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Much about “the other woman” has been dissected in pop culture, and the discourse is rarely sympathetic or understanding.
Last summer, at a party, I was chatting with a woman who said she’s only attracted to married men. She said she was trying to change, but she wasn’t sure how.
Our sexuality experts really deliver the goods on this one, offering nuance and perspective that will likely surprise you. It did me. Sure, being with a married man can be taboo and hot — but familiar and safe as well? I didn’t see that one coming.
My last two relationships — one lasting eight years, the other 13 years — have been with married men. I’d like to understand why I’m attracted to married men. And how can I change my attraction to more available men?
The answer to why is summed up nicely by licensed marriage and family therapist Shadeen Francis: “At its simplest, when we are attracted to people who are unavailable, it is usually because we are also unavailable.”
Our experts break it down.
In the Mood
For AARP’s In the Mood column, writer Ellen Uzelac will ask experts your most pressing 50+ sex and relationship questions. Uzelac is the former West Coast bureau chief for The Baltimore Sun. She writes frequently on sex, relationships, travel and lifestyle issues.
Intimacy and independence. When someone is married, there are built-in boundaries and limits. There’s only so much they can ask of you or you can ask of them, says Francis.
“The relationship can’t deepen in certain ways, and that can feel safe or desirable or comfortable if you are not looking to build that sort of life with someone,” says Francis, who is also a certified sex therapist. “You get to have intimacy to a degree but also maintain a lot of independence.”
The fantasy factor — and the risk. Some people really like being “the other woman” because there’s a fantasy aspect to it, says Francis, explaining that being an object of desire can make one feel sexy and sought-after.
Certified sex therapist Amanda Pasciucco says a relationship like this also introduces an element of risk — and that, too, can feel hot. “It’s forbidden, taboo, addictive and feels more intense because it’s secret and private,” she notes. “It can feel really validating.”
Leaning into what’s familiar. Pasciucco says you could be modeling what you may have experienced in childhood: emotional neglect that has made you accustomed to scarcity when it comes to close relationships.
“It feels familiar, the norm almost,” she says. “It can create a cycle of highs and lows. I don’t think it’s healthy, but a lot of people are satisfied with the highs. They just love that.”
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