The Third Person Was Never the Real Problem
A Therapy Case Study on Emotional Manipulation, Childhood Trauma & Protecting the Sanctity of Marriage
Some relationships do not begin with love.
They begin with emotional hunger.
And if that hunger comes from unresolved childhood wounds, it can quietly destroy multiple lives at once.
This case was not just about an extra-marital involvement.
It was about:
- Emotional manipulation,
- Psychological dependency,
- Unprocessed childhood trauma,
- And what happens when vulnerable people seek emotional refuge in the wrong places.
How Emotional Manipulation Often Begins
The woman he became involved with was not a stranger. She was a close relative within the extended family system.
And like many emotionally manipulative dynamics, it did not begin physically.
It began psychologically.
With:
- Excessive concern,
- Emotional availability,
- Long conversations,
- Constant validation,
- Subtle emotional dependency,
- And carefully cultivated trust.
He entered her emotional world slowly.
Not as a threat. But as a “safe person.”
And once direct communication was established through messages and calls, the dynamic changed.
The Man Who Wanted to Be Chosen
A 40-year-old man approached therapy after discovering my work online.
He came from a wealthy and conservative business family in Ahmedabad. Married. A father. Socially well-settled.
But from the very beginning, something felt psychologically fragmented beneath the surface.
There were signs of:
- Deep emotional deprivation,
- Passive childhood trauma,
- Attention-seeking behaviour,
- Grandiosity,
- Manipulative tendencies,
- And an unusually distorted emotional narrative.
As therapy progressed, these impressions became clearer.
The Most Dangerous Thing a Third Person Can Do
He did not directly attack her marriage initially. He studied it first.
He listened carefully to:
- Her frustrations,
- Emotional disappointments,
- Unmet expectations,
- And ordinary marital conflicts that exist in most relationships.
Then he strategically positioned himself as:
👉 The emotionally understanding man
👉 The caring listener
👉 The “one who truly understands her”
He began doing everything her husband was not doing:
- Attention,
- Gifts,
- Emotional intensity,
- Excessive reassurance,
- Emotional dependence.
And slowly, a narrative was created: That she had married the wrong man.
When Vulnerability Meets Manipulation
The woman herself was not emotionally stable when this dynamic began.
She had:
- Emotional gaps,
- Unmet needs,
- Internal loneliness,
- And her own unresolved psychological struggles.
And this is important to understand: People rarely fall into emotional traps because they are “bad.”
They fall because some unhealed part of them desperately wants:
- Validation,
- Emotional safety,
- Attention,
- Or escape from emotional pain.
And emotionally manipulative people know exactly how to identify that vulnerability.
The Affair Was Never Really About Love
As the involvement deepened, the manipulation became darker.
The man:
- Encouraged emotional distance in her marriage,
- Amplified conflicts,
- Subtly provoked family discord,
- And emotionally isolated her psychologically from her own support system.
At one point, he even encouraged behaviours in her husband that worsened the marital environment—while simultaneously presenting himself as the “better alternative.”
This is not love.
This is emotional infiltration.
The Turning Point
The reason he initially approached therapy was deeply revealing.
Not to heal.
Not to understand himself.
But to seek psychological validation for convincing this woman that:
👉 She should divorce her husband,
👉 And that he was her “real emotional match.”
But during the therapeutic process, something important happened.
When the woman herself was engaged in deeper conversations, reality slowly began returning.
She realized:
- Her marriage was not perfect,
- But it was not the emotional prison he had projected either,
- And much of her perception had been psychologically influenced.
Then came the confession: She wanted to leave the affair.
But every time she tried, he emotionally threatened her with self-harm, emotional collapse, and dependency.
This is where many emotionally manipulative relationships become dangerous:
👉 Guilt replaces love,
👉 Fear replaces choice,
👉 And emotional pressure replaces connection.
What Therapy Actually Helped Her See
Therapy did not force her to “save her marriage.”
It helped her:
- Separate emotional intensity from emotional truth,
- Recognize manipulation,
- Understand trauma bonding,
- Reconnect with her own judgment,
- And rebuild clarity.
Over time, she:
- Emotionally reconnected with her husband and children,
- Regained perspective,
- Strengthened family relationships,
- And became psychologically more grounded.
Today, she is emotionally far more stable than when the process began. But the man continues attempting to breach her emotional boundaries.
Because unresolved emotional hunger does not disappear automatically.
The Childhood Trauma Beneath the Behaviour
At the heart of this man’s actions was something much deeper than lust.
It was unresolved emotional deprivation.
He had grown up feeling:
- Emotionally ignored,
- Unseen,
- Insufficiently nurtured,
- And internally abandoned.
Instead of healing those wounds, He spent adulthood unconsciously seeking validation from women.
No connection. Validation.
And when his own wife emotionally withdrew after years of emotional exhaustion, his unresolved wounds intensified further.
This is the tragedy of unhealed childhood trauma:
If not addressed consciously, it doesn’t just hurt one person.
It spills into marriages, families, children, and generations.
An Important Truth About Marriage
Every marriage experiences:
- Boredom,
- Emotional gaps,
- Misunderstandings,
- Communication breakdowns,
- Loneliness,
- And phases of emotional distance.
But when a vulnerable person invites a third individual into that emotional space instead of seeking healthy support, things can spiral quickly.
Because outsiders do not always enter marriages to heal them. Sometimes, they enter to fulfill emotional voids of their own.
Why Professional Help Matters
When marital discord begins:
- Seek counselling,
- Seek clarity,
- Seek honest communication,
- Seek therapy.
Do not seek emotional rescue from emotionally unstable people.
Because emotional dependency can feel like love in the beginning— until it starts taking control of your reality.
Final Reflection
One of the most dangerous mistakes emotionally vulnerable people make is this:
👉 confusing attention with genuine care.
Real care does not:
- Isolate you,
- Manipulate your perceptions,
- Emotionally pressure you,
- Or slowly disconnect you from your own family system.
And real healing does not happen through emotional escapism.
It happens through:
- Awareness,
- Accountability,
- Boundaries,
- Therapy,
- And the courage to face your inner wounds honestly.
Because unresolved trauma does not stay buried quietly. It eventually begins living through our relationships.
—
Prince Dhawan
Counselling Psychologist | Relationship & Trauma Therapist
@everyday_psychologist