Cheating is something
that happens to women. Women are abandoned, scorned,
discarded, left. Men are the actors, the cheaters, the seed disemenators—the
doers doing those they aren't supposed to be doing—that is, if you rely solely
on information gleaned from film, music, magazines, stock photos, and drunken
conversations you've overheard at brunch.
The most popular and
enduring images of infidelity are of women reacting to their betrayal:
politicians' wives standing behind their men both literally and figuratively;
Angela Basset pouring lighter fluid on her husband's car and clothing in Waiting
to Exhale; Bette Midler, Goldie Hawn, and Diane Keaton dressed entirely in
white, singing Lesley Gore's "You Don't Own Me"; and every devastated
and bedraggled woman doing something sad and desperate in every Tyler Perry
film ever.
But, contrary to
conventional wisdom, women cheat. Women delete texts, pretend they have to stay
late at work, and steam up motel rooms with the best (or rather the worst) of
them. Whether it's because of standard-issue gender stereotyping or enduring
myths about female sexuality, we often don't hear their stories.
Who are these Sarah
Marshalls, these man-eaters, these she-devils, and why are they unfaithful? We
wanted to find out, so we spoke to a few relationships experts, both women and
men, on the subject. While all unhappy relationships are unhappy in their own
way, there seems to be four common reasons why women cheat.
A) They're seeking
emotional fulfillment
"Women have affairs
when the relationship is not addressing their needs," says Susan Shapiro
Barash, author of A Passion For More: Wives Reveal the Affairs That
Make or Break Their Marriages. "I've rarely spoken to a woman who
describes her lover as similar to her husband; rather he provides what the
woman can't get in the marriage." Conventional wisdom holds that women
crave emotional connection, that they lust for intimacy and stability, while
men are like Tex Avery cartoon wolves, howling and hitting themselves over the
head with a sledgehammer whenever a cute gal crosses their path. Men pursue
sex. According to infidelity expert and The Cheat Sheet author
Stephany Alexander, women cheat in the pursuit of appreciation and attention.
"If women are looking for another relationship and/or have a current
unhappy home life, they tend to be more aggressive with infidelity," she
adds. In other words, a woman's love is like a plant: If you stop watering it,
placing it in a sunny window, plucking off its dead leaves, and talking to it
in a low pleasant voice about Making a Murderer fan-theories,
the plant will die … or it will start Facebook messaging Thad from SoulCycle.
B) The sex just isn’t
cutting it anymore
The problem with Reason A
is that it fails to take into account what science, Carrie Bradshaw, and even
pre-teen girls know: women are sexual beings. Women enjoy sex and women want
sex—and not sex as a means to having late-night conversations about one's dreams
and daddy issues but sex as a "Please god, don't let it end" end in
itself. "Women, like men, also cheat because sex gets boring in a
relationship," University of Winchester Professor Eric Anderson explains.
"An uncontested sexological finding is that the longer a couple is
together, the less frequent and less intense their sex will be. Sex with
another is hot, in a way that sex with your partner is not." Barash
agrees: "Sex-driven affairs are the currency men have traded in for years.
Now many women seek the same satisfaction. If there's not enough sex at home,
there's always the lover." Sometimes a couple's sexual drives just aren't
compatible. If the square peg isn't going into the round hole enough times a
week, a woman may stray.
C) For the excitement
Even if you are entirely
smitten with your partner, even if you have no intention of ever cheating, it's
likely that you chronically dream about someone else, someone who isn't much
more than a vague sketch of a real person, like the woman who stood behind you
in line at Starbucks this morning. Nothing is more seductive than potential and
the new. We're all just magpies, beguiled by the unmarred shiny thing because
it holds promise and it may be able to make us shiny, too. When it comes to
affairs of the affair, difference is a draw; "If your husband is a truck
driver, you might be having an affair with your professor from your literature
course. If your husband is older, your lover might be younger. Or vice
versa," Barash says. As the idiom goes, the grass is always greener and
the guys are always better listeners and more inclined to go down on you and
sincerely interested in the vegan chili recipe you found on Pinterest on the
other side.
D) Because they can
In A Passion For More,
Barash dissects what she calls "empowering affairs," or infidelities
provoked by a woman's desire for liberation and control. According to Barash, a
woman may take a "boy-toy" because she feels she's
"entitled." This is a different kind of leaning in, one that finds
its most accurate expression in Ciara's iconic 2006 anthem "Like A
Boy." (A song that ushered in feminism's fourth wave.) In a complete
violation of staid gender roles that contend that women's constitutions are too
fragile for desire and sex, some women feel more powerful and confident when
they are unfaithful or, as Ciara would say, when they're "out, four in the
morning, on the corner rolling," doing their "own thing." The
act of cheating is alluring. Women are rarely given the space to indulge their
impulses or act selfishly, particularly sexually—to do so illicitly, without
apology or consideration of another's feelings, is freeing.
E) Other
Academics, experts have their theories,
but what of the real women who hope their boyfriends don't figure out their
iPhone passcodes and lie about being with friends when they were getting drinks
with a guy from work. How do they rationalize their actions, if they do at all?
"Honestly, when I do think about it, which isn't that often, I—I know this
is terrible, but I don't feel that bad," says a woman we'll call Hannah,
reflecting on a year-long affair that ended her relationship. "It didn't
really mean anything. It wasn't planned or thought out. I loved my boyfriend
but I had this undeniable sexual chemistry with Mike. Love had nothing to do
with that. In a way, being with Mike made me a better girlfriend—I was happier
and calmer. Definitely more willing to give my boyfriend the occasional
blowjob."
When presented with the preceding
expert-generated list of motives and asked which she identifies with most,
Hannah demurs. "Sex is never that easy or one-to-one," she argues. So
if this were a Scantron test, she would choose E) Other? "'Other,' yeah,
definitely," she laughs. "I wish I had a better way to explain
myself, believe me—I wish I understood! I wish I had a clear reason for my ex's
sake but every explanation felt both true and silly. At the end of the day, he
felt like he wasn't enough and that became the truth, you know? So we broke
up."
Credit: Details
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