The first task of the consultant was to point out that the situation was not unusual. Sam had also loved several other people. His list included his wife, his mother, a sister, a minister to whom he was greatly attached, and two other men with whom he fished for a week each year. Love certainly does not necessarily require a sexual expression. Sam's love for his secretary was not essentially different from his love for any of the others, except that it had the additional element of sexual attraction. This could complicate it seriously, but did not need to. It was Sam's wife who had borne his children, and with whom he was building his family, not his secretary. This fact gave to Sam and his wife a unique relationship, quite different from that with any of the others whom Sam loved. Therefore it would be better if Sam would restrict his physical intimacies to his wife.
With other things which attract us, such as cars, tapestries, and washing machines, when they do not belong to us, we take moral restraint for granted. Sam and his secretary decided that their situation was much like that of a teller in a bank. They would expect to be tempted, but for many reasons, they should exercise moral restraint here, as they would elsewhere. Later Sam brought into his office another employee, a fine young fellow who was unmarried. In time the secretary became pathetically grateful, both that she had remained at her job and that she had kept her relationship with her boss clean.
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