The Reasons Cheaters Cheat
Dr. Frank Gunzburg
Baltimore Maryland
Unfortunately,
there is not one simple answer that addresses why all people
who get involved in affairs do so. People are complex and
engage in infidelity for different reasons. When we talk about
the “reasons” the affair happened, it might seem
as though the affair were inevitable or somehow a justifiable
course of action. I don’t want to give you that impression.
As such, it might be better to think of these as themes for
the justification of the affair, rather than the “reason”
it happened. Here are a few themes that seem to come up again
and again:
»
Some people cheat because they aren’t getting their
needs met inside their relationships. They are under the deluded
notion that going outside their relationships is a legitimate
answer. It isn’t.
»
In some cases, people cheat because they have never learned
to honor boundaries. They know the boundaries are there, but
they have little hesitation about stepping over them.
»
Some people are thrill seekers who just can’t pass up
the opportunity to get a thrill. The very fact that these
people are doing something that is taboo compels them to engage
in the affair.
»
Similarly, some men think that they are not a real man if
they turn down a sexual invitation from someone attractive.
»
Some people have low self-esteem, and they get a sense of
self-worth through finding people who care about them.
»
In some cases, people have sexual fetishes that their partners
have problems with, so they go outside their relationships
in order to fulfill these sexual desires.
»
A very common theme is that people cheat because their partners
no longer make them feel special. These people go outside
their relationships thinking that another person might fill
this gap.
Whatever
the underlying reasons, cheaters cheat because they have the
mistaken notion that going outside their relationships will
solve their problems or fulfill some aspects of their characters.
Some people
have a defective sense of commitment. (I most commonly see
this in men.) They might expect themselves to be totally honest
in other situations, but feel they don’t have to be
when it comes to women. Although they usually vehemently deny
it at first, these men have a denigrating view of women, putting
them in a second-class position. I am assuming that the men
reading this book are much less likely to be in this group
because you are devoting this time and energy to repairing
your relationship, which requires equitability between you
and your partner. In the end, the reason why cheaters cheat
is not of paramount importance. You can ask why they did what
they did until you’re blue in the face, and each scenario
could present a different answer.
The typical
reason it is so important to the injured person to find out
why the affair happened is based on the mistaken notion that
if you want to stop or change a behavior, you have to know
what triggered the behavior in the first place. If you don’t
know why it happened, the thinking goes, you can’t stop
it from happening again. Unfortunately, if you try to find
out why the affair happened, the best you will probably get
is some kind of justification for why it started, or perhaps
a list of factors that are built to make the infidelity seem
like less of a crime than it is.
More importantly,
you don’t have to know why an action happened to keep
it from happening again. In some cases, exploring what went
into the cheater’s choice to cheat can help protect
them against the possibility of cheating again, but this isn’t
universally the case, and it isn’t what is going to
keep your partner from cheating in the future. That will take
hard work and commitment. Neither you nor your partner needs
to investigate what lead to the affair to recommit to being
faithful to each other.What is important is that both of you
want to heal your relationship and are ready to do the work
necessary to achieve that objective. The techniques this book
is founded on will help you restore your relationship regardless
of why the cheating partner decided to have an affair.
It is
time to let this question go. Recognize that there may be
reasons that this happened, but that figuring out the reasons
doesn’t take you that much closer to rebuilding your
relationship together. What will move you in that direction
is figuring out what you need in this relationship, how those
needs have been neglected, and how your needs interface with
your partner’s needs.
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Dr. Frank Gunzburg
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Dr. Frank Gunzburg is a licensed counselor
in Maryland and has been specializing is helping couples restore
their marriage for over 30 years. He is also the author of
How to Survive an Affair, a step-by-step healing system that
can help a couple repair their relationship after it has been
shattered from an affair.
If your
relationship has been damaged by an affair and you would like
a step-by-step system for repairing your relationship, then
please visit Dr. Gunzburg's site for more information: http://www.surviveanaffair.com
This article
was used by permission from How to Survive An Affair
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