By Jordan, a guest author on DivorcedMoms.com.
It was a crisp spring day and my new beau and I had just completed a 30-mile loop that entailed biking the length of Manhattan into New Jersey and back. To celebrate accomplishing a longtime goal of biking the George Washington Bridge, we headed to the local pub for a victory drink. I hadn’t even finished my Sam Adams when David started rehashing a story I now knew by heart: his ex-wife’s affair.
With each sip of alcohol, he sunk deeper into despair, reminiscing about the “good old days of his marriage” before his wife stepped out. Put in the uncomfortable position of listening to him vent yet again, I was starting to see the affair as the zipper that scrolls across the bottom of the screen on CNN: an annoying distraction, while at the same time a news flash that signaled this man was no way relationship-ready.
According to an Indiana University study, men and women cheat at the same rate, but the reasons for doing so are entirely different. Men are motivated by sex; whereas for women, it’s emotionally based. They’re looking for the attention, connection and support they’re missing at home.
While a part of me emphasized with David, I also knew his “I-did-nothing-wrong” stance was a bit of an exaggeration and he was omitting critical details. More so, having dated several “David’s” over the years, I knew a man who had been cheated on presents certain challenges that make it difficult to sustain a long-term relationship, specifically:
Top Comments
Simply, Mamamia's target audience is women, so its articles reflect that by addressing issues that women face. While it doesn't address relationships with partners who aren't men, it is clearly written for women in relationships with men.
One question. Does your logic also apply to single mothers in the dating field?