I had started a post where I was going to make a comparable comment as Sisoon made regarding the importance of avoiding/dealing with the most-often misplaced and generally harmful emphasis on emasculation.
I don’t see Sisoon disregarding anything others have shared. I see him offering another way to view things, and IMHO a much healthier and better way to view things. Maybe that’s because I too have the "benefit" of added age (although not the prehistoric levels of Sisoon...) and time since my d-day.
Let me preface the following with this:
There is possibly only ONE constant or given conclusion when dealing with human interactions and behaviors, especially in such complex situations as relationships. That once constant is... there is no firm constant.
Like... I can’t say that all people will cheat, that someone that has had one affair will have another and so on. I can’t say the affair is seldom about the BS, or never about the sex or whatever. What I can say – and state it as my OPINION rather than some solid fact – is that not all people will cheat, that a person that has one affair is more likely to cheat again, that most affairs are about issues in the WS and have little to do about the BS and that sex tends to be a currency or consequence rather than the goal.
I base this on my age, my extended time dealing with MY infidelity-incident and the experience of having shared here for quite some time.
You can read about my experience in my profile. Let’s just say – I didn’t have to imagine anything. I saw the size of OM fast-deflating member, heard the sounds and the grunts and all that. I also discovered that my fiancé had a pattern of finding a new lover when she had that itch. I also had the enjoyable experience of having the OM friends make joking comments about my inadequacies a few weeks later. I get the feelings of emasculation and inadequacies.
I get it! I get it! I get it!
I had plenty of behaviors and triggers that for decades impacted me despite the logical part of my brain telling me that they shouldn’t. I would avoid driving past the apartment complex we lived in, I would avoid the part of town her work was at and so on. I get it... And eventually I dealt with it.
However – I early on decided to refuse to carry them. Refused to feed them.
We place a lot of emphasis here on SI convincing new BS that the infidelity took place for no fault of their own. Your spouse/partner decided to cheat despite you, not because of you. I think – and this can be confirmed about as "absolutely" as all other "absolute" theories on infidelity – that infidelity is usually due to insecurities in the WS. A form of validation.
Validation is fine. It’s normal and even healthy. Like... your client recommends you to someone else. That’s nice. That’s validation. Your boss gives you a bonus – validation. Your kids greet you at the door – validation. You lower your handicap in golf – validation. The look your spouse gives you – validation...
The level of validation needed to click in can be subjective. A 50-buck tip would be a blessing to a server at a cheap restaurant, while a 50 buck annual bonus would cause me work-insecurities. Add a couple of 0’s behind that 50 and now were’ talking...
If you are full of insecurities, you might be reaching out for unhealthy validation. Even the most powerful people might need unhealthy validation – that’s why we have politicians, business-moguls and Hollywood stars having affairs and screwing around. People we think have it all yet are clearly lacking something.
This IMHO applies to most "normal" people that cheat. There is something missing... that "something" usually is something that THEY should be solving using acceptable and available options. Like... if you think your wife isn’t showing you attention the "normal" solution would be to talk about it and work on change. If that doesn’t work... well... it might end in divorce or whatever... but the "correct" or "acceptable" path would never be to cheat.
In may instances the infidelity starts with flirting of some form or another, where the response is confirmation that they still "got it". Whatever "got it" means for them. This then might progress to sex. IMHO great sex is never the reason for the decision to cheat (after all – they don’t have the comparison until they have already crossed the line) but it tends to be the reason why the affair carried on – the constant validation.
I do think there can be a gender-difference. I do think that sometimes we males see the sexual conquest as domination rather than validation on our looks (I’m so powerful that I can dominate this woman and use her body) and women might focus more on their ability to attract. Like I stated: there are few if any absolutes. Is this alleged gender-difference acceptable? Probably not any more than thoughts that others are gloating over us being "cucks" or over the conquest of our partners.
Basically – what I’m getting to is this: Your spouse cheated because of issues within her, not because you weren’t’ pleasing her sexually or she didn’t find you attractive or anything of that nature. They cheated because of faults of their own, and the "solution" to why they cheated can only be found in them. She didn’t cheat to shame you. In fact I doubt you were very much in her mind when she did cheat.
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So with all that in mind then yes – I do understand a feeling of emasculation. Only... as Sisoon (the old cooter...) suggested: Do the work required to deal with that emotion, and a part of that work is probably realizing you have more compassion out there than you realize.