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About Jealousy
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Ideas and Insights about Jealousy in Relationships
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How to Handle Jealousy After
Your Partner's Affair
By Susie and Otto Collins
Jealousy, also known as "the green-eyed monster," can seem out of
your control when it occurs in a relationship. This "monster" can
also be quite destructive.
As you may already know, the experience of jealousy and its effects
are amplified even more when it occurs in the aftermath of an
affair.
If your partner had an affair and the two of you are trying to
rebuild your relationship, you might be feeling jealous fears that
he or she will cheat again.
Jealousy may even be a relatively foreign experience for you and
mainly began showing up after the affair.
Or you might have already developed a jealousy habit. Perhaps this
partner isn't the first who has cheated.
You've sort of trained yourself to stay on guard for the next
betrayal-- your jealousy is part of that defendedness.
If what you want is to heal your pain, rebuild trust and continue
the process of re-connecting with your mate, jealousy is simply not
the answer.
Jealousy-- even after your partner's affair-- will only drive the
two of you further apart.
Elaine easily recognizes her jealous feelings. When she sees her
husband Bill talking with another woman at a party, she immediately
notices her shoulders tense, her fists clench and her blood pressure
rise.
Although it's been 3 years since Bill admitted to Elaine that he'd
had a brief affair with a woman he met while on a business trip, she
still sees just about any attractive woman as a temptation for Bill
and a threat to their marriage.
Elaine fights off the impulse to rush over and interrupt Bill's
conversation with this other woman and, instead, glares at them from
across the room-- simmering with anger and frustrated with the hold
jealousy seems to have over her.
Keep returning to the present and what's going on right now.
It can be difficult to know which of your thoughts and perceptions
to follow up on when jealousy makes its intense presence known in
your life.
Especially when your partner has had an affair in the past, your
mind might start reeling with memories of the signs and signals that
indicated cheating in the past.
You could find yourself constantly checking and comparing to try to
make sure you aren't caught off-guard by another round of
infidelity.
This is how Elaine feels.
Above all else, she doesn't want to be surprised-- again-- by Bill's
cheating. She finds herself at a loss, however, because she and Bill
have both changed so much since he had the affair.
Elaine's jealousy doesn't seem to fit this current situation, but
it's
difficult for her to release it and trust.
Even if you aren't willing or ready to fully trust your mate at this
time, work on rebuilding trust within yourself.
If your mind begins to wander to past events, keep bringing it back
to the present moment. Look at what's going on right now.
Try to stay focused on facts that you can know with absolute
certainty, not guesses or assumptions.
Elaine takes a deep breath and begins to make mental observations
about the room she's in, what she's drinking or eating and how she's
feeling.
She doesn't have to attach any further information to these
observations than simply noticing them.
Next, Elaine takes a second look across the room at Bill talking to
the woman. She can now see that they are not standing too close to
one another and that now another man has joined in their
conversation.
Elaine begins to feel more ease about the whole situation and her
earlier fears that Bill was getting "too friendly" with this woman
seem to have little or no evidence to support them.
Keep returning to what you want in your future.
Make a conscious decision about what you want for your future. When
you think about your relationship, how would you like it to be?
Take some time to really create in your mind-- and even write on
paper-- your vision for the future.
When you are in the process of calming yourself and clearing your
mind after jealousy arises, return to this vision for your future.
You don't have to know how you and your partner will get there, but
just know what you want and keep that in the forefront of your mind.
You might even decide to share this exercise with your mate.
Together, come up with a shared vision for what you two would like
your relationship and life together to be like.
You can then think about concrete actions that will point you in
that direction and follow through by doing them.
Keep remembering that you are choosing to be in this relationship
with this person. Remind yourself what you love and appreciate about
yourself and your partner.
Allow that to fill you and lead you in your next step.
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copyright 2005 Susie and Otto Collins. All Rights Reserved.
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