If Your Marriage Dies, Don't Pitch Your Tent In The Cemetery

Written by Tim Tedder

We usually expect our marriage to last a lifetime. What starts with promises of faithfulness and endurance, we believe, will survive any challenge "for better or for worse." Most marriages do; some even thrive. But many die in ways never anticipated.

​When the death of a marriage is a mutual choice between two partners, grieving its loss may be a short-term process. The decision to end their relationship often follows a period of prolonged suffering, making divorce feel like a relief. Similar to a funeral, partners make the appropriate arrangements, pay their final respects, bury the marriage, and move on with their lives.

But a marriage killed by betrayal is not so quickly mourned.

My work focuses on helping people heal from an affair, but anyone working in this field can speak to the devastation caused by infidelity. Many marriages end because too much damage has been done or because the unfaithful partner chooses the lover over the spouse. These marital deaths are usually unexpected and sudden, leaving the betrayed spouse in a state of confused grief. Here's how one client described her condition:

"I never, ever expected to be here. I thought our 23 years of marriage were just the first half of what we would share together. We talked about our future; we made plans. Then, one day, I find out he's in love with [another woman]. Without warning, he's gone. He's not coming back...

"No matter how often people tell me 'things will get better,' that's hard to believe when all I feel is sadness. I wonder if I'll ever get over this."

Grief is a normal, necessary part of healing. The pain and sadness experienced after betrayal usually require a grieving period. But you need to let go of the dead thing eventually. You need to leave the cemetery.

Start with these three steps:

1. Decide that you have more living to do.

Instead of thinking your life has died with your marriage, believe that parts of your story are waiting to be written. Even if you're not ready to take complete control of your future right now, at least acknowledge that it is in your power to do so. Regardless of circumstances (yes, they will be difficult), you can choose what story you will tell. You can decide who you will become.

2. Begin to grieve intentionally.

When you were first confronted with unexpected loss, you needed to let grief have its way. The depth of loss and sorrow you felt needed to be expressed, not controlled. As time goes on, however, you should require less time for mourning.

I encourage clients to begin the process of moving away from grief by being more intentional. You still need to process the pain, but you can begin taking more control of the time and places you allow yourself to grieve. Your attention to loss was once a vigil; let it become a visit made less frequently.

  • Start by spending a few days being aware of how often you are reminded of the pain and how much time you spend focusing on it. It may help to keep a written record.

  • Choose a specific place (or places) to go whenever it is time to process your pain. Like visiting a graveside, you can associate a location with grieving, then give yourself permission to leave until it's time for another visit.

  • Gradually reduce your grieving time. You cannot control how often the thoughts and feelings come, but you do have some control over how much attention you continue to give them. Perhaps you will start with one hour a day or three days a week. Instead of letting grief control you, determine how much time you need to give it.

3. Choose to get involved with life again.

If you wait until you feel like doing this, you'll probably wait too long. Some people, in fact, never re-engage with life. But that doesn't have to be you.

Every day, choose to walk out of the cemetery and interact with the world around you. To encourage a quicker return to emotional recovery, make a special effort to include one or more of the following in whatever you do.

  • Friends: Don't isolate. Engage with people who care about you. While you're with them, focus on what is going on in their lives, too.

  • Passions: Do things you love doing. Maybe this is a time to return to the interests you had as a child. Or explore new and interesting opportunities. If you think you might like doing something, TRY it!

  • Service: Find ways to help others. Putting yourself in situations that require attention to the needs of others is one of the most effective ways of taking the focus off of yourself. You may feel like you've got nothing to give, but that's not true. I guarantee that you've got something (time, attention, talent, ability, effort, gifts, etc.) that someone else needs. If you're unsure, put the word out that you have some time to volunteer, and doors will open.

Consider the words of the poem Choices by Allen Steble.

​We all have a choice
to live a lie
or be ourselves
to laugh and cry
or to follow someone else

to look up and smile
or bow down and frown
to walk the whole mile
or take off our crown

We have a choice
to shout out loud
or chant a whisper
to fly through the clouds
or to be blown like paper

to conquer our fear
or hide in the shadow
to the wise words hear
or be thrown out the window

We all have a choice
to climb our highest mountain
or fall into our deepest hole
to drink from life's fountain
or live life like a troubled soul

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Will These Tears Ever Stop?

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Is The Affair Partner Better Than Me?