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The Truth About Cheating: Why Men Stray and What You Can Do to Prevent it
 
 
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The Truth About Cheating: Why Men Stray and What You Can Do to Prevent it [Hardcover]

M. Gary Neuman
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: John Wiley & Sons (22 Aug 2008)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0470114630
  • ISBN-13: 978-0470114636
  • Product Dimensions: 16.3 x 2.2 x 24.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 1.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 66,947 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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M. Gary Neuman
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Product Description

Product Description

The New York Times bestselling look at the real reasons for male marital infidelity and what might prevent it

Few events cause as much turmoil in a marriage as infidelity. It can shatter trust and breed insecurity and resentment from which some relationships never recover. People who think it won′t happen to them are hit that much harder when it does. Why are men unfaithful? Can infidelity be prevented? What do men say they′re getting from their mistresses that they′re missing at home? Do a man′s friends have anything to do with his willingness to cheat?

In this New York Times bestselling book, experienced family counselor M. Gary Neuman shares the revealing and surprising findings of a cutting–edge research study in which he interviewed men across the country who have physically cheated on their wives. Neuman shares many shocking discoveries, including the prominent role of emotional dissatisfaction in motivating husbands who stray and how small a role sexual dissatisfaction plays.

  • Based on a groundbreaking study of both cheating men and men who have remained faithful
  • Reveals surprising findings on the contribution of sexual and emotional dissatisfaction to male infidelity
  • Written by experienced family counselor M. Gary Neuman, coauthor of In Good Times and Bad and author of Emotional Infidelity
  • Neuman and The Truth about Cheating were featured twice on The Oprah Winfrey Show

Drawing on dramatic case stories of the author′s own work with clients, The Truth about Cheating includes proactive strategies and action steps for married women to help them prevent infidelity and create a faithful and rewarding marriage.

From the Inside Flap

Why are men unfaithful? Do they stray because of sexual dissatisfaction in their marriage or is cheating a sign of a deeper problem? What are the chances that your husband will cheat? Is there anything that can be done to ensure that your husband will stay faithful?

While several books have explored the feelings and experiences of women whose husbands have been unfaithful, they have generally ignored the questions of why men cheat and what a wife can do to prevent her marriage from being destroyed by infidelity. In The Truth about Cheating, the renowned family counselor M. Gary Neuman presents fascinating and provocative answers to these vital questions.

As Neuman reveals the surprising results of his extensive research with cheating husbands and faithful husbands, he challenges the conventional wisdom and offers keen insights into the real motivations of straying husbands. Among the biggest surprises Neuman discovered during his research is that sexual dissatisfaction plays a relatively minor role in the decision to cheat. Filled with dramatic and enlightening stories based on Neuman′s extensive interviews with his subjects, The Truth about Cheating takes you straight to the emotional core of male infidelity.

Once you begin to understand the often unexpressed but deeply felt emotional needs that most men have in common, Neuman takes you to the next step—what to do to prevent cheating. He provides concise focus points, action steps, and exercises that will help you reduce the chances of infidelity in your marriage and create a more meaningful and intimate relationship with your husband.

You′ll also find out how to tell whether your husband is cheating: how to listen for the warning bells, pick up on cheating signals, and read the signs that tell you when he′s lying. You′ll discover the strongest defense against cheating—connecting with your husband emotionally in ways that are meaningful to him—and learn to encourage him to do the same for you.

If you believe that your husband may be unfaithful, you′re not being paranoid and it′s not your fault. But you can prevent him from straying if he hasn′t already done so and put a stop to it if he has. Read The Truth about Cheating and start making your marriage stronger today.


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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Not helpful 24 Feb 2010
By Amber
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
I bought this as I have training and experience in the counselling field. Very American it its approach, author is apparently a Rabbi which in itself is no bad thing but I am not sure how helpful this would be in the aftermath of discovering your partner has been unfaithul
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Amazon.com:  34 reviews
102 of 110 people found the following review helpful
Catering to a good marriage? 12 Sep 2008
By John Zxerce - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
For 'The Truth About Cheating', Neuman interviewed large numbers of men - both those who had cheated and who had not. His findings? Men blame being under-appreciated by their wives and thereby being 'emotional disconnected'. Even Neuman admits that sounds like whining and yet he moves ahead and works on that premise in order to tell women what to do to make their man feel appreciated.

In order to overcome their marital deficiencies Neuman claims he is helping wives by telling them to... always forgive him; give him sex on demand; lavish praise on him for providing for the family, rarely let him out on his own with friends or work colleagues; and take an interest in his hobbies.

The difficulty is, when does this become an act and when is it real? Is this approach manipulation? Does it put too much pressure on the wife?

Neuman writes nothing about developing a moral foundation of trust in your marriage. That is, what keeps a person from disregarding their vows to begin with? What fuels a healthy commitment to the other person whether it's easy or not? Those are the bedrock questions that Nueman forgets.

As a result, it may feel the author's advice ends up sacrificing the wife's needs and desires as they defer to their partner's needs. This might look like love, but it too easily devolves to pandering.

Neuman claims his work is dedicated to helping wives learn and change in ways that will significantly benefit both them and their husbands. That's a worthy undertaking when it's done together, mutually and out of a choice to care for the other person more than one's self. However, when it's done out of fear, or obligation, or desperation it can too easily devolve to something akin to slavery. That's what Nueman seems to miss.

The real questions are, how do women develop and grow in genuine love for their husbands? Where does a heart-felt love come from? How does a wife choose to respect her husband and not just go through the motions? Ultimately, that's a question much deeper that this book addresses - it's a spiritual question.
111 of 126 people found the following review helpful
Wrong Target 24 Feb 2009
By Elisabeth - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Author Gary Neuman asked cheating husbands why they cheated on their wives. The husbands faulted their wives, claiming their wives didn't meet their sexual and emotional needs...and so, felt no other choice but to get a mistress to meet those needs instead.
At first, the author says women shouldn't be blamed for their husband's infidelity...but then spends the rest of the book advising women to meet his needs from now on so he won't have to cheat on her. But if she's not to blame for the problem, why is the burden on her to fix it?

His solution is basically for wives to act more like the less complicated, less demanding, and totally accommodating mistresses these men are sneaking off to. The logic being, once she starts acting more like a mistress rather than a wife, then just like that...she'll have successfully "affair-proofed" her marriage and transformed a self-absorbed man into a considerate man who'd never cheat on her.

The author ignores many factors, though. For one, both the author and these men acted as if these men had no other choice but to get a mistress to solve problems, but these men DID have other choices. They could've:

1 -- Assertively asked their wives to meet their needs
If these men had unmet needs, it's up to THEM to vocalize those needs. It is unfair to ask a woman to read his mind and play detective.

2 -- Ask for a divorce
These husbands claimed they tried everything to make their marriages work, but no matter how hard they tried, they couldn't win. Well, if the situation were truly that hopeless -- if he assertively asked his wife to address his needs, but she coldly refused to -- then why stick around for that kind of abuse? Why string along someone you neither love nor feel loved by?
I'm thinking these men didn't try as hard as they claimed. These men came across as pretty passive and quick to throw in the towel...and then they went out in public behaving like single, unattached men. So, logically if they're going to BEHAVE like single, unattached men, then they should BE single, unattached men.

3 -- Ask for a separation
A separation would allow him to date other women without lying to his wife and also give him some space to figure out what he really wants. And his wife could do the same.

4 -- Ask for an open marriage
An open marriage also means he dates others without lying while also giving his wife the freedom to date others as well. If he didn't want to divorce because of financial reasons or because of the kids, this would be the route to go. However, I suspect the reason he doesn't choose this route is because although he's very comfortable allowing another woman to caress his naked body...he'd be furious if another man were allowed to caress his wife's naked body.

So as you can see, unless these mistresses put a gun to their heads, these men had a choice in the matter. They may claim they were overcome with emotion and couldn't help themselves, but haven't they ever been angry enough to kill, yet managed to control that impulse?

These men may also blame a broken marriage, but just like there are kids from broken homes who choose to rise above the situation, there are also people in broken marriages who choose to do the same...so that is not an excuse either.
Remember, there's a faithful spouse in this equation. If he was unhappy in the marriage, chances are, his wife was, too...and yet she chose not to cheat. He could've done the same, but since he didn't, he is 100% responsible and accountable for his decisions.

Also ignored in this book is a cheater's character. Character is who you are when no one is looking. When their wives weren't looking, these men intentionally broke mutually agreed upon rules regarding monogamy (without asking permission to do so or considering how their wife's feelings would be impacted).

So then, what does that say about their character? These men all said they'd never confess to their affairs -- not even if asked outright -- and my guess is, it's because they don't want their wives probing too deeply into their character. The author doesn't want wives probing too deeply either and so, distracts wives by having them focus on their own character instead.
However, if she did probe a little deeper, she'd realize it's not HER actions that caused his affairs, but HIS mindset.

In trying to redeem these men's character, the author claims they feel guilty about their affairs...however, the examples told a different story.
For example, one man described in detail how he invented business trips so his wife wouldn't suspect him of cheating. The way he described it made it seem like he was bragging about being able to pull one over on his wife.
When the author asked him if he felt guilty about all this scheming, the man replied, "I guess you feel guilty."
You guess??

See, I think these men claimed to feel guilty because they sensed that's what the author wanted to hear. After all, these men couldn't successfully pull off an affair if they weren't adept at lying.

Instead of feeling guilty, these men felt entitled to have an affair...and you can't both feel guilty about doing something and entitled to do it at the same time.
They had a Tit for Tat attitude...you didn't play nice, so I'm not playing nice either...though having an affair is far worse punishment than she could dish out.
They reminded me of a little boy getting in trouble for pulling his sister's hair and protesting, "Well, she started it!"
Instead of challenging their immature coping skills, the author validates it by giving advice to women that basically says, yeah, she did start it...and so, she needs to end it, too.

It was tiring reading all the self-pitying going on in this book. One man had the nerve to be annoyed that his wife didn't catch on to his affairs. He'd tell his wife he was going out golfing and because he didn't own golf clubs, he figured she should've known he was cheating instead.
I guess it never occurred to this guy (because he was so wrapped up in his own self-pity) that the reason his wife didn't suspect anything was because she TRUSTED him. She trusted that he'd never hurt her like that.
And I guess it also never occurred to him that since trust is something you earn, that trust his wife was giving him was trust he hadn't earned.
And this is the type of guy women should knock themselves out trying to keep in their life?

The type of man worth keeping is one with a strong conscience. A man who lets his conscience be his guide (rather than his impulses) won't cheat no matter how aroused.
It would be like trying to get intimate with someone covered in urine. No matter how sexually and/or emotionally aroused he was by this new woman, that smell (his conscience) would kill the mood.
But if that smell is weak or nonexistent, forget it. A woman could follow all the steps in this book to no avail because a man with a weak conscience will always invent new excuses to bend the rules in his favor. And a woman cannot take on the impossible task of being his conscience for him.

A man with good boundaries won't cheat either. Despite popular opinion, I don't believe affairs "just happen."
Boundaries don't get crossed without an invitation. Without him giving the green light to cross his marital boundaries, a potential mistress would grow bored of the chase or become too embarrassed by the continual rejection by him and would move on. Trying to seduce a married man is a very bold move. There's no way she'd be able to pull that off without his consent.
Another way to look at it would be to ask these men if they would've treated the other woman exactly the same if their wives were standing next to them the entire time. If the answer is No, then that's proof they were behaving in ways that guaranteed the affair would happen.

A man's conscience and his boundary limits are all things a woman cannot control...yet these are the very factors that determine whether a man will cheat or not.
So if these factors are really something the cheating man should get under control, then wouldn't focusing instead on the woman's character mean the author's aiming at the wrong target?

I understand, though, how women could be vulnerable to thinking otherwise. I mean, what woman alive hasn't tried to change a man? What woman hasn't excused bad behavior, believing the guy is just misunderstood and just needs the love of a good woman to change?
It's very flattering to the ego to see yourself as this man's savior...but it's also delusional. If a man's going to change, it's because his mindset no longer works for HIM. HE has to want it badly enough.
You can't change someone who doesn't want to change. We hear that a million times, yet it doesn't seem to stick...which is why books like this exist in the first place.

Women are also guilty of the "if only" thinking. They obsessively think "if only" they had been more loving, more nurturing, listened better, had more sex, been more whatever...then they wouldn't have been cheated on.
This thinking is very similar to a child thinking "if only" they hadn't been such a bad kid, then their parents wouldn't have divorced, drank so much, beat them, abandoned them, etc...
This kind of thinking, though, absolves adults from taking responsibility for their actions. It also gives you a false sense of power...like you were so powerful to control him into cheating that you'll also be able to control him out of cheating, too.

But it's delusional. Imagine you knew a woman whose husband just hit her. Would you tell her if only she had just been more nurturing, he wouldn't have hit her? Would you tell her if she just pretends to like his hobbies more, just compliments him more, he won't hit her again?
Would that message "empower" her....or give her a false sense of security?

The problem I had with the solutions is not that men shouldn't get their needs met. The needs they mentioned (wanting more attention, admiration, affection, etc...) are all legitimate needs. If you love someone, you should want to please them.
My problem with his solutions is that it puts a wife in the mommy role.

For example, one solution he offers to prevent cheating is for wives to keep their husbands away from any friends who are cheaters, too...similar to the way a mom would keep her son from certain friends.
The reason for this advice is because these men claimed it was their cheating friends who influenced them to cheat. For example, one man's friend persuaded him to go dancing. He didn't want to go, but his friend insisted. An affair with the woman he met while dancing happened shortly after.

First of all, are you really surprised these men blame their cheating friends for why they cheated, too? I mean, first they blame their wives for why they cheated and now they blame their friends. Apparently, a husband's cheating is everyone else's fault except the one person who made the decision to cheat...the husband!
Second, do you really think these men needed their arms twisted to hop into bed with another woman? Do you really think these men went out trolling for women simply to avoid hurting their friend's feelings?

What's being ignored here can be summed up by the saying, "Birds of a feather flock together". These men chose these friends for a reason. If their friends' cheating ways bothered their conscience so much, they would've ditched those friends long ago and his wife's interference would be unnecessary.
These friends were picked because they matched the husband's values, so even if a wife is successful in shooing these friends away, her husband's values still remain.

What's ironic is that some other solutions the author advises won't work because of this very solution to pick her husband's friends for him. For example, as a preventative measure, he advises women to have more sex with their husbands and to show their husband's more respect.
However, how can a wife feel sexual towards a man she's also treating like a son? How can she feel respect for someone she's also treating like an unruly teenager who doesn't have the maturity to pick his own friends?

My fear with this book is that women will now panic over every unsettled argument, any instance where she denied him sex, or for any flaw whatsoever, thinking now he's going to cheat on her because of it.
It's traumatic enough to get cheated on, but to also get a guilt trip over it, too, is mental abuse...which is why I've given this the lowest rating possible.

My other fear is that men will feel justified using this guilt trip on her, too. After all, he's not going to want to see himself as a failure, so if he can make her the failure instead, it'll make him feel better about what he's done. And it'll also help him feel like he was just acting in self-defense.

This is an unhealthy solution for both partners. It keeps men stuck in the child's role dependent on others to fix them. And it puts the burden on the wife to act like his mother.
For real change to occur, men will instead have to work on their narcissistic sense of entitlement, their passive-aggressive ways of coping with problems, and to learn how to play fair.
41 of 45 people found the following review helpful
This is an Intriguing Book 14 Sep 2008
By Jo Ana Starr - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
This is an intriguing book with an interesting title that provides one perspective on the issue of cheating. If all men cheated for the same reasons, then a lot more women would have figured out how to deal with it by now. Since every man is different, it's possible that every man views marriage and the marriage vows a little differently, and thus may stray from his marriage for different reasons than every other man.

I agree that a loving, nurturing wife is an asset in any marriage, but I also know from firsthand experience, that being an attentive, nurturing, loving wife focused on her husband's happiness, does not a faithful husband make.

While I feel that this book makes some valid specific suggestions on how a wife can support her husband emotionally which is always good, I feel that being a supportive loving wife does not assure a faithful husband. In addition, I strongly disagree that a wife has the right to keep her husband from socializing on his own with male friends, one of the suggestions in the book. Unless your husband is 12, I think he has the right to socialize with whomever he chooses.

People who genuinely love each other prefer each other's company, so genuinely nurturing that love and friendship seems like the best way to assure that the love will continue. And like another reviewer, I feel that 2 emotionally mature people who love each other have the best chance for enjoying a successful, happy marriage.

I truly appreciated the author's male point of view and his suggestions, some of which I thought were great, but I question the basic premise of this book that there is a formula or a series of behavioral patterns a wife can adopt to keep her husband faithful.
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