveniences, too: increased fatigue,
and
physical
pains,
disorders,
and
sometimes
(though hardly always) a decrease in sexual drive. Tough! There's
no reason why your
life,
and the aging process that
it
includes,
should not be plagued with inconveniences and disadvantages. But don't
awfulize
about
these
hassles
— and
thereby
gratuitously
handicap yourself immensely more! 2.
The worst
that aging
and decreased physical attractiveness
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
196
does tor you
to reduce or
is
sex-love partners.
practically never decreases to zero. If
It
ashamed of
not foolishly
minimize your selection of possible
the fact that you are older, and
you are you do
if
not mistakenly conclude that your age automatically rules out any possibility of
your having desirable lovers, you
ably be able to acquire one or more.
will
almost invari-
you cop out of the "rat
If
race" and do nothing to win an agreeable man, you will frequently
assume that you that
can't.
when you don't
You
Horseshit!
try
are thereby proving only
you probably won't
you are proving nothing about what may or
do
find
will
what you want;
happen when you
try.
Statistically, the
odds are always on your side
many
not the short) run. There are so
many thousands
world, and so that
would be extraordinary
it
one or more did not
if
Though
it
may seem
neously like
odd, some
women who
(if
your own immediate environs,
in
cause of the very "handicapping"
long
in the
millions of males in the
traits that
men
like
you be-
you so sorely deplore.
(for various reasons) sponta-
are older, big-assed, unable to get preg-
nant any longer, small breasted,
wrinkled, unsophisticated,
tiny,
motherly, or whatever else you "unfortunately" happen to be.
Look
at the
millions of homely, uneducated,
silly,
unsexy, or un-
women who are walking around the streets men on their arms. At their age, the
productive younger
with exceptionally attractive
competition
is
unusually keen
Why, twenty or more years 3.
If
you are
in
— and
yet they
older, can't
second place
some other female charmers who
in
somehow make
it.
you do the same?
age and looks, compared to
are around, emulate Avis: try
harder! Zillions of females above thirty idiotically conclude that
because males ultimately become scarcer than females
in
our so-
ciety (since, after the age of fifty, they gradually die off faster),
there
is
practically
no chance for an older female
to get
any
man
whatever. Hogwash!
The
truth
is
that,
nineteen available
after
men
after forty this ratio
the age of thirty,
for each twenty
there are perhaps
available females; that
changes to something like eighteen
twenty women; and that even after sixty
it
is
no worse than
men
to
fifteen
SPECIAL PROBLEMS OF
men
WOMEN
197
twenty women. True, the males are somewhat scarcer than
to
these ratios would indicate: because, although they are alive and
some
kicking,
homosex-
are not really available because they are
armed
ual, or in the
Timbuctoo, or
forces, or off in the wilds of
otherwise not readily accessible to female hunters.
The
fact
remains
— and —
at
and accept
as
many females looking
former
say, the age
at,
situation for
a
man
this fact
it
is
incredible
that even
of forty, this would hardly be a desperate thing, they could easily take part of
"man problems."
Kinsey figures (and
all
women,
sex than are
on the whole of one!) and
Sexually speaking, since the
other reliable figures on sex that
ages
all
look
there were, say, three times
if
(rather than piggishly insisting
have) show that at
will
for males as the latter looking for the
women. For one
thereby solve their
how few women
this
men
are
somewhat more
we now
interested in
would not be the worst solution
in the
world.
To make
matters even better, any
woman who
male companionship can almost always get sons. First, lots of
women
it
for
really craves
two simple rea-
are not that interested in competing for
males, because they just aren't or they defensively withdraw.
females do care only for the one male they have
Some
for their
some non-heterosexkind of preoccupation. Second (and probably more com-
houseful of cats, their career, their ual
— or
art,
or for
monly), loads of females are exceptionally concerned with getting
one or more male companions but are also so ovtrconcerned with succeeding
at this
nothing about
goal that they anxiously stew and do
fulfilling their goals.
little
or
Although they'd much rather
be actively trying for a suitable male partner than doing anything else in the world, they are so terrified at
that they practically never
Older
women who
engage
in
doing poorly
much
its
desire;
group that
larger
avidly desires but shyly, fearfully, inhibitedly does
implement
game
seeking affairs, consequently, divide
are
themselves into two main categories: the
to
at this
it.
little
and the much smaller group
or nothing
that just as
keenly craves male companionship but actively takes the risks of trying to get
it.
If
you are
a
woman who
is
getting on in years and
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
198
ardently wants to be involved in an extramarital relationship (be-
cause you are married and want extra helpings of love or are sim-
and are attracted
gle
some
to
husband or husbands), you
specific
can fortunately choose which of these categories you want to in-
And
habit.
tion
if
you do decide
among
the active seekers
and
your competi-
fact that part of
younger and more physically attractive than you are ever
is
again to be,
likely
to be
and you honestly face the
selectors,
then the harder you
greater your
the
try,
chances of success. This particularly goes for sex
4.
women
point,
exquisite
—
often
are
but they are also,
From
effort.
male stand-
a
charming,
delightful,
exciting,
innumerable instances,
in
a
and trial
and a plague. Those, especially, who are young and comely can from a purely male and sexual standpoint, immensely thwart-
be,
ing and disconcerting.
major campaign
campaign
is
younger
women
to
rewards for relatively
male partners
is
demand
little
mental and mean. Their
It
takes a
after this
reliability,
They may well be temperawarmth, and concern for their
abysmally capricious or low. Their efforts to
They
truly, in
innumerable
few favors (other than their pink skin and firm
instances, offer
for their predacious taking.
The main point of compete with these cult!
suous
It
is
this,
if
you are along
dolls, is pretty clear.
in years
Don't be so
because, from a
Woman's Lib
and
selling her soul
foolishly thinks she has
— an
approval and companionship. This, as these pages,
is
garbage!
entirely without
one or
sex-love desiderata. positively
to
diffi-
standpoint, they over-
emphasize the necessity of any female's seeming
— or
and want
damned
very well for you to object to books like The Sen-
all
Woman
to the male's needs,
has
Even
gigantic nonsexual attentions and
put-out.
please sexually are rare or nonexistent.
tits)
like this:
to bed.
won, they are only intermittently available and enthu-
They continue
siastic.
The male reasoning goes
to get
If
You if
be subservient
absolute, dire need for his I
keep
don't need a
your husband
is
you weakly and
must have one, you
to
and her body because she
will tend to
insisting
man
— even
throughout if
you are
sorely lacking in
falsely
believe that
some you
be a sensuous wo(e)man
WOMEN
SPECIAL PROBLEMS OF
who
199
nauseatingly peddles her ass for an occasional pat on the head.
Who
needs this kind of "feminine" slop? Not you,
But
facts, as a
famous character
in literature
I
hope!
once remarked,
is
People with certain disadvantages, whether they are males
facts.
would often be wise
or females,
compromise.
to
If
you are
sixty
years of age and want to get into a business partnership with, say,
dynamo
a younger
or with an older individual
who
already has a
well-established firm of his own, you don't try to strike the kind of a bargain that you might have tried to strike
when you were thirty By the same
younger and considerably more vigorous.
years token,
if
you are an older woman who
man who
with a
in
fact
is
trying to have an affair
(and not merely in your anxiously in-
flamed imagination) has younger and prettier females to choose
among, you don't Face
reality!
act the
You
same way
as
or lick a desirable man's boots to win lover.
But
it
may
when you were
eighteen.
don't necessarily have to stand on your head
him and keep him
as a
well be profitable for you to go out of your way,
show him you are interested; to make it easy, him to bed you; to find out what he parsexually and to make an effort to please him; to re-
at the beginning, to
rather than difficult, for ticularly likes
from calling him
frain
to
account when he
and
inattentive or not too considerate;
to
do
is
occasionally lax or
(or not do) a score of
make him think that you are a far more him than some competing woman who still she were the Queen of the May while he is one of her
other things that will help desirable partner for acts as if
lowly suitors.
Be tow
a
Woman's Libber, if you wish. Don't, by any means, kowman merely because he is male and because you think
to a
you can't
You
—
live
without him and are a cipher without his approval.
are you; you are a valuable
person, in your
his
own
right.
—
that
is,
He, as a male,
a potentially enjoying is
acceptance of you as a partner doesn't
woman"
or a "worthwhile being."
you would
still
If
no better than you;
make you
no man ever
a "real
really liked you,
be a valid female and an individual capable of ac-
cepting yourself and finding nonsexual and nonamative delights.
good heterosexual relationship may well be the
first
A
or most im-
EXTRAMARITAL ADVENTURE
200 portant thing on your
list
have a second, a
ter also
life
goals or purposes. But you'd bet-
third,
and even a fourth major pursuit.
of
you do, you can then afford
If
to
make sane
sex-love compro-
was able to do. In her youth, she was completely hung up on relating to a man, and she made her entire existence meaningless, joyless, and depressed when her heterosexual amours Gerda
mises, as
F.
were going awry. After her
first
husband
tempted suicide, and came within a her lover of several years' standing
America, tact to a
left her,
sliver
moved permanently
insisting that she stay in the States
few days each year when he was
she spent a
month
in the psychiatric
she seriously at-
of killing herself.
in
and confine
their con-
New York on
wing of a
When
to Central
business,
hospital.
That was before she had a year of rational-emotive therapy, mainly
my
one of
in
self fully as a person,
with a
man
regular groups. This helped her to accept her-
whether or not she was making
successfully
it
she loved. Because she became unfrantic about men,
she looked for other major goals to
become absorbed
in
and she
found two: chess and writing. She threw herself so enthusiastically into the
former that she became one of the best players, male or
female,
in
her community. She also began, for the
and was busy almost every evening
tant avocations,
one or the other, she was able
man who
ried
and
terrific but
away because she knew
that, at most, he'd
in the
week
in
from
that his time
at
mar-
to accept a relationship with a
she had always thought was
she previously shied ited
time
first
reams of poetry. Because she had these two impor-
years, writing
whom
was lim-
be able to get together with her about
once every two weeks. Previously she would have frothed and
fumed her
small bit of time he was willing to afford her;
at the
she accepted
own
bustling
kind of break
was able
with equanimity, was barely able to include
it
to
it
life,
nally
and was extremely grateful for the excited
remain so generally contented with her full
relationship
life
that she
— which,
found when her chess-playing dates with one
blossomed
in
gave her from her other daily occupations. She
kept unfrenetically looking for a tually, she
now it
into a series of romance-filled dates as well.
even-
man
fi-
How the
to
Handle
Problem of Children
and Extramarital Adventure
^