I sometimes hear from wives who are struggling with the reasoning or the justification that their husband has provided for Chinalove.com Reviews having an affair. One example of this is that of loneliness.
A confused wife might tell this
story: "for several weeks, my husband could not give me a straight answer
when I demanded to know why he would have an affair - especially regarding the
person he cheated on me with. I know that I am going to sound mean and spiteful
when I say this. But the other woman is ugly. No, that's not even accurate. She
is absolutely hideous. She doesn't even try to look good. She's overweight and
she wears clothes that are way too tight. She looks like a sausage coming out
of the casing. I guess she thinks she looks good or she is showing off her
body. But it is not a good look. Anyway, I do not get it. I am much more
attractive than her. And I am a good wife. So I would ask my husband to please
explain this to me because I just did not understand. He would give me stupid
vague answers like 'well why do men cheat? I guess I am no different.' I never
bought Chinalove this, so I
kept at him. And one day I guess he got irritated with the questions and he
blurted out: 'I cheated because I was lonely, OK? I cheated because I was so
lonely that I just could not stand it. No one ever listens to me or cares what
I am feeling. The other woman may not be all that much to look at, but she is
the best listener that I have ever known. I could tell her anything.' Now,
nothing he could have said could have shocked me more. I was bracing myself for
him to tell me that sex with her was off the charts. But no, instead he's
telling me that he's wildly attracted to her listening skills. None of this
makes any sense. I talk to and listen to my husband all of the time. He is
surrounded by people he has known his whole life at his work. My kids are very
close to him and they all gather together in the evenings to watch sports
together. He has an entire church community that loves him. My husband is not a
loner. He has plenty of friends. He is constantly expressing himself. Lonely?
That one just takes the cake. How is this a valid excuse by a man who is always
around people who love and care about him?"
I have to be clear when I say that
I don't condone any excuse for cheating. And I really don't care what it is.
But the whole "lonely" explanation actually comes up quite a lot. I
hear from a lot of men who use Chinalove.com
it. And I don't believe that they
mean the word lonely in the way that you might assume.
As I understand it, they don't mean
that they don't have anyone to listen to and sympathize with them. What they
mean is that they don't always feel understood - and frankly, this is sometimes
no one's fault but their's. They can begin to feel like no one sees the real
person outside of the persona. They perceive that no one knows who they truly
are on the inside. You know the saying "you can feel lonely in a room full
of people," well, that saying applies here.
I don't know if you've read any of
the data about how much social media affects our society and actually leaves us
feeling quite lonely even though, on the surface it appears to connect us.
Sure, we may have a lot of Facebook "friends" but allowing us to
communicate by "liking" something or by tweeting a limited number of
characters is quite limiting in terms of feeling connected.
And this extends outside of our
Facebook friends. We are drastically changing our level of connectedness as a
whole. As a society, we do not deeply connect in the way that people did before
there was email, social media and texts. People used to have knock on one
another's doors, sit on one another's porches and really talk. We don't have
that today. And we feel this void.
Sometimes, I think that people
assume that women feel this void more deeply than men. But over and over, I see
that this is not the case. Men want to feel seen, heard and appreciated just as
much. I'm particularly fascinated by the work of therapist who believe that the
top reason that men cheat is for emotional reasons instead of sexual ones.
I am not in any way saying that
your husband was justified in feeling any of these things. It is not your fault
that he didn't take advantage of your presence when he felt the need to
connect. The fact is that many of us can feel really lonely, but frankly, this
is partly our fault when we don't allow ourselves to be vulnerable and we don't
seek out the connection that we say that we want.
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