Infidelity 'doesn't have to lead to heartache'
5 Feb 2010
Adultery is often blamed for breaking up marriages, but according to one mistress, it doesn't always have to lead to heartache.Sarah, as she is referred to, from the University of Lincoln, who has been 'the other woman' twice before, told the student-run publication the Linc that most secret affairs come to an end at some point and insisted that the conclusion doesn't have to be messy.
She said the men she dated still loved their other halves and spoke about them often. They simply needed something else outside of the relationship.
While her affairs with these men lasted some time, both eventually went back to their other halves, who knew nothing of their extra-marital antics and were therefore unhurt.
"Cheating in a relationship doesn't have top be about heartache and ending in disaster soap opera style," Sarah stated. "Sometimes it can end in a civilised fashion."
French author Maryse Valliant went further recently to claim that adultery can actually be healthy in a marriage.
In a new book, titled Men, Love, Fidelity, she argued that women whose husbands play away can find their infidelity liberating.
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