I think this is a good point. I used to do trial work. Anything over 2 weeks and people start to lose it and start looking for comfort in their eco-workers. I’ve known several marriages that busted up this way. Very common. Travel, stress, isolation from family and friends, alcohol. And yes lawyers are boring and they are beyond exhausted during trial but not too exhausted to share bodily fluids. |
Having a good career and a means to support yourself is absolutely a part of not making your marriage your entire life. But it’s not the only part. You have to have a healthy sense of self and hobbies, friends, etc. outside of your marriage as well as a sense of purpose and meaning, however you define that for yourself. |
It is true that married men are only as faithful as their options. What kind of men have these options? He might be smoking hot movie star handsome with women literally throwing themselves at him: not many of those guys around! So that leaves men who CREATE their own options .... by putting in the work. What motivates a married man to do that work? Libido, either because his is exceptionally high or (FAR more likely) insufficient sex at home. This does not excuse men cheating but it certain does explain it. |
This is a good point. Management consultant here and there’s definitely a “breaking point” on certain projects. |
Particularly if the latter is part of a greater pattern of resentment at home. |
| I travel a lot for work, I’ve never witnessed it or even heard a specific enough rumor. It doesn’t make for a juicy DCUM thread but most of us just FaceTime with our families while eating room service. |
People are sneaky about it. |
As far as I know, no men in my immediate family ever cheated. I think if anyone did, I would've heard as we have strong women in our family, they won't take it sitting down. |
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NP. I work in a senior position for a very high profile company. Yes, some coworkers cheat, usually with other coworkers. I think that part is nuts; such an easy way to flush a lucrative career down the toilet.
As a guy in my early 40s, my opportunities are either more junior women (which feels icky due to the power imbalance), or peers at my own level. I have had a couple opportunities related to the later while on international business trips, but have always declined due to morals and loving my family. I’ve also had a couple of crazy opportunities with extremely attractive local employees of companies we do business with, but always decline. I think senior American businessmen are probably an exciting diversion for some of these European women. I’m not particularly handsome, but am tall, successful, dress well, in good shape, kind, and intelligent. I’ve found that’s enough for opportunities to come to me (I never look for them). I think for some of us, the same responsible personalities that led to business success also help us keep it in our pants. That said, in a different life, or if it was socially acceptable, I would have absolutely loved to indulge in some of the opportunities. I feel this particularly acutely as I age and my sex life with my own wife declines from outstanding, to merely good, to average, to below-average. |
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I've never cheated in 25 years of marriage. I'm not a great husband but I haven't cheated.
One thing I have learned is that I never know what is going on inside of someone else's relationship/marriage. |
I work in a boring federal office with swirling rumors that our director is having an affair with one of his subordinates. I’ve seen more attractive garden gnomes than him but the whole thing seems increasingly plausible. That’s the only real life affair I know of right now after a decade in my career. |
Blessed be the fruit. |
| Married man here. The closest I got was a non physical emotional affair. Helped her get where she wanted to be then now we are just friends occasional contact. |
This is baloney. I have tons of options/ chances and I would never do that to my wife whom I love. |
DH here. Agree. And no, have never cheated. |