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Infidelity
affects 8 out of 10 marriages in this country. This is a shocking statistic!
What happens between the time the marriage vows are spoken and that first
episode of cheating? It’s an assumption, of course, but I don’t think that 80%
of the people who get married intend to cheat or be part of a love triangle.
I
decided to tackle unearthing the real truth about how and why this happens. On
one very popular web site there were 260 posts from both sexes commenting about
forgiving and forgetting infidelities. I read every one of them. With one
exception, the perception conveyed was that one party was an innocent victim of
the other’s philandering. It seemed to me that everyone was looking at adultery
as a cause of marital discord. From my perspective, there are only rare
exceptions to the fact that adultery, cheating, or affairs are SYMPTOMS of long
standing marital problems. The cause occurred possibly even before the marriage
vows were uttered.
Let’s
go back to the beginning of a relationship. What really happens before two
people decide to get married? They have been dating and checking each other
out. You all know that women do the choosing. Men respond to a woman’s signals
and a relationship moves forward at a pace governed by the woman’s appetite. So
how does a couple that is totally in love and committed to each other end up in
the predicament dictated by an affair?
I
think the predicament results from the general consensus of opinions and
expectations generated by a marriage. In all of the posts that I read it seemed
that “being married” automatically presupposed that fidelity is the most
precious aspect of the marriage. It appears that everything that could go wrong
would be tolerated, everything except infidelity. I do not support tolerating
infidelity. What I’m wondering is what are the reasons that people actually get
married? Do they get married because they are in love? Want to have sex? Want
exclusivity? Want emotional, financial, sexual security? Want to have children?
It seems like the thing to do? Or do they get married because they have found
someone with whom they are career compatible, financially balanced, sexually
attracted, intellectually well-matched, culturally congenial, religiously aligned,
madly in love, with whom they want to procreate and raise children according to
mutually agreeable standards? Do all people get married for the same reasons? I
don’t think so.
I
believe that some people get married for love, some for lust, some for status,
some for money, some for security, some for convenience, some to have children,
some looking for parental guidance, some for business reasons etc. etc. And if
that is true, why is it that everyone who gets married expects adherence to the
same standards as far as fidelity is concerned? The expectation seems to be
that everyone gets married for passionate, romantic love and fidelity is the
highest value of marriage.
I
don’t presume to have all the answers, but possibly some suggestions as to the
seeds of infidelity. Let’s start with a couple that declare that they are in
love and want to commit to each other. They are starry eyed and the state of
“in love” creates a certain blindness and denial especially when this person
seems to be almost perfectly aligned with the important values you have
designated to be essential in the person you are going to marry. So this person
lies to you about something or breaks a promise to you, or does something that
totally violates your ethics, but you love him/her and he/she is so perfect
otherwise. It’s just a small thing and you can certainly tolerate a little
thing like that. After all, you are getting married and that means you can work
it out. Love conquers all. Here is the problem. Love doesn’t solve anything. People
come to agreement or negotiate boundaries and decide to be together because
they want to be together. They choose marriage. I think the rules of marriage
and the boundaries that each couple wants to live by must be negotiated.
Obviously each and every scenario cannot be discussed ahead of time, but the
individual standards of each partner in each marriage must be decided prior to
the vows. When a woman/man settles (that includes compromises, tolerates, sells
out) on a value that is significant to her/him, the bond is compromised. It
makes it okay to do it again, whatever “it” is.
According
to the Man/Woman Strategy that I subscribe to, women have the power in
relationship and their job is to provide appetite, which challenges the man who
loves her to produce results. The man who wants to please his woman will
produce those results as long as she believes in him and respects him as the
producer. The other component in this neat little package is the sex. Men will
do anything for sex. Women love sex as much as men do; it’s just not socially
acceptable for them to say so. Men get their pleasure from a woman’s pleasure
and “most women lie to men about their satisfaction” which leads to the giant
gap in the presumption that marriage presumes passionate, romantic love and
fidelity are the highest values. Women on the whole are not able to maintain
the level of energy and self esteem necessary to always validate for a man what
sexually satisfies her. Thus the communication regarding sex gets distorted.
Men, unless someone instructs them, cannot be expected to know what areas of a
woman’s body are responsive to erotic touch. It’s different for every woman
(man too). So here’s what happens. Women get pregnant. Pregnancy creates
enormous changes in a woman’s body and physiology, which at times do not make
sex appealing. Women become mothers. Parenting, especially mothering is a
24-hour job, which includes massive sleep deprivation, and instincts, which
consume even the most, prepared. Generally, both men and women have jobs, which
consume time and energy. Women also feel responsible for the upkeep of the
home. Not that men do not, but somehow for a woman five million years of
homemaking has become instinctual. So what does this entire story mean? It
means life gets in the way of relationship and unless some time and energy is
devoted to the relationship as an entity, that state of “in love” that everyone
marries into will disintegrate.
There
are exceptions, but generally speaking most people do not intend to cheat on
their spouse after the wedding nor do they intentionally pursue an affair. So
here is how an affair begins. One or the other partner is not getting his/her
needs met for whatever reasons. That person encounters someone at work, or at a
party, or in the neighbourhood, who notices him/her and sees something that
attracts. There is nothing like a flirtation to restore a sense of self-esteem.
Initially, the married person resists but enjoys the attention. That person
then goes home to his/her spouse and hints that he/she needs more attention.
The spouse at home who assumes that because they are married, everything is
great and there is always time for taking care of the spouse later, ignores the
hint That, my friends, is the beginning of the affair. When one partner seeks
emotional or physical or intellectual support from someone of the opposite sex
outside of the marriage, the seeds have been sown.
The
marriage is taken for granted. The almighty wedding ring is supposed to be able
to bind people to their vows automatically. This is the false presumption that
leads us to the incorrigible statistic that 80% of marriages are affected by
infidelity. Marriage doesn’t work by itself. It takes two people who pay
attention to each other’s needs. It takes two people who believe in each other
and validate each other. It takes two people who want to love each other and
who continually approve of each other which allows the vulnerability necessary
to be honest about their personal needs.
What
should be done about reversing this destructive trend? Marriage encounters?
Premarital counselling? Relationship coaching? Pre-marital coaching would be
best. Determine if the person you are marrying meets your standards and that
you are not just settling because he/she is almost what you want and you might
not find anyone better. Second best would be to stop an affair before it
happens. This could be accomplished by paying attention to your relationship
and not taking anything for granted. Decreasing the number of affairs would
probably make a difference in the divorce rate. Preventative would seem to be
preferable, but some people need to get hit by a board before they wake up and
realize they are in jeopardy. Ideas are welcome. What do you think are the
cause and effect of infidelity?
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