|
Can Cheaters Change? We'd all like to think that people can make changes, learn to
compromise, and make their relationship stronger. Unromantic men
can learn to buy a card every once in a while; women who nag can
learn to stop themselves at least a few times they see toothpaste
in the sink, or whatever it is. But those are small changes. The
big changes -- the changes that can make or break a relationship --
are the ones most of us are really concerned about. And perhaps the
biggest question of all -- when you consider that 25 percent of men
admit to cheating in relationships and about 15 percent of women do
-- is this: Can cheaters change? Is cheating an inherent
personality trait or a controllable behavioral one? Can a guy -- or
gal -- who strays learn to be a house cat?
For these purposes, we'll consider cheating full-on sexual contact
-- not only sex, but also its close relatives. (I fully know that
60 percent of men say that even having drinks with an old flame is
cheating, 50 percent of men say visiting strip clubs is cheating,
and virtually all women say emotional betrayal is worse than
physical betrayal. So I know cheating is complicated, but here,
we'll go with the traditional "Where did my underwear go?"
definition.) The average woman says that the No. 1 reason for
divorce is infidelity -- so that indicates to me that for women,
their answer is no, cheaters can't change (or if they do, they
don't believe he deserves a second chance). After I give you my
take, I'd love to hear your thoughts about this very question,
because I think your perception of this issue may very well depend,
in some major way, on whether you've been burned -- or have done
the burning.
Can Cheaters Change? Not a chance!
Once someone crosses the line in the relationship (again, that
line being different things to different people, but for argument's
sake, we're talking here about the horizontal hora), it's like a
seal being broken on a pill bottle. Though some of it may depend on
whether it was a drunken fling or an ongoing stealth hookup with
someone at work, the fact is that once that trust is compromised,
the offender will have a hard time resetting the relationship to
its startup condition. Even if the victim accepts the offender back
into the relationship, the offender will be likely to stray again
-- because he knows he's already gotten away with it once. The
bigger picture, really, is the fact that he (we'll assume the
cheater is a he; sorry, guys) cheated for a reason -- that
something in his current relationship -- for example, one study
showed that couples with infidelity issues showed greater
dishonesty, arguments about trust, narcissism, and time spent apart
-- made him explore other options. And that's ultimately what makes
him prone to do it again. But...
Can Cheaters Change? Absolutely!
Just because someone has cheated in one relationship doesn't mean
that he's always a cheater in his next relationships -- for the
very same reason. In the relationship where he cheated, he was
willing to gamble it away. So if he enters a committed relationship
where he feels there's much more to lose, there's a less likely
chance he'll want to risk it. Does that mean he won't, or that he
couldn't succumb to the temptations of the tight-topped bartender?
Of course not. Cheating certainly can make some relationships
impossible to continue, but some infidels can indeed change -- that
is, if he hopes to make other relationships even remotely
possible
 |
|