Temptation Confessions Of A Marriage Counselor May 2026
Temptation Confessions of a Marriage Counselor: What Really Happens Behind Closed Doors
By: A Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist (Anonymous)
I’ve felt the spark with three clients over my career. I never acted on it. But I want to confess: I wanted to. And wanting something forbidden, for a person whose job is to enforce boundaries, feels like a special kind of hypocrisy. temptation confessions of a marriage counselor
Long-term relationships require work, compromise, and the occasional boredom of routine. Temptation, by contrast, requires nothing but presence. It offers the "high" of the honeymoon phase without any of the responsibilities. It is a powerful drug for someone feeling invisible or unappreciated at home. Healing and Prevention Temptation Confessions of a Marriage Counselor: What Really
My own marriage is a quiet museum. We curate it well. We have dinner parties; we go on vacations; we share a bed. But we don’t touch souls anymore. We are roommates with a shared history and a mortgage. I had grown accustomed to the dull ache of emotional loneliness. I had rationalized it as the natural progression of long-term love. And wanting something forbidden, for a person whose
I’ve been a marriage counselor for fifteen years. I have a doctorate in clinical psychology, a wall full of diplomas, and a reputation for saving marriages that everyone else deemed doomed. I’ve talked couples down from the brink of divorce, mediated custody battles, and helped people rebuild trust after affairs that would make your stomach turn.
I started noticing things that had nothing to do with therapy. The way his eyes crinkled when he managed a rare, tentative smile. The scent of cedar and rain he brought in with him. The way he listened to me with an intensity that my own husband hadn't shown in a decade.
But there is one secret I have never shared with my colleagues, my spouse, or my supervision group.