fantisizing about another woman: no lap dance at a strip club: no paying for phone sex: no recieving a happy ending: yes online freakiness: no hooking up with a coworker: yes hooking up with a ex: yes hiring a prostitute: yes
^i wonder how you'd think if your girlfriend did all of the above (for those you said 'no') but then again, she's not 'cheating' per your standards @hiake: tsk tsk tsk. i guess some people would rather remain in the dark seeing as their "sun yao see" haha.
i can believe it... if i was to say this everyone would bash me... there was a research similar to this done yonks ago in australia... but it wasn't published coz they thought it would make ppl look over their shoulders... believe it or not when the passion in a relationship dies one or both parties seeks more passion else where... it might seem wrong but it does happen... ppl feel empty in their routined practical relationship... sometimes they even hate each other... seeking passion outside is like charging up... it gives them the energy to go back n put up with their practical partner... ever wondered y romantic chick flicks never win best films... but movies like Terms of Endearment and American Beauty grabs attentions... that's b coz they reflect the harsh reality where everyone's trying to deny
^ well if these were question for my gf and she answers no to "fantasizing about another woman," I wouldn't complain haha
but the thing is... a guy would leave a girl if she did anyone of the above... they can choose not to tolerate... they believe they can find a girl who's 100% loyal n would never cheat on them... but they don't believe women can find a guy that is 100% loyal to them...
this one i'm not sure... but for the australian one yeah... something like married women r miserable... coz they feel empty n trapped in the marriage... where as the single women or women seeing a married ex/old flame r happier coz there's no responsibility in the relationship... so it's less stressful... it's like an escape from reality...
The stats doesn't make sense anyways. Percentage of married cheaters who had previously cheated on a girlfriend: 90% First if its a poll of cheaters then the percent should be 1005 not 90%. Percentage of non-cheaters who had previously cheated on a girlfriend: 2% If its a poll on people that never cheated on someone... shouldn't it be 0% and not 2%.... cause need not to cheat in order to qualify to answer this question.......
Oh yes, guilty as charged, so you can probably amend the stat to 98% vs. 2% -tongue2 I am sure there are studies done on that matter, but seeing GQ is a male-oriented magazine... They only offer reality checking for guys
we need some female statistics too and then we can compare.... You girls are like: males only want sex, they cheat, they are evil, they are bad.... But im sure its almost the same with females
but male n female r different... females cheat coz they don't know which one to choose... so they usually feel guilty... males cheat coz they want them all...
Newsweek's July 1 issue tells about exploding female infidelity in American marriages. Exact statistics are not available, but therapists who specialize in these issues suggest that half of American men cheat on their wives, and about a third of American women cheat on their husband. The news is not only that women cheat, but also that the female infidelity is rapidly approaching that of men. One therapist suggests that female infidelity has gone from ten percent to fifty percent in just twenty years! The article notes that as infidelity increases, and more people suffer from it, attitudes harden against it. Statistics show that eighty percent of people oppose infidelity in marriage today, a ten percent increase over 30 some years. The huge numbers of broken families and broken children, not to mention the broken spouse, cry out a warning that infidelity is deadly! Women find their affairs at work. The new ethic of men and women working together is destroying family. Men and women cannot sit together all day long, dressed for the best, smiling and complimenting, without trouble. Family is where the mask is off. Family is where anger and nervousness are manifested. Thus, people enjoy work and suffer at home. Ultimately, the family cannot compete with work What about the Orthodox woman? She, too, is increasingly working outside of the house. Even if she does not, her husband works in an office where women look great and smile all day long. How is marriage to survive? When Ed Koch forced the police in New York City to allow women police to patrol with men, in each case, there was a divorce. Not every married woman can compete with the young lovelies in the office. Not every man can refuse the pull that destroyed so many even pious people. Piety has nothing to do with it. The Talmud warns us that the most righteous person can collapse from sexual desire. It is often the most religious person who doesn't see which way the wind is blowing until it is too late. The future is not going to be easier than the present. And the present is awful. At least, let us realize how bad it is. Let us make every effort to establish a private business, so we don't have to live on the edge, and our children have true hope. Here's another one: Female Infidelity on the Rise Isn't it amazing that yet more evidence comes along to buttress the premise of my book, The Man's No-Nonsense Guide to Women: How to Succeed in Romance on Planet Earth, that men and women are virtually the same. No, it's not amazing. I've been telling you this for over one year. Sue Shellenberger, work & family columnist for the Wall Street Journal, has just written a new book about the "female midlife crisis," called The Breaking Point. Before Sue's book, people never even put female and midlife crisis in the same sentence. No longer the case. Because women now have the freedom, power, and economic means traditionally associated with men, they are behaving like men (duh, they are behaving like humans). Gee, what a concept. In fact, Shellenberger's book cites a 3,000-person study from the National Opinion Research Center in 2002 suggesting that the overall rate of extramarital cheating for women is rising rapidly and is approaching that of men, with nearly one in six married women saying they have had affairs. No, say it ain't so! Read the article below about Shellenberger's groundbreaking book... and, remember, you heard it first from me. ------------------------------------------------------------------ The Female Midlife Crisis More Women Than Men NowReport Upheaval by Age 50; The ATV Tipping Point By SUE SHELLENBARGER Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL (Personal Journal) -- April 7, 2005; Page D1 The "midlife crisis" has long been thought of as something that afflicts men and often involves expensive toys and second wives. But the Wall Street Journal's Work & Family columnist, Sue Shellenbarger, says that as gender roles change, women are increasingly experiencing their own version of these upheavals. What follows is adapted from her new book, "The Breaking Point: How Female Midlife Crisis Is Transforming Today's Women." * * * Like most people, I had never taken the notion of midlife crisis seriously. I thought of it as a fleeting, laughable period of adolescent regression that leads middle-aged men to buy red sports cars and take trophy wives. Typing with my arm in a sling after a thrill-seeking ATV adventure ended in a crash, I attempted to make light of the subject in my "Work & Family" column in The Wall Street Journal. Lampooning myself for having one of the stupidest accidents of my life, I wrote, "The midlife crisis is a cliche -- until you have one." I quickly learned I wasn't alone. The column drew one of the biggest reader responses I had received in 12 years as a columnist. While some readers of both sexes were startled by the notion that a female could even have a midlife crisis ("I had no idea that women got this, too," wrote a Texas man), a far larger number of women readers experienced a shock of self-recognition. Dozens told heartfelt tales of pain, upheaval, rebirth and transformation in middle age, and said they had no idea other women were experiencing the same thing. My comic tale had touched a hidden nerve. Clearly, millions of midlife women had reached a crisis stage -- a time when old values and goals no longer made sense to them. I began gathering more stories. Through newspaper ads, networking and e-mail, I identified 50 women who had undergone midlife turmoil, each of whom generously agreed to share her life experience. In 30 years as a journalist, I haven't experienced interviews as moving as these. A startlingly high number of women have experienced what they consider a midlife crisis, broadly defined as a stressful or turbulent psychological transition that occurs most often in the late 40s and early 50s. FURTHER READING: Read an additional excerpt on how to tell if you are headed for a midlife crisis, from "The Breaking Point." By age 50, even more women than men are reporting a turbulent midlife transition -- 36.1% of women, compared with 34% of men -- according to research by Elaine Wethington, a Cornell University associate professor, based on a subset of the giant 6,432-person MacArthur Foundation "Midlife in the United States" study of Americans' well-being at midlife. Applying the findings to the 42-million-member generation of U.S. women who are nearing or in middle age, defined as about 38 to 55 years old, more than 15 million women will have, or are already having, what they regard as a midlife crisis -- about equal to the entire populations of Colorado, Massachusetts and Minnesota combined. This pattern of female midlife crisis is emerging now because, to put it simply, women are different today. For the first time in history, women not only face more of the kind of stresses that tend to bring on midlife crises, but they also have the financial muscle, the skills and the confidence to act out their frustrations and resolve them. In a sense, women are having midlife crises now because they can. The income of middle-aged women has posted powerful gains in comparison with men's, by many measures. Women's inflation-adjusted full-time earnings have risen 16.8% in the past 15 years, government statistics show, giving them the financial strength needed to act on midlife rebelliousness. Men's comparable earnings have declined 1.7% for the same period. Nearly one-third of wives now outearn their husbands, and the proportion of women earning more than $100,000 tripled in the past decade. All this gives women a sense of freedom at midlife. "My successful, satisfying career allowed me to be very independent, with a cocky attitude" that sparked to a full-blown midlife crisis, says a California saleswoman in my study. Women also have the skills and resources to make career changes or start their dream businesses at midlife if they wish. The proportion of professional jobs held by women, from engineering, law, medicine and architecture to teaching, writing and computer science, has grown to 54.7% from 51.1% in 1990, the Bureau of Labor Statistics says. Women hold nearly half, or 45.9%, of all executive, managerial and administrative jobs, from CEO slots to food-service management, up from 40.1% in 1990. Women today are better-educated than men, too, earning 58% of all college degrees granted, including 59% of the master's degrees, says the National Center for Education Statistics. Gender Differences Real differences are emerging in how women and men experience midlife crisis. A variety of studies suggest that women not only undergo bigger changes than men in middle age, but they also by some measures have a more positive attitude about their prospects in life. Women experience a more dramatic rebound in personal fulfillment at midlife, on the heels of a deeper dip than men in their child-rearing years. A study of MacArthur Foundation data by Dr. Wethington, Ronald Kessler of the Harvard Medical School, and Joy Pixley of the University of California at Irvine found that only 24% of women ages 35 through 49 said they had "fulfilled a special dream" in the past five years, such as acquiring money or property, accomplishing something noteworthy, finding a partner, or getting married. For adult women, this was the lowest ebb of fulfillment in their entire adult lives. By contrast, 40% of the men in the same age group reported dream fulfillment. But the pattern quickly reverses over the age of 50. The study shows 36% of women ages 50 through 64 report reaching some fulfilling goal in the preceding five years, suggesting midlife can be a time of powerful renewal for women. In contrast, men's dream fulfillment goes downhill from their mid-30s on, sinking to 28% from ages 50 to 64, and 27% after that. The triggers of midlife crisis reflect sex differences, too. Women's midlife crises are more likely than men's to begin with family events or problems, Dr. Wethington says, from a divorce or a parent's death to an extramarital affair, to the realization you haven't met your own standards or goals as a parent. Whereas male midlife crisis is more likely to be driven by work or career issues, women's turmoil is more likely to be driven by introspection. Women are more likely to attribute their midlife crises to some new insight into themselves through religion, therapy or reflection. Women are more likely to cite personal health problems as the cause of their midlife crises. This can include worries about slowing down or about losing one's attractiveness, based on the MacArthur Foundation research. Perhaps most significant for the culture, women are innately more likely than men to talk with others about their inner turmoil, to openly seek solutions, and to look for remedies in community and society. That suggests their midlife transitions will send increasingly visible ripple effects through society. Ripple Effects Midlife women are turning old sex roles upside down. They are dating and having affairs with younger mates -- a luxury that used to be regarded as the exclusive province of men. And increasingly, they are enjoying vital, active sex lives over the age of 45. A rising number of women are having extramarital affairs. In 1991, research showed married men cheated a lot more often, with about one in five admitting to having affairs, compared with one in 10 women. But a 3,000-person study from the National Opinion Research Center in 2002 suggests that the overall rate of extramarital cheating for women is rising rapidly and is approaching that of men, with nearly one in six married women saying they have had affairs. The middle-aged group appears to be leading that trend. In a look at 1994 data from the National Opinion Research Center, Michael Wiederman found a spike in the rate of cheating reported by women ages 30 to 50, and lower rates among women born before the baby boom. Mr. Wiederman, an associate professor of psychology at Columbia College in South Carolina, believes that extramarital sex is simply easier and more acceptable to today's middle-aged women than it was in the past. "There's been a change in attitudes and mores. There are more women out there in the working world, and they have greater independence, which you need to have an affair." The midlife search for meaning drives women into other pursuits. Many change careers to pursue work that is more altruistic or fulfilling. Others return to college to pursue a new interest. Part-time college enrollment among women 35 and over grew 10.5% in the past decade, nearly twice the overall rate of growth in part-time students, the National Center for Education Statistics says. Full-time enrollments among older women rose 31.3%, well above the 18.7% overall trendline. Organized religion is drawing significant support from midlife women's quest for meaning. While the proportion of middle-aged men who attend church often has declined nearly 10 percentage points during the past decade to 38%, women ages 38 through 55 have held steady in church attendance. Midlife women also are changing the face of sports and travel. Participation in such adventurous pursuits as wilderness camping, wall-climbing, kayaking and snow-shoeing has risen significantly since 1997 among women ages 38 through 55, according to a study by Leisure Trends Group, Boulder, Colo. Looking Back To capture a few complete stories of midlife crisis, viewed through the clarifying lens of hindsight, I sought out several older women in their late 50s, 60s and 70s who had experienced midlife crises a decade or more ago. I asked them how their midlife decisions had shaped their experience in old age, and what they would do differently if they could. Without exception, the women who made big midlife changes said that if given the chance to do it all again, they would embrace new undertakings even more wholeheartedly. Every one of the women who entered fully into midlife crisis, taking risks and exploring new opportunities, was enthusiastically glad that she had. Their only regrets were in failing to start sooner or to take more chances. At the least, each of these women reaped memories that sustained her for years. Carol Marians an Oregon artist and scientist, left her career as a math professor at age 43 to return to college as a Ph.D. candidate, then pursued a lifelong dream of re-creating the copper-red glazes of China's Sung dynasty. Her work with ceramics led her to make pioneering discoveries on the structure of certain mineral forms. That work is a bulwark of her sense of personal identity. Now 64, Dr. Marians still revels in those memories. "Whenever I feel sad, I look back at that," she says. Write to Sue Shellenbarger at sue.shellenbarger@wsj.com