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丈夫
妻子
治疗师
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妻子:丈夫与其他女性保持联系长达九个月,迟迟未做决定,让她感到焦虑和不安。丈夫的行为持续多年,并非偶然事件。她不信任丈夫,认为他像变色龙一样,根据需要讨好不同的人。她希望丈夫能够做出选择,结束婚外情,但她也不想成为导致家庭破裂的那个人。她经历了很多失去和痛苦,包括失去父母和兄弟姐妹,以及多次流产和不孕不育的痛苦。她需要时间来处理这些情绪,并且不需要为自己的情绪道歉。她认为他们家是一个容易产生戏剧性冲突的家庭,并且长期以来为了丈夫而压抑自己的情绪,她需要丈夫优先考虑她的感受。 丈夫:他无法完全解释自己的行为,并试图在自己的时间框架内解决问题。他最初参与网络聊天室是为了满足好奇心,并从中学习人类行为。通过网络聊天室,他发现自己是有价值的,被他人喜欢。他过去认为自己不受欢迎,但在网络聊天室的经历改变了他的看法。他试图停止与其他女性的联系,但未能成功。他承认自己的行为伤害了妻子,并表示不希望再伤害她。他试图通过与其他女性的关系来重塑自己的过去,并寻求认可和肯定。他感受到自己与女儿们之间存在距离感,并对自己的行为感到内疚。他希望修复婚姻关系,并放下过去,但他同时也承认自己可能无法控制自己的行为。他与女儿关系紧张,部分原因是女儿们知道他是通过辅助生殖技术才成为她们父亲的。 治疗师:丈夫的行为可能与他童年的经历和未解决的心理问题有关。丈夫的行为背后存在着潜在的、未被意识到的动机。丈夫需要理解自己行为背后的原因,而不是仅仅关注行为本身。理解丈夫行为的意义比了解事实更重要。问题的核心在于丈夫自身的问题,而不仅仅是婚姻关系。丈夫需要深入了解自己,而不是简单地重复旧有的故事模式。丈夫与家乡女性朋友的关系可能与他童年创伤和身份认同有关。这次危机揭示了婚姻中长期存在的问题。妻子需要做出决定,而不是继续等待丈夫。妻子不应该为丈夫的行为负责。丈夫的行为是出于自私的动机,丈夫需要正视并处理自己内心的需求。丈夫母亲的病情可能加剧了他的行为。丈夫与其他女性的关系可能与其内心的恐惧和无助感有关。丈夫的行为可能与其原生家庭的经历有关。丈夫需要为自己的言行负责,而不是找借口。丈夫需要真诚地道歉,而不是试图为自己辩解。丈夫的行为是长期积累的结果,不能简单地归因于单一原因。丈夫需要正视过去,并从中吸取教训。夫妻双方需要沟通和处理失去的痛苦。丈夫需要正视并处理自己的痛苦,而不是逃避。妻子需要正视并处理自己的悲伤和痛苦。夫妻双方需要谨慎处理彼此的情绪,避免进一步伤害。

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The wife discusses her husband's long-term infidelity and his inability to commit to ending his affairs, leaving her in a state of uncertainty and distrust.

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None of the voices in this series are ongoing patients of Esther Perel. Each episode of Where Should We Begin is a one-time counseling session. For the purposes of maintaining confidentiality, names and some identifiable characteristics have been removed, but their voices and their stories are real.

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To be honest, I'm waiting for him to make a decision because obviously I can't. Nine months ago, this woman found out that her husband had reconnected with a childhood girlfriend in his hometown, where he went to visit his ailing mother. And I remember that first night I went to the bathroom and I looked at myself in the mirror and I was like, listen, I was like, we're good. You got this. This is fine. I have this under control.

It's been nine months that they're grappling with the ravages of this infidelity, but also decades long of acting out on his part, proceeding. Little did I know that he had been going online to all these different chat rooms. At first, I kind of wanted to seek the solace of strangers. It happened over time.

A decision needs to be made because the other relationship is not over, contrary to what the wife thought. But she wants him to make the decision. And his decision would be not to make a decision. He's still just hedging his bets all the time. He won't commit. I feel like sometimes I'm living with like a time bomb. He's been...

telling me he loves me and he wants to be with me and this is where he wants to be and at the same time he's still been in communication with this other person and I don't trust. I don't trust what he's telling me like over the past nine months he said these same things and saying these things of this other woman at the same time and he's like a chameleon pleasing whoever he's with based upon what he needs. So

You know, that sentence that you just gave me, "He pleases everyone he's with," that's new or that's the man you've known? I think he, yes, he's definitely a perfectionist and definitely someone who goes above and beyond to make people happy or to do well in work. He's there 110%. And I've always known that. I've always seen that. I've loved that.

I didn't know what disappointment it was giving him maybe internally when he wasn't pleasing somebody. He can't let it go. He can't let it go. Yeah? Yeah, I think that's probably accurate. Say more. She knows you well, but say more. I grew up and it was just my mother and I. And I think I was always in a position of having to prove something.

I think I was very, I was driven early almost to kind of prove that I more than belonged. I very quickly get a sense that this man has a story and he repeats the story to himself. The child of the single mother, the only child of divorced in his school. But at the end of the story, he still doesn't really understand why he's doing what he's doing.

You know, I can't. My behavior is not completely explainable. And I don't know if it was a midlife crisis or kind of what was happening. And we're so much farther along in these nine months. She says in these nine months that I've said certain things and then done things to negate the things that I've said. You can talk to her. And I think in many ways I've been trying to figure it out, but on my timeline. And...

while I've been trying to pull away, I haven't pulled away exclusively, been able to really cut the cord. But I'm, you know, I'm working on it. And I know that doesn't sound right, but it's really all I could do at this time. No, I don't think so. No? No. I think part of why you seem to be hitting a wall, see, is because there is a kind of a manifest story.

But then there's a latent story, and that one isn't clear to you. On some level, you don't really know what's happening to you. You know what you've done. Yes. But you don't really know why what. Why now? How come? And I wanted to ask you first, what have you understood so far? Of my actions? Of you, yeah. Of your actions, and most importantly, of what your actions tell you.

You know, I think there was such a curiosity at the beginning in the chat rooms, you know, such a curiosity. I loved getting to know other people and I described it as fishing because I was basically fishing to try to gather their attention in these chat rooms and how you could do that. And even though there was a sexual component to it, I learned a lot about human behavior. I really did. And what did you learn about you?

That I was likable. That there was something of value. That people liked me. You know? That women liked me. You know? And I think along... Because... Because... Slow down. Slow down. Because before that, I thought and felt what? Alone. More alone. More isolated. And I thought of myself as what? And you can connect that guy with the teenage one and with the younger one. I am likable.

And I am not what I've always thought of myself, which is what? I rub people the wrong way, even when I wasn't trying to rub them the wrong way. I just rub people the wrong way. And in the chat rooms, I might be worth spending a couple minutes with, you know? But it's low risk. Sure. What other tricks did you try? I stumbled on this name, Dopamine.

in there and I thought that was ironic and I, you know, reached out, said something that I probably thought was semi-clever and she responded. And I was really trying to stop the whole process at this point. I really was. I didn't want to have anything to do with it. Are you okay listening to this? Yeah. I mean...

I want to listen. You do? Yeah. Because I can also take a few minutes alone with him. No, because I know about this person and I need the truth. It's interesting, right? Because what I'm hoping to do with him and with you is to get away from the truth about the other people and get closer to the truth about him. I know. If he starts to talk now about the women...

To me, it's a deflection. I agree. I agree. So as seductive as it may be to hear about her and to think you're going to find something there or he's going to find something there, but I hope that you leave here with things that you haven't yet talked, felt, or thought about. And I think you may get more from understanding the meaning than the facts.

And some of this is going to be for you to not fall into your typical stories. If you just tell it as the next anecdote, you won't learn anything new about you. And this is true for all of us. We have a way of thinking about ourselves. We have a way of understanding ourselves. And then we pile up stories that come to confirm it. But the truth doesn't lie there. And the understanding doesn't lie there. You may stay in this marriage. You may leave this marriage. And you won't have understood squat.

The issue is not can you make a decision. You don't know what the decision is about. It is about the marriage and not the marriage, but it's also about what happened to you. And with the latest woman and the latest installment, but also throughout your life. And this I say to you too, you kind of organize yourselves around, we must make a decision. Does he stay in the attic or does he come back to the bedroom? Yeah. Tell me something. What happened in the car?

One part of his story that did seem to matter a great deal was a recent interaction with his teenage daughter in the car. They made a crack about me not being their real father, right? Who is they? My children. Where I felt super disrespected, which I haven't done well with my whole life, obviously. That would be a trigger point for me. And they said you were not their father because?

Well, because we had problems having babies and we needed a donor. And we told them at a very early age, in an effort to be healthy, that, you know, mommy and daddy needed some help. And so, you know, I went through two surgeries and we really, we did everything we could. We went to the top of the line and I had a backup. I had a donor backup.

Did you tell the daughters how hard you worked on this? How much you tried? They know all of that. So basically, they knew that this is your Achilles' heel. Yeah. And if they really want to get at you, this is the thing they need to throw at you? Pretty much. It's just words. Like, they understand. Do you know what I mean? They understand nothing. Right. They don't understand how much it hurts him. No. And they don't understand how much this hurts.

may also be at the core of a lot of your acting out. Yeah. The friend, the woman I grew up with in my hometown, you know, it's ironic that she has two boys. I also think it's ironic that she's a single mother. Of course, not ironic. I know. It's extremely well chosen. You need enough elements to...

to be able to repeat your story, your origin story, and maybe have the opportunity to play with it and change it. Yeah. But do you know what you're trying to change? Myself? I don't know. I think in some ways I can actually rewind history for me, right? I could be there for someone who seems really appreciative, too.

I mean, one of the things I got in trouble with her is I stumbled on this book. He's a runner. And I sent him a book that I knew that he would really, really like because I wanted him to know that I was watching from afar, that I cared about him. I mean, I wanted him to know that he was valued.

I have a sense that what I've just watched is a very old dynamic here, whereby he highlights how the girls make him feel that he's not legit. By throwing at him the genetic factor, they can really go and say, you're not my dad. Something that kids often will say to parents when they're upset. But

But when there is a piece of truth to it, some element, even though he's raised them from day one, they really know where they're aiming. And then the mother tries to defend the girls by just saying, it's just words. The girls don't understand what he's going through. But in that moment, maybe the mother doesn't either. And so he experiences that as a microaggression. He doesn't say it. I'm not even sure it's conscious.

And then when he cries about how he was able to be so kind to the son of his lover, who doesn't question his DNA, and so his competence and his legitimacy is intact, then he's basically firing back a microaggression at the wife to say, here, I may be incompetent, but there, I'm deeply appreciated. You have two girls.

They still need you. Yeah. They need a father to really throw himself into them. I know. I just can't change them. You know, the little ones. But you're not supposed to change them. I can't even. I have to wait for them to come to me. You know? Why is that? They don't want to talk about it. No, no, no, no. Don't put it all on them. I don't know. I don't know. I'm sure. I'm tough on them. And I'm tough on them. I want them to be great. I want them to...

apply themselves. So you're replaying the not enough, prove yourself? I guess so. It's the only way I knew how to get there. And they love him so much. And it kills me that he, that, it just kills me.

But there's like, they're all like this with each other. All of them in different ways, but the three of them are like this with each other. Not we go off on our own trips. We did that. We used to do that. Don't argue. Listen for a split second. I'm not saying that there's not moments, but I think there is some wall or something where having the older one is more mature, more articulate to be able to not be afraid to say what she feels. And she will be

very direct about how she feels and she's not afraid to challenge you. No. The younger one though hasn't found a voice yet. And she's in that awkward age where she doesn't even understand what her voice is. I think the younger one doesn't talk because everybody else does the talking for her. And I think... She also has her escapes. And that's why she escapes. Well, she has these darn devices. Right. And she watches her...

you know, repeated television shows. It's easier. It's easier. She doesn't have to fight with them. She can think what she wants to think about those shows and not have somebody else tell her, no, you're wrong the way that you're thinking. One moment you get over-involved and you want to control the whole thing and the next minute because you don't succeed at it, you say, fuck it. That's exactly what happened. I've had it. I'm out of here. And

Then, on occasion, you think, no, I'm not going to do what my father did. I'm not going to abandon my children. Right. But then you say, I want to be rewarded for that. And they have to make me feel good about the fact that I didn't do what he did. Right. Yeah, that's right. And because you're not doing well at home, you find yourself another family where you think you can come in as the shining prince. Yeah. Yeah.

And if I can't help my daughters, I'll help those little boys with whom you create this kind of overlapping identification. I once was that boy. And you confuse realities. Right. And I feel to that end that I'm being where someone also truly needs me and also understands me as well, right? I mean...

I'm just, I'm not, I'm not, just bear with me here as we go into this. I mean, I'm not trying to be hurtful. But I think there's a sense of, you know, you say people have responsibilities, right? And I know I have my responsibilities with you and the girls, but I feel terribly guilty about it.

having entered her life in such a way. - You know what? - I understand that really makes you angry. - But listen, listen, listen, listen. She's got a family out there. She's got plenty of people to take care of her. - She does. - She's been taking care of herself and taking care of those boys and doing exactly what she wanted to do and making her choices way before you came into the picture. - I know. - And if you kinda can't, you gotta kinda understand that because I'm actually not here to kinda let you just go and live out your other reality.

I know. That's the bottom line. I've kind of had enough with that. I've been very forgiving. I've been very patient. Very patient. But you say there's a decision to make. It's time to either actually put the work into this and figure this out or just go so then I can go live my life. He ain't going to make a decision. You're going to make the decision. I know that. I know. I know that. And you're going to have to accept that...

You know, the way this ends goes is I want him to make the decision so I don't have to be the one that is responsible for breaking up my family. Let him do the dirty job. It's his doing. And so then you end up sitting and waiting. You could wait for a few years like this. The woman is irrelevant. It's all about him. The test for you is to actually stay in a place where you're not doing so well and make it better.

rather than continuously seek out places, people, women in particular, who give you a stage to do mini performances. I don't want to hurt her anymore. I really don't. I just hope I have enough control to not hurt her anymore. I love her. I think that's what's so confusing to me. I just can't relate to not having control.

If you know you're going to do something that's going to hurt somebody, then just don't do it. Like, I just, it's hard for me. Sometimes it's very hard to understand the logic of if you know it's going to hurt, why do you do it? What he's giving to the little boy inside of him, the affirmation, the importance, the whole spiel, the selfish part for him, in that moment takes precedence of everything.

It's not what he's doing to others, it's what he's doing for himself. Yeah, but then that's like indulgence. Yep. That's indulgence. And you will call it indulgence, and he will think that it is primary food. And that's the piece that needs to come out if this is to move. Not because you have to accept it, but because it needs to be at least properly labeled. Yeah. Why is the little boy...

so much the forefront right now? Why is he coming on with a vengeance? Because your mother got sick. Because you're about to lose your mother. There was a sincerity to this question. Maybe one of the first moments when he stopped and pondered. And as I'm listening to it, it sounds as if I was kind of impatient with him and dismissive. That was really not the idea. It was more just to say, it's so obvious. Why now?

But it came out as if I was saying, you don't know that? So obvious. And that's really not OK. Support for Where Should We Begin comes from Babbel. The year is already halfway through. And soon enough, we'll all be looking back at our New Year's resolutions and taking stock. Well, if one of your goals this year was to practice another language, there's still plenty of time, especially if you try English.

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spelled B-A-B-B-E-L dot com slash Esther. Rules and restrictions may apply. Vitamin water is from New York. We needed a drink that can keep up with the music scene in the city. We got to see our favorite DJ perform in Brooklyn at 3 a.m. or sing karaoke in the village also at 3 a.m. Drink vitamin water. It's from New York. You found another woman that actually helps you with your sense of terror and helplessness. Mm-hmm.

In an interesting way, I think it has less to do with this family and more to do with your family of origin. It's more about your mother than your wife and your daughters. The chat rooms, the nannies, all of that, that's a different story. But if you ask me for the timing, what better way to protect yourself against loss than to find someone who is completely dependent on you?

You know, when you say that, you know, there was this emotional connection, this person cares for you and loves you and everything. And I guess I'm going off a little off track here a little bit about me at this moment. It's okay. You can insert yourself back into story. Please do. Please do. You know, it just makes me feel diminished. Like it makes me feel replaceable. It makes me feel replaceable.

Knowing, you know, one thing he would say to me at the beginning is that if I had met this woman before I met you, this is someone I could have seen myself live my life with. I was so shocked. I thought I was finally giving him the family that he needed to complete himself. I know. I was giving him the stability. I was trying to be, you know, loving and calm and compassionate and a good mother and...

I was trying to do all these things I thought I was, like, really giving you everything that you wanted. You were. And it's like, but that's where it was. Did you hear? You were. I was, but it wasn't enough. But that may not be because you're not enough. That's the catch here, is to not translate this as if if I was more, he wouldn't do this.

instead of, "I was plenty." I know. And whatever he did is not a response to you. You have got to know that. I know. Okay? No matter how much you've given him, there's a piece of it he's gonna have to do on his own. I know. Or not. Or not. Or not. Can I just say something to qualify the comment that this was someone I could live or see myself with a life with? I think in some ways,

warped as it may sound, I felt that was, it's not a compliment to you, but it's the idea that this wasn't just a floozy. This was someone of substance. The idea was, it was an experience. May I stop you? Yeah. I think the only or the most important thing at this moment, if you will say something to your wife, has to be about acknowledging how shitty a thing it was to say and how hurtful it was.

And not to justify yourself. Seriously. I really wasn't trying to hurt you. I don't care if you were trying. But when we do, you own it. Yeah, okay. I'm sorry. Yeah. And what makes it worse is you keep justifying it. When sometimes it's just someone just wants to hear, I'm sorry. And that was wrong. You know, the challenge for you is that

You see yourself as a good person and you're doing not good things. And so you keep trying to close the gap. There's a lot of things that have been triggered by the fact that his mother is dying. There's also a lot of acting out, from the chat rooms to the nannies, through all kinds of unsavory behaviors.

that really has happened over 20 years period. So it's probably not the wisest thing to just try to come up with one reason to explain a whole behavior. I know I want to stay. I know I want to stay. And I know I want to fix this. And I know I want to move on. I don't want to have to answer for forever. And I just want to work on putting it behind me. Go with me here. Putting it behind you.

We all move forward, but part of putting that behind you is also acknowledging that this happened and it is part of your story now. And it should be catalyst or the inspiration to be like, where have I gone now because of this? I am. I'm acknowledging. I just want to talk about it 100 times a day. Yeah, I get that. Okay.

You know, our life obviously hasn't been completely easy. There have been, you know, the whole everything about our infertility, you know, took a long, long time. Not only him, but I went through many, many, many, many different treatments and medications, right? Miscarriages, you know, different things. And I've had a lot of loss on my side. I don't have my parents anymore. I don't have a sibling anymore.

And I've had to kind of rush all these emotions along because I needed to kind of, I needed to be a wife and I needed to be a mother. And I think what I'm feeling right now with all of this, when you say you don't want to talk about it all the time, is that I can't, this one, I just, I can't rush. It's like I've just, if I'm feeling depressed or I'm feeling anxious or something's triggering me, I shouldn't have to apologize for it.

As if that's going to trigger you. I think that's my biggest fear. No, it's not about that. Listen, I think we're also a very dramatic family. I think we are. Talk to her. Don't tell me. I mean, I think we are prone to drama. And I just think there's a sense of wallowing in it, too. Yeah, but when you kept all this connection going on with this other person, it's like, I can sense that.

I can't really move on and just pick myself up when it's continuing on. I like to think sometimes that when a crisis occurs like this in a relationship, it kind of lights up the scorecard of the relationship. The arrangements you made, the spoken and the unspoken compromises, the implicit agreements, the explicit ones. And what I'm hearing from you is, look...

husband of mine, something that I realize is that I basically have continuously moderated my own emotional experience by checking in how it would affect you. And if I didn't think you could take it, I would cut my grief short. I just have always asked myself not what do I feel, but how will it affect you.

And this has been pretty much the way we've been for 25 years. That's terrible. I mean, I don't want you to do that. That is. It is neither a good thing or a terrible thing. These things are way more complicated than just right and wrong. But now my anger about all the other times when I cut things short because I was thinking of you is coming up because for once in my life, I need you to think about me first. Yes.

So when she says, "I need you to think about me," you can't start coming back and saying, "Honey, on occasion, just be a little happy." This is bullshit. Because you know damn well that part of why she can't is because you keep sniffing under her nose. - Yeah. - Yeah. So you have to be really careful not to push each other out of the door when actually nobody really wants to go anywhere. Nobody wants to go. I want to ask you something.

Because you did mention loss. And you mentioned your parents. And you mentioned your siblings. And you mentioned the miscarriages. And you mentioned infertility. And you mentioned the sperm donor. And you mentioned your mother. We need to talk about loss. You need to talk to each other about loss. I don't want to lose anymore. I can't lose anymore. How much more do I put up with? Because I'm afraid of loss. How much more do I put up with? How do I trust you?

Listen, you know, we know each other. Hold on one second. Every time you talk, you create a buffer. Just look at her and listen. You're killing me. Because there's no screen here. There's no delete button. This one you can't just control. And you have to actually not pretend you're dealing with distress, but actually be present for the distress. It's the girls too. Go ahead. I just want you to...

I want you to not hurt me. I know. I know. I want you to put us first before yourself. I never wanted to hurt you. I wasn't... I mean, she's had many friends who've wanted her to end this. Be strong. Walk out. Why does that make you laugh? I don't know. Talk to me about loss. In fact, not talk to me. Talk to her. I lost the ability to have...

Kids the way most guys have kids. How has that been for you? You know, I never thought it was that much. I just rolled with it quick. But obviously it hurts me, right? I love the... Some of, you know, my oldest, she has a lot of similar personality traits. And I love those traits. I love her sense of humor. I love her spiritedness.

And the little one is ferociously funny. But I also feel sometimes distant, more distant than I want to be because I don't have that cellular connection. And it hurts me. And then it reinforces it when they hit that dig that I'm not their real father. I just feel like some sort of standby.

Because he knows that he's not a genetic father, a biological father, he then interprets his distance as being rooted in that. But that's a construction. It could have been about anything else. Maybe he's distant because he's too self-involved. Maybe he's distant because he doesn't like to be in a place where he doesn't feel competent. So everybody's using the same weapon. Him to explain himself, them to push him away and attack him.

But if that wasn't the weapon, there would be another way for kids to tell their parents, "I don't love you. You're not my real person. How can I be your daughter? You mustn't be my father." There's loads of ways that people try to say, "Our relationship is broken." That is the statement, not the origins. You have a way of talking about very painful things in passing.

like two surgeries, like many miscarriages. These things, even though you had your girls and you have to be thankful that they are there, these things, they scar us. And I think if you allowed yourself more of that sadness, you'd be less into your sense of "I deserve." Because your deserving is kind of the entitlement of the deprived.

And when I said to you before, why does that make you laugh? It's because it's the laughter of self-loathing. It's not a real laughter. You escape from something and you fantasize into something. And it's the something that we're trying to understand. Otherwise, you're going to continue to say, I don't want to hurt you and then go call the other lady and hurt her. And in the end, you'll hurt both of them and you'll have two women who are pissed off at you, who want you, and you will feel so important.

- Ridiculous. - You see the dance? - The thing is, I love this woman. I love this woman. I love her. We're good together. We're good. - You're an integral part of our family unit. - Mm-hmm. - But you're also someone that I really care about. - I know. I love you. - It is like a roller coaster. That's why I've kept going on and on. - Yep. And when he says, "You know that," then your head says, "Well,

If you know that I know, then why do you keep doing things that hurt me? Right. Obviously you don't. So no, I don't know it. Why would I know it? So that one is a slippery slope. It is. Yeah. And that's why I have to say, start saying to myself, enough is enough. Enough is enough. I don't want to be this person. Which one? The person that keeps letting it all slide by. I don't want to be that. I don't. There's more to me than that. What would happen if...

If he moved out, he will move to Ohio? No. What will you do all alone? Me? Yes. You will move to Ohio within a week? No, probably wouldn't stay there very long. Where? Alone. I don't think so. I don't like being alone. I mean, I would try, you know. I don't know, I would try to be alone for a little bit, but I'm sure things would kick back up, right? With my friend in Ohio, probably.

What are you giving me that look for? Because it's just, it is true. Well, I mean, that's what happened. It's like you've been saying all along. It's like you're lying to me. You're lying to her. You're lying to yourself. I'm not lying. Actually, I'm not lying. No, no, no, exactly. That's exactly true. You're absolutely right. You would be, the reality is that within a week, you would, less than a week, you'd be right back into it. And honestly, and I would just divorce you. Okay. Okay.

Isn't it funny how Pat, how quickly we can get to the other side? I mean it is a slippery slope. I mean that you can start running down that mountain real quick. But you're provocative. I love you, I love you, I love you. I move out, I'll figure it out. I don't like being alone. I'll solve that problem really fast. I just know me. I'm being honest. I didn't say you're not honest. I'm saying you're provocative.

You're asking why did you just go on the other side of the slope? Because you just literally put a banana peel under her foot. And then you say she slips. Your honesty is valued, but it has consequences. Right. Because in effect, what you're saying to your wife is not being alone is really the important thing for me. You matter to me, but if you're not there, I'll figure it out. How else is she to understand? What comes out is what leads to the next move.

You say this kind of stuff, you're going to get that kind of answer. I know. So if you want an end to this misery, it's true that you will have to have a negotiation with the part of you that says, I deserve this. It's less about the child you were and more about the adult you will be. Esther Perel is the author of Mating in Captivity and the State of Affairs and also the host of the podcast How's Work?

To reply with your partner for a session for the podcast or for show notes on each episode, go to whereshouldwebegin.esterperel.com. Where Should We Begin with Esther Perel is produced by Magnificent Noise for Gimlet and Esther Perel Productions. Our production staff includes Eric Newsom, Eva Walchover, Destry Sibley, Hiwote Gatana, and Olivia Natt. Recorded by Noriko Akabe. Kristen Mueller is our engineer.

Original music and additional production by Paul Schneider. And the executive producers of Where Should We Begin are Esther Perel and Jesse Baker. We would also like to thank Nazanin Rafsanjani, Courtney Hamilton, Lisa Schnall, Nick Oxenhorn, Dr. Guy Winch, and Jack Saul.