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Would you buy a love
affair from this man?
Is it
possible to have no-strings, extramarital sex without wrecking your
relationship? Edward Marriott meets the man who makes it happen - and
some of his satisfied customers
Katy
Ford is 45, and has been married to Ben, a City banker, for 17 years.
They have three daughters, aged 10, 12 and 14. They live in
Hertfordshire and, from the outside, look like your stereotypical
upper-middle-class family. The children go to boarding schools. During
their holidays, they ride ponies. Katy, who works in publishing, plays
tennis on Saturday mornings with her friends.
Scratch
the surface, however, and a different picture emerges. Ben has been made
redundant a number of times, and is now depressed. Katy works not
because she wants to, but through necessity. She says: 'My husband has
retreated to the sofa. I'm a regular gym-goer, and like to keep fit. Ben
hasn't taken any exercise since we met. And he's now depressed, and on
medication.'
The last time they had sex was 10 years ago. Katy says she would have left a
long time ago, but believes that 'it's best for children to have their
parents together. Sounds a bit Victorian, I know, but there you go. The
children should come first.'
For a long time, she was in a quandary. She
wanted a sexual relationship, but, wishing to keep her family together,
didn't know where to turn. 'I don't go clubbing, and I don't go out on the
pull. I've got a busy job.' Then a friend saw an ad in a magazine for a
service that promised to bring together married people for 'romance'. It
took her six months before she called the number.
When she did, she found herself having coffee with David Miller, 52, a
softly spoken, immaculately tailored businessman who runs
lovinglinks.com, a London-based
internet dating site for married people, which describes itself as 'Europe's
leader in quality extramarital dating for thoughtful, attached men and women
looking for romance. It is a genuine resource and not an escort service of
any kind.' Miller also offers a 'bespoke' one-to-one service. Katy opted to
go for the latter, figuring that meeting men through Miller's £85-a-go
internet service would result in 'kissing a lot of frogs'. So she parted
with £350 and Miller gave her a list of mobile numbers.
Over the past two years, Katy has had 'several liaisons'. Protected by
her pseudonym, she is candid about the pros and cons. 'I have got a lot of
fulfilment about being made to feel attractive. But I have been hurt a
couple of times. You have to be tough to do this as a woman.'
Because of the pressure to keep up appearances, she has seldom managed to
spend the night with any of her lovers, managing just the afternoon, or an
evening. 'I always put in place a perfect alibi, too. I'm pretty sure my
husband isn't aware, but he also chooses not to inquire.'
There are significant downsides, though. 'For a man, this kind of
arrangement is like having all the sweeties in the sweetshop. I'd rather
have a proper relationship, but also want to do my duty to my children. I
couldn't last more than five years doing this. I'm an adulteress, after
all.'
As we are talking on the phone, her other mobile rings. She breaks off
the conversation. 'Hi darling,' she says. It's one of her children. She
discusses travel arrangements, then says goodbye to her daughter. 'I'd
certainly never reveal to any future partner that I've gone down this
route,' she says to me. 'The potential to be regarded as a whore is pretty
high.'
David Miller is in a growth business. In a nation plagued by relationship
breakdown, a service offering married people the chance to cheat in secret
was always going to be a winner. Websites abound, with new ones added almost
daily: Google 'adultery' and scores of websites come up: meet2cheat.co.uk;
rekonnect.com; illicitencounters.co.uk; philanderers.com. The latter not
only promises to put you in touch with your perfect lover, but to help you
'have an extramarital affair without getting caught!', how to 'prepare for
an affair', and how to 'handle guilt'. Rekonnect.com offers 'a sanctuary
where you can escape from the problems of your existing relationship'. And
illicitencounters.co.uk speaks to those 'in a loveless or dead-end marriage
or relationship. Your partner no longer values you. Intimacy has long gone
but for many reasons you do not want to upset the apple cart. Is this you?
You'd be surprised how many people this applies to.' All websites promise to
preserve confidentiality. Lovers use pseudonyms even with each other; seldom
do they find out the other's real name.
Miller, who claims to have had just one antecedent in the business - 'a
Thora Hird-type character in Edgware who ran a business called Additions,
producing something pretty much like a church newsletter' - started up 13
years ago. A former TV-commercials producer, he was unhappily married. 'I
couldn't get divorced at that stage, and I wanted a date. But the only thing
available was the sex industry. And I didn't want that.'
Thinking there must be others in his position, he placed an ad in the
Independent on Sunday: 'Are you married? Attached? Bored?' He got 60
replies, all from men. 'So I thought, right, I've got all these blokes, what
am I going to do with them?' He phoned round female friends he thought would
be interested, and put together a newsletter. Four years later he moved
online. He's aware of the burgeoning competition, but says that 'no one
offers the one-to-one service I do. If you came to me as a male client
today, by the end of the week I could introduce you to five decent-quality
married women who would date you. No one else could do that.'
'Quality', he says, is key. 'It's what we're all about. A quality person
is someone who hasn't come to us through choice. They went into marriage
with old-fashioned ideas. They never expected to be an adulterer. Then they
got blown off-course. I deal with thoughtful people, who don't want to
destroy their children's lives. They don't want to get into something random
at the office, because that will just lead to disaster. They don't want to
take unnecessary risks with their partner, or their children.'
This is a description that would seem to fit Tom Baxter well. Tom, 46, is
married with three teenage children. He's a partner in a City accountancy
firm. Listening to his story, it is hard not to feel for him.
'My wife has a severe depressive illness, to which there's no
resolution,' he says. 'She is a real suicide risk. My best mate's wife made
a suicide attempt, and it's something I'm desperate to avoid. Unlike many
people,' he continues, 'I'm not prepared to walk away. And neither do I want
to plough on in a monk-like way, which is what I've done for so many years.'
Contemplating the idea of an affair, he realised that he didn't like 'the
idea of middle-aged men preying on young women in the office, which you see
all the time, and neither did I like the idea of having an affair with a
neighbour, which also happens a lot.' There was also the fact of his wife's
mental fragility. 'If she heard I was having an affair, she'd be certain to
make a suicide attempt.' And so, like Katy Ford, he joined lovinglinks.com.
In July, he met 'a wonderful married woman' over lunch in the City. 'The
lunch lasted for 11 3/4 hours, starting with us holding hands over the
table, then snogging on every street corner. Take it from me, it was an
intense start to an intense relationship.' They had much in common. Like
Tom, she had 'a disturbed husband, whom she would never leave'. They're no
longer seeing each other, however. 'The stresses of it got too much. We've
both got families, we live some distance apart. But in seeing each other we
haven't done any damage to anyone. In fact, I'd say that, without each
other, we would have had grave difficulty in sustaining our families over
what has been a very hard period.'
Like Katy, Tom is acutely aware of how he might be perceived. 'Most
people reading this will think I'm a shit, but actually it's enabled me to
be a better person, father and husband.'
Relate, the UK's largest provider of relationship counselling and sex
therapy, is not so sure. According to Relate counsellor Denise Knowles,
'agencies in this market play on the old-fashioned and incredibly negative
premise that couples will only find sexually fulfilling, romantic
relationships outside of their long-term partnerships. For the thousands of
clients we've helped over the years, rediscovering the excitement of shared
intimacy within the marriage or partnership has been incredibly rewarding.'
She acknowledges, however, that it is a complex area. 'We know that
people using these services have a variety of motives, but from the point of
view of healthy, respectful relationships, web-based agencies like these are
unhelpful and exploit the "virtual reality" of the internet.' Most affairs,
she adds, 'happen for a reason. It's much more constructive to deal with the
causes of the affair by focusing on the primary relationship. When both
partners look honestly at their relationship, they can begin to move on -
either together or apart.'
But what if, like Eve Hampson, you have no desire to move on? Hampson,
41, who lives in Harrow, says she has a 'brilliant relationship with my
husband. It's great - everywhere apart from the bedroom.' She and her
husband have four children, aged two to 15. And they do have sex, just at
six-month intervals. 'That doesn't do it for me.'
The problem has always been present in her relationship, she says. Though
her husband is the same age as her, 'he's always had a low libido. I suppose
I should have known when we got married. The second reason is professional.
He's got a very stressful job, and he's tired a lot of the time. I've talked
to my friends about it, and it's the same for a lot of professional men.
They're under so much stress at work. They just want to veg out when they
get home.
'I've done everything I can think of. We've talked about it, gone away
for weekends. But nothing worked. About three years ago, I reached the end
of my tether. I thought: either I leave the marriage, or I do something
proactive. So I looked around. There was no way I was going to have an
affair with someone in my social circle; it's bad enough going down this
road in the first place. So I did a web search under "adultery" and came
across David Miller's website. It took me ages to sign up and then another
year before I met a man for a coffee.'
Despite her doubts - 'I'm still quite dubious about having an affair in
the first place' - she eventually met someone she liked enough to start a
relationship with. 'I've met about five men. And had one affair. I'm very
selective.' So far, her husband is in the dark. 'I live near central London;
my boyfriend, who like me is married, lives further out. We use email, and
text, never with our real names. It takes organisation. We meet up daytime,
or evening. I'm not working, and have childcare, so it's just about
possible. So far it's worked out well for me. It's saved my marriage. It's
meant that the level of stress at home has gone. It has decreased my
frustration.'
Now, it's no longer an issue if her husband never approaches her for sex.
'Being constantly rejected was a very bad experience.' The situation,
however, does have its 'stresses and strains. With my man, right from the
beginning it was very clear that we were not going to leave our partners.
And certainly at the start it was built on sex. But after two years I love
him. We are both very lucky to have met each other. We meet once a week, or
every two weeks. It's not just meeting up in a hotel room, shagging away for
three hours. If you look at it from an objective standpoint it can seem
tacky, but you have to look underneath the superficial longer and see what's
underneath. It's such an odd thing to do, I know. But it has worked very
well for me.'
As well as running his internet business and one-to-one matchmaking
service, Miller also hosts parties. 'Parties where you get to meet other
adulterers!' Hampson laughs. 'They're seriously surreal.'
One of the regulars at these parties is Frank Goldman, 50. Of all
Miller's clients, he's the only one who wants to be interviewed in person.
We meet in a coffee bar in Covent Garden, central London. He's trim,
unshaven, with an expensive grey suit. 'I could tell you so many stories,'
he begins. 'If you made a film about it, you just wouldn't believe it.' He's
been a subscriber to lovinglinks.com for the past four years. He runs a
business organising sporting events, and lives in Hampstead. He's been
married for 30 years, and has two teenage children.
'I was happily married for 18 years,' he says. 'Then one day I found out
that my wife had been having an affair with one of my best friends for two
years. I thought I was happily married, and all the rest of it. She ended
the affair; I sorted my best friend out.' A while later, he began an affair
with an Italian solicitor he met through work. When he saw one of Miller's
ads, he thought, 'that sounds just the job'. He's since had '10 to 15 short
relationships' through lovinglinks.com, and one that lasted two years. He's
currently having three relationships with women he's met through the
website. 'The women don't know this. They think they're having a
relationship just with me. I see one of them once a week, the other two
maybe once a month each. So I'm the ultimate bastard I'm afraid.' He grins.
According to Miller, it's often women who - contrary to type - 'run
portfolios of men. Whereas some of the men are incredibly tight on time,
with very stressful jobs, some of the women have a bit more time. It can be
very annoying when you're a woman and you find yourself with a free
Wednesday afternoon and your guy has to rush off to the Tokyo office. What's
a girl going to do? That's why they run a portfolio. The sort of men who use
us would be very happy to fit one woman into their life.'
If this is true - and there's something about it that sounds a bit like
wishful thinking on Miller's part - then Goldman bucks the trend. He
believes that many of the men signing up for websites such as
lovinglinks.com are thinking, 'I'll give this a try. I might get a shag out
of it. The women, on the other hand, are looking for a guy who's
presentable, who hasn't got his arse hanging out of his trousers, who can
spend a bit of money on them and see them every couple of weeks.'
He launches into a long story about his first date through
lovinglinks.com. 'She was average-looking, I wouldn't say stunning, in her
mid-thirties. We met at Waterloo Station, under the clock, had a coffee. And
she made it very plain to me that she'd had a couple of affairs already and
wanted to see me again. We agreed to meet near Bristol. The hotel I booked,
though, was awful, and we ended up going back to her place. Her husband was
away on business, and we ended up in their double bed. She told me her
husband was in Australia, but for all I knew he could have been down the
local pub. I was prepared, should he suddenly come back. I'd clocked where
the window was, how it unlocked, where my shoes were.' He left the next
morning, and never saw her again. 'I liked her, but it was so easy, there
was no challenge.'
So far, Goldman - like the others - has managed to keep his affairs
secret from his spouse. 'I travel a lot for work anyway,' he says. He claims
not to be aware of any downsides, and stresses he doesn't have 'a guilt
problem'. But, despite his good humour, his wealth of stories, and his
cheery casualness, the scent of revenge hangs heavy over his tale. 'I
probably would still be happily married if my wife hadn't messed around,' he
admits, almost in passing. 'I probably wouldn't have gone down this road at
all.'
· Some of the names in this article have been changed
Internet infidelity: are we all at it?
Internet access
A survey of 15,000 US internet users in 2004 revealed that 32% of women,
and 13% of men believed the web encouraged adultery.
Virtual vs reality
Another UK study, published by the BBC, confirmed their fears: 30% of
internet users who have online lovers admit to having had sex with their
virtual partners in the flesh.
Sexual equality
The same BBC study revealed that younger people are more likely
candidates for webultery, and women are as likely as men to be unfaithful.
Slipping through the net
It also revealed that 70% of women and 54% of men remained in the dark
about their spouses extramarital activity.
Porn ratings
In the US, meeting a new lover online and an obsessive interest in
pornography are the top problems cited in internet-related divorce cases.
Too much chat
Other reasons for the breakdown of marriages, a panel of Chicago lawyers
say, include excessive use of the net and chat rooms.
Email evidence
Staying in the US, 22% of men, and 14% of women have strayed at least
once during their marriages. Peoples' online activities are also being used
against them in divorce cases. Almost 80% of US attorneys said that
incriminatory emails had been part of divorce proceedings.
Privacy rights
This has raised concerns about privacy laws in the US including what
legal rights spouses have to each other's communications.
Eva Wiseman
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