I think posters who are worried about this are wise to be concerned. Those heady "in love" feelings are very intoxicating and if you don't have them for your partner any more, it makes both of you very vulnerable to an affair.
But it's difficult when you have responsibilities and the mundane things about life take over. I also think we all tend to have very child-centred marriages now, where everything in life revolves around the little darlings and it's easy to forget that they wouldn't have come along in the first place if you hadn't become a couple.
I've also been with my H for 25 years plus and can honestly say I am more in love with him now that at any time in our relationship. But there were years when I didn't feel in love with him, although I did always love him. His "in love" feelings lasted a lot longer than mine, too.
Sadly for us, it took him having an affair to bring back all those "in love" feelings, but what I really mean by that is that for the first time in years, we really talked about our relationship with total honesty. For me, I know that communicating at an emotional level, with honesty, is the biggest turn-on of all. I do think my biggest erogenous zone is my mind....
We now have dates, are forever touching and kissing each other and the kids love it that their parents are so in love. In fact, some of their friends have commented wistfully that they wish their parents were like that.
I wouldn't however recommend the route we took to achieve this. The pain of betrayal very often outweighs the pleasure of rediscovering one another and I wish we had woken up to how we were feeling and acting without this misery.
I want to reassure people that you can absolutely fall in love again, but take action now before a crisis forces you to.
And even after saying all of that, I suspect that some of you are shaking your heads thinking that affairs will never happen to you. Believe me, that's what I thought - but now believe that affairs can happen to ANYONE. Especially when a cast-iron opportunity presents itself and isn't perceived as a threat to the marriage.