Welcome to the Internet's most trusted self-help & psychology portal, developed by hundreds of volunteers as a labor of love. Since 1994, our licensed professionals bring you the science of psychology, complete with a worldwide support community. C'mon in - and help yourself!

I Am Involved in A Long-Distance Relationship

by Richard B. Patterson, Ph.D.

 
Question: I am involved in a long-distance relationship. I find myself at times thinking about cheating. Is this normal? How should I look on actually cheating?

Maintaining a long-distance relationship is a difficult task. There is loneliness, self-doubt, even fear ("Can I trust him/her to remain faithful?") Having thoughts about another relationship is certainly a normal response to the loneliness.

Having sexual feelings toward someone else is also certainly normal. Acting on those thoughts and feelings is a different matter. Cheating undermines any relationship. Not only is there guilt to contend with, but there is the uncomfortable task of dealing with deception. Maintaining a deception can sometimes be a formidable task in itself.

You and your significant other need to have an honest discussion about this relationship. What can be done to maintain the relationship? How do you each feel about the other person possibly seeing someone else? Yes, honesty is always risky but for the long term it beats getting into a quagmire of guilt and deception.

About the Author:

Richard B. Patterson, Ph.D. is a clinical psychologist in private practice in El Paso, TX. He is the author of three books on psychology and spirituality.

Originally published 02/15/99
Revised 05/04/2009 by Marlene M. Maheu, Ph.D.
Rate this article: None
 

Post Your Comment

Email addresses are not shown publicly. Your privacy is sacred to us.
CAPTCHA
Help us prevent spam.