The Six Different Reasons that Men and Women Cheat on Each Other
by www.SixWise.com
Cheating in relationships has been around as long as romantic
relationships have existed (give or take seven years.) If
you have never cheated yourself, chances are you have at least
considered it ... or at the very least you are close to
someone who has cheated in some relationship.
As we are all aware, at least one of our ex-presidents has
cheated (historians tell us many of them have), along with
countless other celebrities and politicians. There's even
a program called "Cheaters" on TV that allows suspicious
partners to spy on their potentially cheating mates.
Some experts estimate infidelity affects eight out
of every 10 U.S. marriages!
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Just how widespread is cheating?
According to Susan Sheppard, life and relationship coach
and author of How
to Get What You Want From Your Man Anytime, "Infidelity
affects eight out of 10 marriages in this country." That's
a startling 80 percent!
Why is it, though, that men and women cheat on each other,
rather than simply staying single in the first place or being
upfront with their partners?
Interestingly, where men and women once cheated for different
reasons (men for the physical aspect and the excitement, women
because they were unhappy in their relationship), nowadays
those differences are disappearing.
"In the past, there were significant gender differences,"
says Dr. Glass, PhD, author of Not
"Just Friends": Protect Your Relationship From Infidelity
and Heal the Trauma of Betrayal. "The traditional
male affair that was primarily sexual is changing because
more men are having more emotional affairs (meaning their
feelings for the "other woman" go beyond just sexual)
with coworkers. Meanwhile, women are having more sexual affairs."
The reasons we cheat are more complex than you may think,
and the motivations are vastly different for each person.
Emotional Needs Not Met
When one partner feels lonely, misunderstood, ignored or
emotionally "uncared" for by their mate, the stage
is set for infidelity. It's cases like these where the person
will seek to have their emotional needs met by talking with
friends and coworkers, perhaps even confiding in them about
their relationship problems.
If a physical attraction exists between the person and the
new confidante, it could lead to first flirting and then all-out
cheating.
Physical Needs Not Met
Similar to emotional needs, if a person isn't satisfied by
their partner physically, they may seek this out from another
person. This could be done consciously or unconsciously, but
a person who feels isolated physically will often be drawn
to someone who shows them affection and physical attention,
which could lead to infidelity.
A relationship that's in constant turmoil grows an
environment ripe for cheating.
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Constant Conflict Within the Relationship
If the relationship is plagued with problems - -these could
be related to finances, different values, in-laws, career,
location, etc. -- a person may seek refuge in the arms of
someone else. This may be done as a way to escape from the
conflicts at hand, or a person may cheat to make themselves
feel better about the conflict (for instance, a man who loses
his job and feels unable to provide for his family who has
an affair with a younger woman, which makes him feel a sense
of accomplishment and self-worth).
One Person Just Wants Excitement and Attention
Sometimes couples get stuck in the routine of everyday life
so severely that it leads one partner to stray. It may be
a mid-life crisis of sorts, a way to recapture youth or just
a strong feeling of wanting some excitement (for some, an
affair can add excitement just for the very fact that it is
"forbidden).
Along these lines, a person may cheat to feel they're desirable
to another person (not just to their mate). When a person
cheats for this reason, it's often to enhance their own self-esteem
-- and, "There is nothing like a flirtation to restore
a sense of self-esteem," says Sheppard, "But sometimes
that flirtation gets taken to far."
Empowerment
There are those out there who simply believe they are entitled
to more than one intimate partner. Perhaps they are following
"traditions" set up by their family, in which one
parent was overly flirtatious or cheated, or they may just
do it because they feel they can.
To End a Relationship
A person who is unhappy in a relationship may cheat as a
way out. They may do so hoping to get caught, and therefore
thrown out of the relationship, or they may be seeking to
find a new mate and start a new relationship before letting
go of the former, unhappy one. Says Lonnie Barbach, PhD, co-author
of Going the Distance: Finding and Keeping Lifelong Love,
of this type of cheating, "[It's] different from the
person who cheats while maintaining the dating relationship--this
person is much more likely to cheat during marriage."
Relationships After Cheating
After one partner has cheated, does the relationship have
hope? According to most experts, yes. In fact, some relationships
may even grow stronger. "I've seen many relationships
that were much better after the affair, because up until then
the couple wasn't dealing with their real issues. Dealing
with the affair helped them communicate on a much deeper level,"
says Barbach.
Recommended Reading
The
Top Seven Signs that Someone is Lying to You
The
Top Six Signs that Someone is Physically Attracted to You
Sources
MSN
Women: The Lowdown on Cheating
AskMen.com:
Cheating
Why
do Men Cheat? The Essence of Infidelity
Reflections
by Glass