ADULTERY SWIM
Q: I started seeing a guy whose previous relationship ended because he cheated. He insists he really learned his lesson and would never do it again. Should I trust him, or should I go by that line, โonce a cheater, always a cheaterโ?
โWorried
-People in relationships do develop little traditions โ like coming home every night and checking the closet for their boyfriendโs sex partners.ย
The question is, does the skeleton that your boyfriendโs yanked out of the closet point to a heavily populated closet in your collective future? This is ultimately a question of whether heโs a cheater โ a person psychologically โwiredโ to be prone to cheating โ or a person who once cheated. There is a distinction. Sometimes, somebody cheats just to see what itโs like to walk on the bad boy/bad girl side โ the (heh) Socio Path. And sometimes, in the moment (SEXXXXX!), somebody whoโs generally considerate puts their partnerโs feelings on โignore.โ
However, evolutionary psychologists David Buss and Todd Shackelford found there seems to be a cheater personality โ a trio of personality traits common to people prone to infidelity: narcissism, low conscientiousness, and โpsychoticism.โ
That last one โ psychoticism โ suggests an ax-killing hobby, but itโs actually researcher-ese for a combination of impulsivity, unreliability, and an inability to delay gratification. Narcissism, of course, is the โMe! Me! Me!โ personality trait, reflected in self-absorption, self-importance, exploitativeness, and an empty well in the empathy department. Low conscientiousness is the personality trait of the inconsiderate, reflecting disorganization, poor impulse control, and an inability to delay gratification.
Yet another factor is a personality trait that psychologist Marvin Zuckerman named โsensation-seeking.โ People โhigh in sensation seekingโ crave a variety of new, complex, and intense sensations and experiences and will take physical and social risks to get them.ย
Talk is cheap โ especially for the ethically sketchy, the morally underfunded. Look at the guyโs behavior and thinking โ in your brief past and in the weeks and months to come. See whether it adds up to good character or reflects the cheater personality markers. Sometimes cheaters change, but personality traits have a substantial genetic component, so cheaters mostly just change who theyโre cheating with. If your boyfriendโs moral compass is secretly set on Booty Call North, youโre setting yourself up for many joyful years of checking his shirts for some hussyโs self tanner and trying really hard to believe that he only goes to strip clubs for the music.
Best Of Reflux!
Q: My fiancee and I mutually ended it several months ago, but sheโs staying in touch, reaching out, texting, etc. Itโs really hard to move on when sheโs trying to maintain a connection. Iโve hinted at this, and I know she isnโt interested in rekindling romantically, but nothing changes.
โDisturbed
My late Yorkie, Lucy, now resides in a tiny urn in my living room; I didnโt have her taxidermied and mounted on an old roller skate so I could take her on walks like nothingโs changed.
After a breakup, itโs hard to go your separate ways if you never stop being together. Though your situation sounds like โBrokeback Mountainโ for straight people (โBro, itโs super hard to quit ya!โ), there might be something else keeping your ex-fiancee around.
Ancestral humans became a cooperative species, living and working together in groups, leading to a need to identify (and avoid) the takers among the givers. We seem to have evolved to act in ways that elevate our reputation, which is basically a social credit check for the sort of people we are. For example, evolutionary psychologist Bo Winegard and his colleagues theorize that reputation promotion is one of the evolutionary functions of grief. They see the expression of grief as a form of advertising for our character, showing us to be loyal and committed allies who โform devoted bondsโ with people in our lives.
This zombie fiancee thing โ the ex-fiancee who keeps coming back and eating your well-being โ may be your exโs way (probably subconscious) of promoting herself as a good friend, a caring person who doesnโt just shut the door on somebody sheโs romantically done with. This could help her seem more attractive to the next guy โ which is surely help you arenโt interested in providing, especially at the expense of your need to heal.
Toss the hinting. Tell your ex-fiancee that this maintaining-a-friendship business does not work for you, and ask her to stop contacting you for now and/or until you let her know otherwise. Cutting off contact will help you get used to the new normal โ you and your former fiancee walking off into the sunset apart, in totally different directions…at least until your new wife is in the delivery room, giving birth to your first child. A familiar voice behind you: โGuess whoโs here to finally cut the cord!โ
(c)2020, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved.
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This article appears in Mar 25 โ May 20, 2020.








