“The truth is that infidelity doesn’t just happen,” says Mira Kirshenbaum, clinical director of the Chestnut Hill Institute and author of I Love You, But I Don’t Trust You. “An affair is almost always the result of a slow-building storm of unmet needs, resentments and hurts — all of which eventually lead you into the arms of another.”
Of course, monogamy isn’t for everyone. But if it’s the route you want to go, watch for these signs to determine if you’re at risk for cheating. (And if you are, don't panic — but do check yourself and prioritise honest, open communication with your partner.)
You’re at an age that ends in nine.Imagine
this: While your partner is busy planning a surprise birthday party for
that upcoming age ending in zero, you’re spending the last year of your
current decade in someone else's bed. People are more likely to cheat
during the year before a milestone birthday, according to a study from AshleyMadison.com.
Men and women who registered on the website seeking extramarital
affairs were more likely to be 29, 39, 49, and 59 than any other ages.
If you’re feeling unfulfilled at the dawn of a new decade, you’re more
at risk of engaging in damaging behaviours like cheating on your current
partner, according to the Proceedings of The National Academy of Sciences.
Try using the final year of a decade to reflect on the good in your
life or make goals for the future. Or, just make a deal with yourself:
You’ll be 29 forever. Stress solved.
You start to notice all the things you dislike about your partner.Finding faults in your partner is natural (for example, how he always
drives two miles below the speed limit, or how she nags you to do the
dishes after work), but focusing on those faults is destructive to your
relationship, Dr. Haltzman says. It puts you at risk for comparing your
partner to other potential mates (as in, “I bet she’s kinder to
her girlfriend”). Plus, choosing to focus on your partner’s faults sets
you up for a cycle of negativity; the more you look for it, the more
you’ll find, Dr. Haltzman says, so get in the practice of noticing the
good instead.
A caveat: Sometimes, the problem isn’t actually your partner — it’s you. “Some people have a talent for choosing people who won’t make them happy, which eventually leads them to cheat,” Kirshenbaum says. So when you start mentally nitpicking your partner, try to take a step back and decide if the relationship is working. That could make the difference between starting a potentially painful, but important, conversation with your partner — and diving into a full-blown affair you can’t take back.
A caveat: Sometimes, the problem isn’t actually your partner — it’s you. “Some people have a talent for choosing people who won’t make them happy, which eventually leads them to cheat,” Kirshenbaum says. So when you start mentally nitpicking your partner, try to take a step back and decide if the relationship is working. That could make the difference between starting a potentially painful, but important, conversation with your partner — and diving into a full-blown affair you can’t take back.
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