Emotional affair

An "emotional affair" is an affair, which excludes physical intimacy but includes emotional intimacy and can begin as innocently as a friendship. It may also be called an affair of the heart. Where one partner is in a committed monogamous relationship, an emotional affair is a type of chaste nonmonogamy without consummation. When the affair breaches an agreement in the monogamous relationship of one of the partners to the affair, the term infidelity may be more apt.

Contents

Definition

David Moultrup has broadly defined an extramarital affair as

a relationship between a person and someone other than (their) spouse (or lover) that has an impact on the level of intimacy, emotional distance and overall dynamic balance in the marriage. The role of an affair is to create emotional distance in the marriage.

This viewpoint does not require sexual play or sexual intercourse in order to define the presence of nor the impact of an affair on a committed relationship. Moultrup is the author of 'Husbands, Wives & Lovers' [1] and has contributed to 'The Handbook of the Clinical Treatment of Infidelity'.[2]

An emotional affair has the capacity to injure a committed relationship sometimes more than if it were a one night stand or about casual sex.

Incidence and prevalence

Research by Glass & Wright found that men's extramarital relationships were more sexual and women's more emotional. For both genders, sexual and emotional extramarital involvement occurred in those with the greatest marital dissatisfaction.[3]

Chaste and emotionally intimate affairs tend to be more common than sexually intimate affairs. Shirley Glass in her study, reported in 'Not Just Friends' [4] 44% of husbands and 57% of wives indicated that in their affair they had a strong emotional involvement to the other person without intercourse.

In University of Chicago surveys conducted by NORC [5] between 1990 and 2002, 27% of people who reported being happy in marriage admitted to having an extramarital affair. What infidelity means depends on who you ask and the statistics are, of course, misleading. Sexual feelings in an emotional affair are necessarily denied in order to maintain the illusion that it is just a special friendship. Affair surveys are unlikely to explore what is denied. Many people in affair surveys are not honest with themselves nor with the interviewer.[6][7]

Related topics

On the romantic friendship page there are a number of 'special friendships' in popular culture. Each is an example of one form of human bonding or another. Each may be synonymous with platonic love or spiritual friendship. Some may exist alongside or in support of a spiritual marriage, a sexless marriage or a marriage of convenience.

What is emotional cheating?

This type of affair is often characterized by:

See also

References

  1. ^ Moultrup, D Husbands, Wives & Lovers: The Emotional System of the Extramarital Affair New York: Guilford Press 1990
  2. ^ Piercy FP., Hertlein KM., Wetchler JL. Editors 'The Handbook of the Clinical Treatment of Infidelity' Haworth
  3. ^ Glass & Wright 'Sex differences in type of extramarital involvement and marital dissatisfaction Journal Sex Roles Publisher Springer Netherlands ISSN 0360-0025 (Print) 1573-2762 (Online) Issue Volume 12, Numbers 9-10 / May, 1985
  4. ^ Shirley Glass S 'Not Just Friends - protect your relationship from infidelity and heal the trauma of betrayal'
  5. ^ NORC home page
  6. ^ Blow, Adrian J, Hartnett, Kelley "INFIDELITY IN COMMITTED RELATIONSHIPS II: A SUBSTANTIVE REVIEW" Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, April 2005, retrieved from [1]
  7. ^ Blow, Adrian J, Hartnett, Kelley "INFIDELITY IN COMMITTED RELATIONSHIPS I: A METHODOLOGICAL REVIEW Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, April 2005, retrieved from [2]
  8. ^ [|Halscheid, Christopher] (December 2011). "Tips for Handling an Emotional Affair". Magnum Investigations. http://www.magnuminvestigations.net/tips-for-handling-an-emotional-affair.html.