Posts Tagged ‘responsibility’

Affairs and Marriage – Why Do Women Cheat on Their Husbands? By Brandon Grittini

Saturday, September 18th, 2010

The issue here is to understand why affairs happen, not to blame. Both partners in the relationship need to accept responsibility for what happens and do their best to understand it. The more understanding in the relationship that there is will result in more efficient methods of dealing with future issues as they come up and they will.-Robert Heard

Infidelity is on the rise. We hear about it more and more each day, especially from celebrities. Many people, when you think about cheating spouses, automatically think that it is a husband cheating on a wife. This, however, is not always the case.

Men are not the only philanderers. Women are also committing adultery. In fact, some studies suggest that almost 50% of married women have had sex outside of their marriage. Cookie Magazine did a study back in May that found 34% of moms admitted to having an affair after they had children, and another 53% say they have thought seriously about having an affair.

This says that it’s not just men having affairs. We hear all of the time about why men affairs, but women having affairs never seems to be a focus. So, why do women have affairs?

Women Cheat For Emotional Reasons

Whether it’s a lack of communication in their marriage, a need for an emotional connection they are not receiving, or just the desire to feel wanted and beautiful, women are cheating to fill emotional voids their husbands have left them with.

Women also crave the need for security. Men are the blanket that provides this security, and if you as a husband aren’t satisfying this need, she will seek it elsewhere. As women age, they tend to feel less and less secure. They begin to question the way they look, feel less attractive, and unable to do things they did when they were younger. Even if these things aren’t true, women tend to convince themselves that they are.

If you are not reassuring your wife that she is beautiful and important to you, you are putting your relationship at risk.

Other Reasons Women Cheat

*Sense of Loneliness
*Insecurity
*Disappointment with their spouse
*Depression
*Lack of Romance

Profile of a Female Cheater

Now that we’ve covered some reasons why women cheat, lets profile the typical female philanderer.

*Women tend to choose partners who are also married. This offers some safety for them, as they have less of a concern to worry about STD’s. They also don’t have to worry about the “secret” getting out, as the married man also would have no benefit of leaking the truth. Last, it puts a limit on the amount of time they can spend with their lover if he is also married.

*Women who cheat on their spouse are more likely to be a full-time worker. Men in the workplace can tend to make the women feel important, if she is doing a good job, notice the woman, and take an interest in her.

*Women don’t jump into affairs. They tend to know the person they are cheating with for a couple of months or more before they actually cheat on their spouse. This proves the stat from Cookie Magazine that 53% of married women with children say they’ve contemplated an affair.

*They don’t always want a “bad boy”. In fact, They are looking for the “ideal husband”, someone who can provide the security, communication, financial, and emotional needs they currently lack.

Myths About Adultery

As you learn more and more about affairs, you will begin to understand their true meaning and place for existence. You will also be able to dispel some common myths.

1. An affair can help your troubled marriage. No, it cannot help. It will only worsen the problems you are already having. What it can do is open your spouse’s eyes to the trouble and ignite a plan to address those problems.

2. Bad Sex Causes People to Have an Affair. No, this is not true either. Sex is just that, sex. It is all the same, really, until you add emotion to it. Sex can become worse if one person feels it is a problem, an insecurity, and begins to turn sex into what it never should be, a performance. Great sex comes from sharing yourself, mentally and emotionally, with your partner, which creates a deep trust between the two of you.

3. Affairs Can Last Forever. False. Affairs die for the same reasons marriages do, the lack of intimacy. If you are having an affair and think it is a wonderful relationship, it is because you are hiding the imperfections from one another. You never truly get to know the real person you are with. If you care enough about getting to know someone, get to know your spouse. Affairs lack the emotion necessary to sustain long term.

What To Do If You Are Tempted To Cheat

I hope you are not tempted to cheat, but if you are, think about it first. Typically when you have this feeling, there are problems going on in your relationship. Try addressing those problems and see if you and your spouse can work through them.

Learn to communicate better with your spouse. Create a transparency, where you know everything about your spouse, and they know everything about you. Spend time together every day, and learn something new about them. Find new activities that you both can enjoy together. Never stop dating your spouse!

Women really crave the emotional things, so men really need to work at giving them those things. If you are a women, you need to share with your husband what you are craving and lacking. If you are a man, work on satisfying those needs. If you do, you can live a happy marriage together!

To read on please click here

Blame by Jerry Waxler

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

“You make me so angry.” “My life is ruined because of the things he’s done to me.” “If it weren’t for those jerks I’d be fine.”

When we let blame control our thinking, we waste precious time and energy mulling over angry thoughts against others. We dull our awareness of our own choices, robbing ourselves of opportunities to gain deeper insight and choose better options. Worrying about the faults of other people, or as Stephen Covey puts it, “confessing their sins” is a waste of time and energy and pulls us down. Blaming and complaining get us no where, and actually make us feel worse, and add to the stress of those around us

Victims
By blaming others we transfer power to “them”, and paralyze ourselves while we wait for “them” to change or release their hold on us. By remaining locked into our victimized explanations, we become helpless to change a situation or attitude, while we pour our energy into complaining and anger, and other misdirected activities that can’t resolve our issues. Helpless thoughts lead to feelings of depression, anxiety, and chronic anger.

As victims, instead of taking steps to help ourselves, we lobby against others, looking for supporters to help justify our anger and blame. We harden our hearts against others, making our world more antagonistic and combative. We may also believe that we’ll be better off if bad things happen to the ones we are blaming, as if their misfortune will relieve our anxiety.

Since our problems are caused by other people, we hope they’ll be resolved by other people. We passively wait for a rescuer, in the form of a parent, a lottery ticket, a perfect lover or a discoverer of some kind, who will pull us out of our circumstances and place us in a position where we can get what we deserve. Since we have no control over the rescuer, we remain trapped in our situation, firmly entrenched as helpless victims.

Improve our opportunities
When we begin to see how our habit of blaming has reduced our chances for success and made our world a harsher place to live, we look for more positive options. When we want to create our best opportunities, and live most harmoniously with the people in our world, we need to unlearn the habit of blaming. By giving up blame we make available a range of options: grow, negotiate, move on, or rethink our communication or attitude. We reclaim the power over our own choices, improving our opportunities for change by focusing on our own responsibility, and withdrawing our attention from situations over which we have no control.

Deep Roots, Persistent habits
Unfortunately, these habits of assigning responsibility run deep in our mental model of the world. We rarely can stop blaming just because we want to. What gives our blame so much energy, erupting into antagonism against a perceived enemy? Blame often makes us feel like small children, and it is in the behavior and thoughts of small children that we can find the origins of our habits.

When we were little children, breaking the rules unleashed our parent’s anger. If our parents convinced us they loved us anyway, we were able to tolerate their accusations. On the other hand, if we believed they would no longer love us because of something we did, we became desperate to defend ourselves against the terror that we might lose their love. Sometimes we tried to change the past by simply lying that we didn’t do the thing we were being accused of. When that didn’t work we tried shifting out from under the burden of responsibility by accusing our siblings or playmates. When our parents let us get away with blaming others as an excuse for our behavior we learned to use blame to temporarily relieve the anxiety of the deep terror of losing our parents’ love.

Children also develop ideas about personal responsibility by listening to the way our parents interpret the world. When they blamed others, we soaked up the information that adults, too, may avoid their own responsibility by assigning it to someone else. We may have even heard them relieve themselves of responsibility by angrily attacking a whole group of people, unwittingly planting the seeds of bigotry and hate within us.

When we’ve been blaming others in the world since we were children, we grow up with the belief system that some people cause other people’s problems. Given these beliefs, when we try to understand the cause of events, especially things that happen to us, we automatically look for the person to blame. These habits are built so deeply into the way we understand the world, a world without a culprit seems unfamiliar and strange, and changing our outlook can take persistent hard work.

Flexible approach to cause and effect
One reason blame is so attractive is because we can usually find a kernel of truth in it. This moral justification makes it difficult to let go. We need to see that there is more than one way to look at the same truth. When we look for more effective ways to explain events, we begin to see that the other person’s responsibility in the matter is only a partial picture of reality. When we take in the whole picture, there are many other factors to consider. We learn that the world we want to create for ourselves and our family includes other truths, such as forgiveness, acceptance of others, and choosing to look within ourselves at the “beam in our own eye” rather than focusing too much energy on the “mote” in someone else’s.

Forgiving
Forgiveness was important enough to attract attention from the founders of the world’s great religions. “Love thy neighbor, as thyself.” “Be kind to them that abuse you.” “Put not out the mote in thy neighbor’s eye, when you have yet to put out the beam in thine own.” While we often think of religious teachings as limited to the ethical and moral realms, when we look at the results of forgiveness we recognize its value for personal growth, as well. As we stop blaming and start forgiving, we realize how much we were using blame to protect ourselves from fully embracing our own responsibility. By stopping our habit of blame, we learn more about ourselves, and discover more opportunities to grow and stay mentally and socially healthy.

Some people become confused about forgiveness because it sounds like we’re letting go of all responsibility and allowing others to discard the rules of society. But forgiveness can complement personal responsibility. Forgiveness allows us to let go of the past, while we continue to maintain our best effort and clear thinking about personal responsibility in the present.

Untying the anxiety knot
When we feel vulnerable or fearful, we naturally want to relieve our anxiety. If we use blame to relieve anxiety, we turn against others, or against ourselves, and undermine our own growth and awareness. Rather than using blame to distract us from our fears and anxieties, we can face our feelings directly. We can learn to identify our agitated feelings, and learn how to soothe ourselves, using tools such as muscle relaxation, breathing, prayer, exercise, positive visualization, and positive self-talk.

Learning the value of our choices
Our habit of blaming is part of a vicious circle. We blame others because we feel they have power and we don’t. And yet, we fail to act, keeping ourselves in a position of helplessness, that further justifies our blaming. To break out of this circle, we need to understand all the parts of it, including learning about and healing from the obstacles that block us from choice and action, and learning how to become more active, responsible participants in our own life.

We may fail to act responsibly because of low self-esteem, assuming that others have the power and authority, while we are mere bystanders. When we examine our attitude carefully, we realize that our assumptions about our own ineffectiveness are trapping us into inaction. By improving our sense of empowerment, we can become slower to blame, and quicker to take personal responsibility for resolving the issues that bother us.

We may be averse to acting because we fear failure. If we believe that choices and actions are risky, we’ll naturally prefer that someone else take the action. While we are waiting for others to make the choice, we are doomed to become victims, feeling that our only option is to blame those people who have not yet acted.

To break this cycle, we need to become comfortable with our own choices and accept that risk is part of life. We may tend to avoid risk because we were trained as children to fear rather than trust our choices. Perhaps our parents didn’t give us enough encouragement, or they let us know that they felt their own range of action was small and discouraging. From their training, we may have formed a belief that the universe is a dangerous place, with few second chances. As adults, we can turn these attitudes around, and look at choices not as an opportunity for disaster, but as an opportunity to either achieve our goals or learn about the methods that don’t work. Many successful people look at mistakes as a step along the road to success.

As we explore our actions and their results, we realize that everything we do or don’t do affects the people around us. Once we face the fact that our actions affect the people in our world, we begin to realize that we have personal responsibility to do our best. This sense of responsibility energizes us, and we find ourselves at the opposite extreme from victimization, feeling that our actions have true value in the world.

In Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, Stephen Covey teaches empowering ways to approach life. By taking responsibility for the things over which we have control, and learning to spend less time worrying about things outside our control, we use our valuable time in the most effective way.

Passing healthy explanations along to our children
Another way to help unravel the cycle of blame is to pass along to our children a sense of forgiveness and love. Many of us feel that when our children make a mistake, we must drive home the lesson that they’ve done the wrong thing. If our message conveys the possibility that they might lose our love, they learn to shy away from risks, or even from taking responsibility for their own actions. When we let our children know we understand their faults and love them anyway, they can feel more confident that they’ll keep our love even if they make a mistake and they’ll be better equipped to face responsibility throughout life.

Conclusion
Exploring the dimension of blame offers us a life-changing opportunity to determine the guiding principle around which we want to orient our lives. If we focus on blame, we are doomed to seeing ourselves as helpless victims. When we organize our lives around the choices within our circle of influence, the beam in our own eye, the things we can influence, including emotions such as forgiveness, we empower ourselves to solve problems and create success and health.

See also: Anger, Anxiety, Assertiveness, Beliefs, Child within, Decisions, Depression, Faith, Leadership, Self-esteem, Soothing

To read on please click here

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