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Vivian Diller, Ph.D.

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Relationship Secrets: To Tell or Not To Tell?

Posted: 06/20/2012 6:40 pm

I suppose it shouldn't surprise me that many people believe marital happiness requires complete and full disclosure.

The longtime relationship bible Men are From Mars, Women are from Venus taught us that clear communication was the best policy. Now, those reading Fifty Shades of Grey are convinced that sharing their deepest sexual fantasies will improve intimacy, too. Others, following Don Draper's character on Mad Men, are certain his secrets will ultimately destroy his marriage.

In truth, most successful long-term relationships are based on strong emotional and physical connections. But intimacy isn't necessarily equated with complete honesty. There are many couples that don't "tell all," yet maintain a trusting, fulfilling relationship. Likewise, there are some couples that suffer a great deal when well-kept secrets (or ultimately revealed ones) lead to mistrust and hurt. Below is a list of five commonly kept secrets and suggestions about whether it might be best to tell -- or not tell -- your partner about them.


1) The Affair -- Revealing an ongoing affair or divulging one from your past has wreaked havoc among many married or long-term partners. While affairs remain a serious breach of trust today, experts are beginning to understand that not all are a direct path to separation or divorce. Some serve to highlight already existing relationship problems and can actually promote working on them.

While a double life will undoubtedly put distance between you and your mate, it may be more important to discuss why the desire for a lover began in the first place, rather than focus on the affair itself. For most couples, affairs suggest disconnection, not just sexually but emotionally as well. If you decide to talk to your partner -- whether about an actual affair, a fantasy about one or one you had years ago -- think about how to use the discussion to heal your current bond or how it can serve to propel you toward an inevitable separation. Neither option is simple, but the most important thing is to be aware of the impact either choice may have on your relationship.

2) Your Debt - Keeping a mate in the dark about debt is never a good thing. Many couples today enter long-term relationships burdened with college loans, credit card debt or little money in the bank. Learning about these money matters later almost always leads to feelings of betrayal and mistrust.

One fellow I worked with learned about his wife's debt only after applying for a mortgage for an eagerly-awaited new house. He was furious that they were denied the loan, but even more when he found out why. Another woman who had been married for many years called it quits when she discovered her husband hadn't heeded her warning and had lied -- for a second time --about how deep he had put their family in debt. She said it was the broken promises and deceit that forced her to walk away for good. Being upfront and clear about what you have, what you owe and your plan for how to deal with it will gain you much more respect and trust than learning about it later.

3) Lack of Libido and Impotence - How many women keep their disinterest in sex a secret and fake their orgasms? How many men keep their Viagra in some hiding place? While these secrets are more common among mid-lifers, when hormonal shifts impact sexual performance, some younger couples avoid intimacy altogether rather than reveal their lack of interest. As open as we are about eroticism and pornography in today's culture, sexual secrets are often kept between partners. Some view a lack of arousal as an inadequacy, a lack of femininity or masculinity. Yet partners can misinterpret physical disinterest as lack of emotional interest.

I encourage both men and women who feel low -- or loss of -- libido to talk to their health care providers first. Most often, discussing the issue with a professional paves the way to a more productive discussion with a mate. But remember, not talking about sexual intimacy doesn't make the issue disappear. Ultimately, it will impact the relationship. It's more about how you tell your partner than whether or not you tell them. One way or another, your partner will know. And once the elephant in the room is talked about, connection most often improves.


4) Past 'Bad' Behavior - The decision to share past illegal or immoral activities is complicated. Some are no-brainers -- crimes and jail time are best revealed and explained, as they available on public record. Keeping them hidden can create enormous guilt, and if exposed, can cause deep fear that the behavior could be repeated.

But there are some gray areas in this category. How many of us have had wild experiences during adolescence and young adulthood that led to trouble with the law -- speeding, cheating, fist fights, drug use, shop-lifting -- activities we know will never recur and are best forgotten? We want our mates to think well of us and these were often not the best of times. Most of us have a laundry list of actions we are not proud of, but hopefully we have learned from them. Past 'bad' behaviors that are clearly no longer part of our present are secrets that exist even among couples that are intimate about most everything else in their lives. They can lie dormant, safely kept between you and you.


5) Eating Disorders, Alcohol or Drug Use: You'd be surprised how often these disorders remain hidden from even best friends, husbands and wives. Many couples fear their addiction -- past or present -- will cause a loss of respect, while often it's the secrecy that does.

One patient I treated who attended Overeaters Anonymous (OA) for years had his wife believing he was an avid churchgoer, which is where he told her he was when he was at his OA meetings. Ironically his wife, who couldn't relate to her husband's so-called religious interests, was struggling with her own addiction to alcohol. She needed help, but was afraid to seek it. After he was encouraged to share his involvement in OA, she was actually relieved and began her own treatment. They also began to tackle the ways they were enabling each others' addictions. Ongoing substance abuse will almost always interfere with a couple's intimacy, as the object of desire is something other than your mate. Unless addressed, addiction will ultimately destroy most relationships

Intimacy and complete openness are not one and the same. A successful long-term relationship means being willing to share your vulnerabilities and strengths, but requires sensitivity to the consequences that sharing brings.

Do you have a secret you keep from your mate? Do you think it would be helpful -- or detrimental -- to your relationship if you shared it?

****
Vivian Diller, Ph.D. is a psychologist in private practice in New York City. She serves as a media expert on various psychological topics and as a consultant to companies promoting health, beauty and cosmetic products. Her book, "Face It: What Women Really Feel As Their Looks Change" (2010), edited by Michele Willens, is a psychological guide to help women deal with the emotions brought on by their changing appearances.

For more information, please visit my website at www.VivianDiller.com. Friend me on Facebook (at http://www.facebook.com/Readfaceit) or continue the conversation on Twitter.

 
 
 

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I suppose it shouldn't surprise me that many people believe marital happiness requires complete and full disclosure. The longtime relationship bible Men are From Mars, Women are from Venus taught us...
I suppose it shouldn't surprise me that many people believe marital happiness requires complete and full disclosure. The longtime relationship bible Men are From Mars, Women are from Venus taught us...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MissTake1989
Equal means equal, hypocrites.
07:21 AM on 06/22/2012
I can't explain the number of women I know who regularly and routinely "cheat" on him...by shopping.

Lying about spending the money, hiding the spending of the money, etc.

I know one family that is now homeless because she stopped paying the mortgage to go shopping instead...

Cheating with money is just as damaging as cheating for sex.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
DrVivian
Clinical Psychologist and author of Face It
01:29 PM on 06/22/2012
That's a good one: cheating by hiding compulsive shopping. I'm writing a second post with 5 more secrets couples commonly keep and I'll be sure to add this one. Thanks.
RealistBC
Micro-bios must pass muster.
11:41 PM on 06/21/2012
Are you kidding? Women tell all to their best friends! They tell each other things that they wouldn't want us telling our guy friends - and they don't ask us if that's OK. I have had friends of my wife come on to me because of things they were told. I didn't accept the offers, mostly because I didn't want my wife to lose a friend, but I wasn't happy that they knew things about me that I wasn't about to share with them.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
DrVivian
Clinical Psychologist and author of Face It
01:32 PM on 06/22/2012
That's a whole other issue, sharing secrets with friends that you don't with your own mate. I think men do it with their male friends too. And, I agree, this can be problematic and should be discussed with one's mate. Setting some ground rules in relationships about this issue right from the start might be worthwhile.
01:22 PM on 06/21/2012
I think it is good to talk about the issues with the relationship that may have added to your desire to have an affair, but I don't think we should act like affairs in any way help relationships. It seems like society often acts as if people, especially women, are justified in having affairs if their partner isn't perfect. The fact of the matter is that unless your partner is physically abusing you, you having the affair is worse than pretty much anything they could do to you. Don't make excuses for your affairs. You can ask your partner for forgiveness, but they are under no obligation to give it and are not required to accept any blame for your affair. If you have a problem with your spouse, talk to them instead of betraying them by an affair.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
DrVivian
Clinical Psychologist and author of Face It
01:35 PM on 06/22/2012
Sound advice. As the article mentions, even in today's world, an affair is considered a major breach of trust. The point being made is not about excusing affairs, but viewing them not necessarily as a direct path to divorce.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
joeinknoxville
a TRUE christian would oppose guns
10:24 AM on 06/21/2012
If you go into a relationship with the intent of withholding those topics you've already doomed it. Honesty is liberating but you have to feel safe with you share it with as well.

Just my thoughts anyway.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
DrVivian
Clinical Psychologist and author of Face It
01:37 PM on 06/22/2012
Sometimes people use the "honesty as the best policy" to be abusive and critical of their mate. Just worth thinking about -- rather than accepting this form of communication as always the best.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeanette Gabaldon
Accountability Enthusiast
09:57 AM on 06/21/2012
Your partner is supposed to be your best friend. To me, that means if I start to clam up about anything then it is on me to put on the big girl panties and say something. I owe it to the relationship to be honest, not him or me, but the relationship. Tension, awkwardness and silence might ensue after but it is worth it in the long run. So many people do not want to experience the bad feelings that go with the situation, at hand, and choose to ignore it, hoping it goes away. It doesn't, it gets bigger. Nip it the bud. Being honest means you trust your partner enough to work through things, together. Isn't that why you are with them in the first place? To get though things together? You are not giving them the opportunity to respond with their truth when you hide yours. I learned that the hard way.
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Terence Manuel
Confine yourself to the present.
09:11 AM on 06/22/2012
"I owe it to the relationship to be honest, not him or me, but the relationship."

Thank you. If you are a man or woman of character, then you will step up to plate. I agree with you.

I too learned the hard way.
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dim
one in a can
01:06 AM on 06/21/2012
>How many women keep their disinterest in sex a secret

My ex-wife did it for years. Oh, I have a headache. Oh, I prefer it earlier in the day. Oh, I'd rather you didn't have a shot of liquor beforehand. But invariably it's their disinterest in sex with YOU.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
DrVivian
Clinical Psychologist and author of Face It
08:37 AM on 06/21/2012
Women's lack of interest in sex is much more complicated than simply disinterest in their partner. Some women talk openly about never having been comfortable about sexual desire, but fail to tell their mates about it. Some women lose their desire as they reach menopause, and are embarrassed about that. And yes, some lose their desire because of the emotional distance that grows toward their mates. But, keeping it a secret, without clear discussion, doesn't make it go away. As this is an ex-wife you refer to here, sounds like that was true for you both.
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dim
one in a can
09:12 AM on 06/21/2012
Yes, she mentioned menopause, which can span quite a few years, but she had no trouble having desire for the next guy.

You can't have a clear discussion, if you are proffered false information from the get-go. The way she presented it, there was little room for further conversation, until it was way too late.
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Terence Manuel
Confine yourself to the present.
09:03 AM on 06/22/2012
"But, keeping it a secret, without clear discussion, doesn't make it go away."

Correct. Yet any real attempts to discuss the matter is often quashed by a lot of married women. You are simply dismissed. Reason? The women is done. Why bother if she is disinterested.

"Women's lack of interest in sex is much more complicated than simply disinterest in their partner."

Other than medical reasons, I see very little else that would make her sexuality "complicated."
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Terence Manuel
Confine yourself to the present.
08:57 AM on 06/22/2012
"But invariably it's their disinterest in sex with YOU."

I have always maintained this as well. Married women are certainly very much interested in sex. Correction good sex.

Unfortunately, it is not with their husbands. Now, if it is because the husband is unable or unwilling to provide the good sex she desires, I full well understand her view. However, did she not know this before marriage? Of course she knew. Why did she marry him in the first place? And ladies, if you bother answering, please save the "I loved him" garbage.

So, to me it is just deceit and callous behavior on her part. Women know this about her man before marriage. But out of selfishness, a lot of women proceed anyway.

Clearly, this is not always the case. However, I know from experience that women just are not as forthcoming on this issue as men.
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jf12
When I saw her I marveled greatly.
11:47 PM on 06/20/2012
Lack of *willingness* to physically respond to your partner's physical interest is indeed interpreted correctly as lack of emotional interest.
12:20 AM on 06/21/2012
Many women who have been raped fear to reveal the fact because of the shame and victim-blaming attached. And often their sexuality has been impacted by the trauma of rape. With 1 in 4 women being victims of rape in this land, this is not a minor or trivial problem. Presumably men who were sexualyl abused as boys also fear to reveal this history.

So, there may be other things blocking a healthy interest in sex besides mere "unwillingness."
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dim
one in a can
01:07 AM on 06/21/2012
Not in my experience. Quite the opposite.
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jf12
When I saw her I marveled greatly.
01:10 AM on 06/21/2012
Yes, but. Besides the week or weeks gaps of interest, only being interested when interested, it isn't the lack of interest that's blocking her participation: it's laziness.
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ginadeoliveira2008
Seen a shooting star tonight and I thought of you
08:16 PM on 06/20/2012
If there's anything you feel must be kept secret, don't tell. Intimacy does not require giving up all privacy. Use your intuition, some secrets when out in the open can destroy while others heal.
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dim
one in a can
01:08 AM on 06/21/2012
Real intimacy indeed requires giving up all privacy. Doesn't mean it's what to strive for.
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ginadeoliveira2008
Seen a shooting star tonight and I thought of you
12:47 PM on 06/21/2012
God Forbid! Living well and intimately together does not require to give all degree of privacy.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
DrVivian
Clinical Psychologist and author of Face It
08:41 AM on 06/21/2012
I think there are gray areas in terms of when secrets make sense to keep or reveal -- no absolutes for all couples all the time. But, just because you "feel" like keeping a secret, doesn't necessarily mean it will be helpful to a relationship. One of the obvious ones mentioned in this article was about debt. Keeping debts hidden can be detrimental to long term relationships, even if you 'feel' debt is a secret you 'feel' like keeping.