I get a decent amount of correspondence from folks asking what questions are important to ask and have answered concerning the affair. Occasionally though, I'll have someone ask me the atypical question, tubit.com review but the one that is equally as important - what questions should you not ask.
An example is the person who says:
"I will admit that lately, much of my days have been spent wondering about
my spouse's affair. And I have asked him many questions. But even though he has
been patiently trying to answer everything, there are always more questions
that pop up. I want the answers, but I honestly feel like most every
conversation that we have lately centered on my wanting to understand the
affair. And yet, the more he tries to explain it, the less I feel I understand
it. And so I feel like we are going round in circles with no real resolution.
And I feel like I'm almost harming the process with my endless list of
questions. So I've started thinking that maybe I am approaching this in the
wrong way. Are there any questions that I should not be asking? Are any
questions off limits or harmful?"
I am not sure that there's any one
question that is off limits. I think it really depends upon the couple and your
own healing process that works for you. I know that some wives will avoid
asking tubit.com if this
affair had been the only one because they are not sure that they could endure
it if the answer to the question was yes. I understand the fear and the
hesitation. But, for me, the answer would be an important one. But it is not my
marriage that we are talking about and it is not for me to say. Everyone is
different.
I'm not a therapist, but my opinion
on this is that there are certain lines of questioning that are somewhat
pointless or harmful. I'll explain my reasoning behind this below. Again, this
is just one person's opinion and I am not an expert on this topic.
Questions That Have Repeatedly Been
Asked And Answered: I think that getting in a rut as far as your conversations
go is very common, but very harmful. Like you explained, often he will answer
you as best as he can. He will think that he's trying to be honest. tubit But his
explanation doesn't give you the clarity that you hoped for. You still don't
quite understand. And so you will keep asking the same question - but in
different ways. You will come at it differently, but that doesn't mean that he
doesn't know he's heard this all before. Eventually, you may assume he isn't
being honest and he will assume that you don't care what he answers because you
just want to interrogate him.
The point is, because you might
never fully understand his thought process (which is very hard, since you
weren't the one with the thoughts,) there is no sense in continuing to pick at
the scab, so to speak. Don't keep revisiting the same old questions, when you
are already know how he is going to answer. If you think you aren't getting the
truth, then I'd suggest having your counselor broach it. But there's no point
in going round and round when you both know how this is going to go.
The Questions That Are Personal
Attacks In Disguise: Be careful that your line of questioning isn't really
asking anything at all. An example are things like: "so for how long did
you keep your filthy lies going?" Or "so when did you take the plunge
to become an adulterer?" Or "when did you decide that your children
didn't matter to you?"
These aren't really questions. They
are insults in disguise. I understand why these are so tempting because I
uttered them myself. But they serve no real purpose and they only fuel the fire
and make both of you angry.
Questions To Which You Are Not
Ready To Hear The Answer: I know the feeling of having a million questions and
feeling the dire need to have them answered. This need feels immediate - like
you're just going to burst if you don't know. But, often we blurt these things
out and then we are deeply hurt when they are answered. We deeply struggle and
we can't un ring the bell.
That's why I'd suggest making a
list of questions that pop into your head. As more come, write them down. And
then ask yourself which ones are really constructive and which ones truly do
not matter. For example, of course you need to know the basic Ws and the H
(who, what, when where and why.) But before you ask, think about whether you
really want to go there just yet. You want to take the time to process each
answer. Make sure that you're ready before you ask. Sometimes, it is better to
stagger the information so that you are not overwhelmed.
And maybe you don't need to know
the silly, arbitrary facts that are going to drive you crazy, like the fact
that her favorite color was red or the insight jokes that they shared. These
small details are the ones that you are going to revisit and the ones that are
going to be the most difficult to banish.
I honestly found it helpful to pace
myself as far as the questions went. Because you can only successfully and
productively process so much at one time. And it gets tiring - going through
the questions every day. So I would make the list and we would save the
questions until one agreed upon time. This meant he had more patience because
he knew that my questions weren't going to be a daily occurrence. And it also
meant that I put a lot of thought into which questions were most important to
me.
I'm not telling you that you
shouldn't ask something that you really want to know. But I am suggesting that
often, we ask the same things over and over. And other times, we aren't asking
questions at all. We are just trying to punish or insult him with our
questions. And this really does nothing to help the situation.
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