I'M
SORRY, BUT I DON'T SHAKE HANDS !!
Not Just Friends: Protect Your Relationships from Infidelity And
Heal the Trauma of Betrayal
"I'm sorry,
but I don’t shake hands with members of the opposite sex." This
line can be heard coming from Muslims working in office settings
everywhere.
Islamic
standards of modesty warn against even casual physical contact
between unmarried men and women This, of course, can cause
uncomfortable situations in places of business where it is
customary to shake hands with colleagues. But Muslims have long
known that even casual, seemingly innocuous contact as well as
casual behavior between the sexes can lead a person astray into
either marital infidelity or inappropriate pre-marital
relationships.
Until
recently, it seemed that it was only Muslims that felt this way.
But in her book, Not Just Friends: Protect Your Relationships
From Infidelity and Heal the Trauma of Betrayal, Shirley Glass
gives credence to time-honored Muslim traditions on the issue of
inter-gender office relations.
Glass' main
thesis is, for all intents and purposes, Islamic in character.
She asserts that unguarded, casual office relationships between
men and women often lead down a slippery slope towards
extra-marital affairs. And according to Glass, this phenomenon
does not apply solely to the spouse with a wandering eye; even
strong, nurturing marriages can be rocked by office romances.
Glass, who
has studied martial infidelity over the last 25 years of her
career as a psychotherapist, found that 25 percent of women and
44 percent of men have strayed from their marriages. And although
the cliché of the office romance has been around for quite some
time, Glass says that the typical lustful physical relationships
that often develop are but one aspect of illicit office behavior.
For Glass, it is the more personal friendships that develop in
the office environment that pose a greater threat to marital
stability.
Speaking
recently to Connie Chung on CNN, Glass noted, "The crisis is that
men and women are working with people that they respect, people
that they have intellectual interests with, people that they
share excitement over projects, frustration over deadlines. And
so the relationship begins as a platonic friendship that's very
deep and rich. And what happens is that, over time, they begin to
share more and more of their personal lives together."
This type of
intimate sharing of personal thoughts and feelings is, Glass
asserts, more detrimental to marriage because, unlike casual
sexual encounters, these interactions create strong bonds between
the people. And once this level of personal intimacy grows, the
dreaded sexual affair is just on the horizon.
For Glass,
the answer to this problem is to establish what she calls "walls
and windows" by which married couples agree to keep emotional
distance from people outside the marriage while keeping open
channels within the marriage.
The
resemblance to Islamic standards of modesty is uncanny, although
Glass does fail to call for the true Islamic solution, which
erects clear boundaries between the permissible and
impermissible.
Glass is
just one of several authors to recently take a more conservative
tack regarding marriage and relationships. And in many instances,
themes that have elements of solid Islamic common sense are
finding favor over the more liberal trends that have predominated
in popular culture.
Shirley
Glass
Assalamu alaikum
This
was posted on Hanafi Fiqh and I thought it was interesting.