8 Signs YOU May Be Engaged In Emotional Infidelity
There are various signs that you may be having an emotional affair. Here are the main ones.
1. You frequently communicate with the other person.
Communication with the person is often and ongoing.
You may find yourself brushing aside your partner to make time to talk to this person, often at inopportune times, like during lunch breaks, late at night, or when your partner is sleeping.
You devote an excessive amount of time to communicating with this person.
2. You find yourself thinking about this person often.
The person invades your thoughts regularly. You start to have thoughts of them like you would with someone you’re infatuated with.
You want to share things with them, share time with them, and often wonder how they are doing.
This person will be on your mind more often than what you would expect with a platonic friendship.
3. You discuss personal topics with the person.
Very few conversation topics will be off-limits between the two of you. You may find yourself relating your problems to them often, seeking solace in their words or actions.
You also find yourself sharing the problems of your relationship or criticisms of your partner with this person.
4. You believe this person understands you better than your spouse.
The person may seem like they get you in a much deeper way than your spouse.
And often, they will, because the lines of communication have broken down between you and your spouse so they aren’t privy to any growth or changes that you’ve experienced.
5. You start making excuses to spend more time with the person.
This may or may not be physical. It could also be skipping an activity to instead spend your time video chatting or texting with the person.
Emotional infidelity is often fueled by regular and constant contact with the person.
6. You start comparing your spouse to the person.
You may idealize the partner that you’re having an emotional affair with, comparing your spouse to them.
You may be angry or frustrated that your spouse isn’t like the third party or doesn’t do things the way they do.
The spouse often becomes the bad guy, even if they aren’t doing anything wrong, because the person having the emotional affair is now holding them to an unfair standard.
That unrealistic standard is usually based on an idealized version of this third party. That idealization is mostly rooted in the fact that the chemistry is fresh and you’re not living with the person, so you haven’t accurately seen their flaws or annoying behaviors yet.
7. You redirect more of your time and attention to the person.
Your spouse is getting less and less of you as time goes on. You are giving more of your time and attention to this third party, often cutting into the time you could be spending with your spouse instead.
8. You need to lie to control the information flow about the partner.
Lying by omission is still lying, and it’s easily the biggest red flag that you’re having an emotional affair.
You aren’t fully honest about your friendship with the person to your spouse.
You leave out details about what you talked about and when you talked. You don’t mention times when you meet up with this person, like lunches or meetings.
You deny communications happened or you may be regularly deleting conversation logs you’re having with the person so that your spouse doesn’t find them.
If you can’t openly discuss the friendship with your partner, it’s probably an emotional affair.