Active Affair Session Three

The third session in discernment counseling, when there is an active affair, is a high-stakes and high-risk situation. The focus is on helping both partners navigate their complex emotions and decisions while ensuring the process remains respectful and constructive.

Key Points for the Leaning-out Partner (Having the Affair):

Empathize with Their Situation:

  • Acknowledge the leaning-out partner's agony over choosing between the affair and their marriage.
  • Understand that they may be torn between their feelings for the affair partner and their responsibilities to their spouse and children.

Scenarios and Clarity:

  • Recognize that by the third session, the leaning-out partner may have clarified their intentions regarding the affair.
  • Some may be clear about continuing the affair and ending the marriage, while others may still be torn and seeking clarity.

Responsibility and Healthy Choices:

  • Challenge the leaning-out partner to take responsibility for their choices and avoid running out the clock.
  • Encourage them to make decisions in a self-responsible and healthy way, even if they choose to continue the affair.

Meaning Making:

  • Help the leaning-out partner explore the meaning of the affair in their life and how it relates to their broader life situation.
  • Assist them in understanding their motivations and desires, even if the affair is not seen as a long-term relationship.

Key Points for the Leaning-in Partner (Coping with the Affair):

Integrity and Self-Protection:

  • Help the leaning-in partner decide what they want to do in a way that maintains their integrity and is self-protective.
  • Support them in acknowledging their desire to see what could happen with their marriage, even if they feel hurt and betrayed.

Patterns and Contributions:

  • Begin to help the leaning-in partner examine other aspects of the marriage and their own contributions to the problems.
  • Encourage them to see the affair as one issue among many, rather than the sole cause of the marriage's difficulties.

Affair Must End for Path Three:

  • Make it clear that for path three (couples therapy) to be viable, the affair must be completely over.
  • Support the leaning-in partner in setting boundaries and making decisions that prioritize their well-being and the potential for healing the marriage.

General Considerations:

Building Pressure:

  • Recognize that by the third session, the pressure is building, and decisions need to be made.
  • Ensure that both partners understand the implications of their choices and the need for definitive action.

Avoiding Problem-Solving:

  • Emphasize that discernment counseling is not therapy, and both partners do not need to be open and vulnerable to each other.
  • Focus on helping each partner make informed decisions without trying to solve problems together.

Ending the Affair:

  • If the leaning-out partner is willing to end the affair, support them in implementing that decision.
  • Help them communicate their decision to the affair partner in a definitive and respectful manner.

Conclusion:

The third session with an active affair involves navigating high-stakes decisions and complex emotions. By empathizing with the leaning-out partner's situation, challenging them to take responsibility, and supporting the leaning-in partner's integrity and self-protection, discernment counselors can help both partners make informed decisions about their