Attraction outside a committed relationship can happen, but it does not automatically mean someone will act on it or that a marriage is doomed. People notice others for many reasons. What matters most is boundaries, honesty, behavior patterns, and how someone handles those feelings.
Also, none of the signs below “prove” attraction on their own. Stress, personality, work demands, social style, or unrelated issues can look similar. Context matters.
1. He Seeks Extra Contact With Her
He may create reasons to message, talk, help, or be around her more often than necessary.
2. He Becomes More Self-Conscious Around Her
Some people suddenly change posture, grooming, tone of voice, or behavior when someone they’re drawn to is nearby.
3. He Mentions Her Frequently
He brings her up in conversation more than expected, even when unrelated.
4. He Protects Access or Privacy
He may become secretive about messages, social media, or certain interactions.
5. He Looks for Validation From Her
He seems especially interested in her opinion, praise, or attention.
6. He Compares or Idealizes
He may subtly compare his spouse, home life, or routine to the excitement of the other person.
7. Emotional Energy Shifts Elsewhere
He becomes emotionally engaged with someone outside the marriage while less present at home.
8. He Rationalizes Boundaries
He says things like “we’re just friends” while repeatedly crossing lines that make the spouse uncomfortable.
9. He Changes Relationship Behavior at Home
Sometimes this looks like distance, irritability, unusual defensiveness, or sudden overcompensation.
Important Reality Check
These behaviors can also happen for reasons unrelated to attraction:
- Workplace stress
- Midlife dissatisfaction
- Depression or anxiety
- Conflict avoidance
- Need for novelty
- Poor communication habits
So avoid treating listicles as certainty.
What Matters More Than Attraction
Feeling attracted to someone else is less important than:
- Whether he maintains boundaries
- Whether he is honest
- Whether he invests in the marriage
- Whether trust is preserved
- Whether concerns can be discussed respectfully
If You’re Worried in Real Life
Instead of trying to decode signs, focus on observable patterns and communication:
- “I’ve noticed distance lately. Can we talk about it?”
- “Something feels off to me. I’d like honesty.”
- “How are you feeling about our relationship?”
If trust has eroded, couples counseling can help.