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After the Affair
After the Affair
After the Affair
Audiobook (abridged)2 hours

After the Affair

Written by Janis A. Spring

Narrated by Janis A. Spring

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

About this audiobook

“Dr. Spring possesses a remarkable combination of clarity, wisdom, spirit, and heart. This is an extremely helpful and healing book—a gift to us all.”
—Harriet Lerner, Ph.D., author of The Dance of Anger

“It is ‘must’ reading for any couple who has experienced the violation of trust as a result of an affair.”
—Harville Hendrix, Ph.D. 

A staggering number of couples in America—about 70 percent—have been affected by extramarital affairs. After the Affair is the only book to offer proven strategies for surviving the crisis and rebuilding the relationship. Written by Janis Abrahms Spring, Ph.D., a nationally known therapist and acknowledged expert on infidelity, this revised and updated version brings the groundbreaking classic into the 21st century, with a new section dealing with online affairs in cyberspace. For women who are struggling in their marriage—and for clinicians, psychology academics and readers fascinated by of popular psychology—this newly revised and updated edition of After the Affair is essential reading.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperAudio
Release dateDec 26, 2007
ISBN9780061572975
After the Affair
Author

Janis A. Spring

Janis Abrahms Spring, Ph.D., is a nationally acclaimed expert on issues of trust, intimacy, and forgiveness. In private practice in Westport, Connecticut, she is the author of the award-winning How Can I Forgive You?, The Courage to Forgive, the Freedom Not To, and Life with Pop: Lessons on Caring for an Aging Parent.

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Reviews for After the Affair

Rating: 3.978723421276596 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    she did not address long term affair issues much.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Very practical: thorough, hopeful, a real road map for those considering reconciliation after an affair.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I read this as a necessity, working on a personal issue, and rebuilding trust, after the affair. I noted many points, and interestingly not the same as my wife underlined. The approach is that of a cognitive-behavioral therapist. "Fully commit to the process of re-connecting""If I didn't love him so much, I couldn't tolerate the way he treats me""Build on small, shared rituals""How can I trust you again, after so much damage"Flip-flop - personality traits have negative and positive connotations: A stressed, driven person can also appeal to the spouse as productive, effective and responsibleThere are low cost and high cost behaviors to heal the relationship: the high cost behaviors are all the responsibility of the unfaithful partner.Sex differences in conversation: Females value empathy, males give advice."If your partner has decided to re-commit it is likely to be because you offer something deeper and longer lasting than romantic love""Resolution of trauma is never final, recovery is never complete"Mental note to not summon up fiery material as one reflects on the affair
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Let me try to express to you the virtues of this book, because while I think they will be apparent to anyone picking it up, they are hard to put into words.

    Well, okay: why are you picking it up? Unlike so many of the "Joe/Josephine Blow, PhD"s who crank these "change-your-life/love" type manuals out into the ether and live off the fat of the proceeds (vampires! sadness vampires!), Spring is a competent prose stylist, but you're not opening After the Affair looking for a gripping read. (I recommend The Magus by John Fowles--everyone I give it to,and there have been many, is all "oh man! oh man!")

    No, you're presumably trying to put your relationship back together after one of you has cheated, or at least wondering if you can. And from that perspective, I think there are three things needed from a book like this:

    1. Ideas. Use value. the book has to give you a solid plan of action for forward motion, because--aside from anything else--time is of the essence and you want to start trying to repair the damage or at least moving toward a place where you can begin, before the hurt metastasizes. Everybody has these, from Dr. Phil to your buddy Wayne, but some of them are worse and more self-aggrandizing (*coughnototsaypatronizingwithallyour"Italkatseminars!nobodyreallyhurtanybody!ujustgottacommunicatebro"JonathanRobinson) than others.

    2. Understanding. When I say "you" in this review, I am speaking of both partners, "hurt" and "unfaithful" as Spring calls them, and it is impossible to overstate how important her balanced approach (in this least balanced of all situations) is. "You, the hurt partner, are feeling . . . "; "you, the unfaithful partner, must . . . "; her unproclaimed philosophy of relationship pathology seems to be "humans are built to love, to pairbond, to be there for each other, and when one partner cheats it is because something is seriously wrong, always;" or in simpler terms, to both partners, "you are in pain." But, "the hurt partner's pain is much deeper, and the unfaithful partner chose to cause it in a direct way that is uniquely crisis-precipitating." In other words, there hurt partner must come first, but there must always still be two of you in the room.

    3. Sensitivity. The fact that I make this a whole point separate from "understanding" perhaps sheds a lot of light on my own feelings as I go through this process. But aa lot ofyou must be feeling similarly fragile, and knowing that what you need desperately is to be just the opposite--to find strength. Especially in her lyrical introduction, Spring puts you at your ease. "This will help," she says. "I'm not here to tell you what to think." And she even is agnostic on such fraught matters as whether you should tell your partner about the affair, and while I know my own feelings on the matter, especially now, and suspect that Spring is less neutral than she comes across, that atmosphere of secular tolerance is a balm--hard to create in a book--and necessary. You unclench, and the understanding of how your partner is hurting washes over you--it was there all the time, but you were like "No!Me!" Spring helps you work at loving again, in a spirit of humility.

    Spring sees the aftermath of an affair as a three-step process--first, normalizing your feelings; second, deciding whether to recommit or quit; third, rebuilding. (I should note that this book is light on the acronyms aand twelve-step processes that elicit an instinctive snob reaction in overdeveloped aesthetes like probably everyone on LibraryThing--although it uses some of the best and simplest, like the "mirror speech" thing where you paraphrase what your partner is saying until they think you've got it--and, for a self-help book, heavy on academic rigour.) For me at least, this description felt immediately familiar and accurate. She doesn't so much "tackle" each sub-topic--the hurt partner's loss, the unfaithful partner's confusion, and then undestanding your ideas about love, learning to trust again, talking about the affair, becoming sexually intimate again, etc.--as remind you they're there, set out a lot of things to consider, and, well, vulgar as this sounds, give you handles to pull yourself out of the fog--so you can sit with your partner and together say "there is this, and there is this, and also there is this." Tumble your relationship in all its aspects until it emerges bright, clear, lit by its deep internal lightand made beautiful not by cutting and the loss of pieces of itself, but by the gentle action of water.

    Spring gives you license to be your beautiful selves and leave behind your unbeautiful selves, recognizing that they are part and parcel, love one another and take responsibility and build a stronger love and triumph over pain. With that in mind, let me just say that I love Heidi Jasper and I'm so proud to have her in my life and humbled by this second chance. Y'all better reckonize.

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Written by a clinical psychologist who has been treating distressed couples for 22 years, it guides both hurt and unfaithful partners through the three stages of healing: Normalizing feelings, deciding whether to recommit and revitalizing the relationship. It provides proven, practical advice to help the couple change their behavior toward each other, cultivate trust and forgiveness and build a healthier, more conscious intimate partnership.