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Why Do People Cheat? Causes & Therapy in Long Island

Why Do People Cheat? Causes & Therapy in Long Island

Irina Zhuravleva
by 
Irina Zhuravleva, 
 Soulmatcher
15 minutes read
Blog
19 November, 2025

Immediate actions: Remove dating apps, place phones in a neutral location during evenings, and create a 30‑day transparency contract that both partners sign. Clinicians said these concrete moves reduce impulsive encounters by limiting opportunities; they also protect vulnerable partners and create a measurable baseline for trust rebuilding.

Data from representative relationship surveys show roughly 20–25% of men and 10–15% of women in committed unions report sex outside the partnership; in separation filings, extradyadic sex appears in about one quarter of cases. Common drivers are impulsive decisions, boredom, unmet intimacy, or persistent unhappiness rather than pure malice. Perels said erotic life and desire often need renewal; seeking variety or novelty does not automatically mean the primary bond is irretrievably gone, but it does signal a difference in needs that deserves direct work.

Practical treatment roadmap: combine weekly couples counseling with individual counseling for the partner who acted and focused coaching for the partner who was betrayed. Establish written boundaries, a small set of nonnegotiables (no secret meetings, full disclosure of new contacts), and measurable check‑ins. If resentments arent addressed, small ruptures widen; if they are, even little consistent reparative acts–daily check‑ins, shared calendar, transparent finances–make a measurable difference.

Language matters: label actions accurately rather than calling someone evil; that framing increases shame and shuts down repair. If either partner feels scared or insecure when intimacy returns, slow the physical reconnection and use structured exercises to rebuild safety. Thankfully, with clear limits, repeated accountability, and clinical support, many couples restore trust and create a more honest, intimate partnership.

Practical Causes and Therapy Considerations for Long Island Couples

Begin with a measurable plan: schedule weekly 30–45 minute sessions where each partner answers three concrete prompts and logs progress for four weeks.

Practitioners should actually record baseline metrics, review them every session, and engage both partners in defining success; asked concretely, clients can identify one behavior they will change within 72 hours and one external support they will contact if tempted to revert to old patterns.

How unmet emotional needs and relationship boredom trigger emotional affairs

Start a weekly 45-minute meeting: no phones, one partner sets a 3-item agenda (appreciation, unmet need, one shared activity) and the other responds with concrete fixes. Track outcomes: aim for 1 new shared activity every two weeks, 5 instances of physical touch per week (physically affectionate contact), and zero secretive messaging; record progress in a shared note so youve objective data to review.

Watch for a predictable escalation: boredom and dissatisfaction often produce small shifts that build slowly – casual chats with someone else become daily check-ins, emotional energy shifts back and forth, and lying about time spent appears. That pattern erodes self-esteem and, under certain circumstances, can make an emotional bond feel stronger than the primary relationship. Samantha’s case: she became distant after a promotion, began confiding in a coworker, and thankfully caught the drift before long-term damage.

Fix practical drivers: replace poor communication practices with a template – 10-minute morning check-ins, weekly planning calls for living logistics, and a rule that one-on-one contact with new friends includes your partner’s knowledge. If current schedules or values conflict, negotiate one measurable decision at a time (childcare, nights out, work hours) rather than broad promises. Add variety deliberately: rotate date-night activities, introduce a new hobby every month, and change routines that create monotony.

Repair strategy when emotional closeness has shifted: halt secrecy immediately, request transparency about outside relationships, and rebuild trust via small, verifiable commitments (returning texts within 24 hours, shared calendars). Use counseling focused on attachment style and communication skills to increase mutual understanding and care; avoid blaming language, focus on observable behaviors. If unaddressed, dissatisfaction can escalate to separation or divorce; with consistent practices many couples regain connection and become stronger than before.

Which personality and attachment patterns raise cheating risk and how to recognize them

Which personality and attachment patterns raise cheating risk and how to recognize them

Start by screening every client and couple for insecure attachment and high impulsivity; use brief validated tools (ECR-R, BIS-11), ask explicit behavior questions about affairs or boundary breaches, and refer via the aamft directory when structured couple work or specialized individual care is needed.

Anxious attachment often traces back to childhood abandonment or inconsistent caregiving: the adult may have a persistent lack of felt safety, actively seek reassurance from other partners, and report that she herself “wouldnt” feel secure without frequent contact. Recognize it by repeated texts between partners that escalate to jealousy, statements like “I shouldve known” or “they needed me more,” and a pattern of pursuing relationships where desired closeness is never reciprocated.

Avoidant attachment appears as emotional distance and minimized intimacy; clients describe wanting freedom and say “I wouldnt tell them” about temptations. Signs include secrecy, strong preference for autonomy, and a tendency to move away from conflict rather than repair. These clients sometimes form parallel relationships to meet unmet needs without disrupting the primary relationship.

Disorganized attachment combines fear of closeness with impulsive pursuit; presentations include abrupt shifts from clinginess to withdrawal, distortions of reality about partner motives, and repeated boundary violations. Look for history of trauma from a child period, sudden escalation in sexual risk-taking, and statements that they “felt” forced into patterns they cant control.

Narcissistic, borderline, and antisocial traits or formal personality disorders raise risk because they reduce empathy, increase entitlement, and heighten impulsivity. Common red flags: grandiose minimization of consequences, blaming the other partner, repeated boundary violations despite consequences, and substance-driven acting out. Screening should ask about past relationships, legal issues, and patterns that havent worked despite attempts to change.

Pattern Key behavioral signs Brief screening prompts Immediate clinician actions
Anxious attachment Constant reassurance-seeking, jealousy, secret checking “How do you react when your partner is emotionally distant?” Teach distress tolerance, increase partner responsiveness, consider individual attachment work
Avoidant attachment Emotional withdrawal, secrecy, compartmentalized relationships “Do you keep parts of your life separate from your partner?” Use slow-paced exposure to intimacy, set transparency agreements, monitor boundaries
Disorganized Approach-avoid cycles, trauma history, impulsive breaches “Have you experienced abrupt shifts between clinging and pushing away?” Stabilize affect, trauma-focused interventions, safety planning
Personality disorder traits Entitlement, manipulation, lack of remorse, impulsivity “Have you repeated patterns that harmed past partners?” Structured DBT or CBT strategies, collateral history, clear behavioral contracts
Sensation-seeking/impulsivity Risk-taking, substance use, poor delay tolerance “How often do you act on strong sexual urges without planning?” Impulse-control work, consider pharmacotherapy, relapse prevention

Concrete clinician recommendations: document specific incidents and their consequences, set measurable safety agreements, and require transparency steps (shared calendars or agreed phone checks) only when both parties consent. If clients minimize harm or arent willing to change, add behavioral contingencies and consider referral out of the relationship setting. Use short follow-ups to monitor whether interventions have worked or whether risk will eventually escalate.

Screening language examples to use in intake: “Whats a recent time you acted against your relationship rules?” “Who would you tell if you felt tempted?” “What would force you to move toward or away from fidelity?” These questions reveal motive, capacity for repair, and whether lack of empathy or unresolved abandonment drives behavior.

For healing focus: prioritize emotion regulation skills, rebuild trust through transparent tasks, and address underlying needs from early attachment wounds so that the partner can move from reactive affairs to desired committed behavior. Track progress with concrete metrics (number of secrecy incidents, days sober, completed behavioral assignments) and discuss legal or family consequences if there is a child involved or repeated harm.

How local social circles, work commutes, and proximity create opportunities for infidelity

Set a strict boundary: limit unplanned one-on-one after-work contact to no more than two occasions every three months and tell your partners in advance so both know the ground rules; keep a shared calendar entry for exceptions.

Create a written map of social ties and common place lists: name each regular venue like bars, gyms and coworkers, note who attends, and mark overlapping ties so small flirtations don’t become routine; many therapists recommend this to surface what you’ve learned about risky patterns.

If you share the same commute longer than 30 minutes – for example commutes common in cities such as francisco – set rules: rotate seats, avoid personal messages after 9pm, keep conversations task-focused, and maintain a little distance in after-work hangouts; multiple micro-interactions add up whereas one-off events are less risky.

Track early signals: partners who feel bored, felt confused about attraction, or notice sudden realizations should record context and discuss them openly; unresolved attachment from childhood can skew perspective and make someone feel guilty later, so separate personal urges from relationship commitments before problems escalate.

If transparency and boundary-setting are tried and patterns persist, pursue targeted treatment with clinicians and certified therapists: ask for a written plan, set measurable goals across months, expect relief from concrete behavioral steps, and monitor mental health outcomes while keeping hope alive.

If a partner asked for proof, provide timestamps, calendars or a short log; wouldnt hiding small details reduce suspicion, whereas early transparency prevents escalation and demonstrates you know the problem and are committed to change.

What role substance use and impulsivity play in one-night or recurrent affairs

What role substance use and impulsivity play in one-night or recurrent affairs

Prioritise immediate safety and harm reduction: avoid substance use in high-risk social settings, put a personalised assessment of impulsivity and substance misuse in place, and if the relationship is abusive activate a safety plan before any relational work.

Empirical work indicates intoxication and trait impulsivity increase the likelihood of one-night and recurrent affairs; alcohol myopia narrows attention to short-term rewards, stimulant use lowers inhibition, and impulsivity correlates with higher risk-taking. Meta-analyses and cohort studies report small-to-moderate effect sizes, and even moderate intoxication can raise the probability of a risky encounter – those findings should inform risk stratification and follow-up intensity per aamft-aligned resources.

Concrete interventions: screen with AUDIT-C/DAST-10 and a validated impulsivity scale (BIS-11), deliver brief motivational interviewing targeting substance goals, use CBT protocols for impulse control and relapse-prevention skills, add DBT-based distress tolerance when emotional dysregulation is present, and schedule couples counselling that focuses on boundaries, consent and communication. Make session contents explicit, set daily behavioural experiments (e.g., alternate sober social plans for 30 days), and coordinate with addiction services or legal services if force or non-consent are reported.

Clinical framing matters: assess what stressors, daily routines or unmet needs preceded the incident and encourage clients to reflect on the lived experience rather than assign simplistic blame. Many peoples and cultural norms shape expectations; some clients realize over days that their actions were driven by loneliness or work-related difficulties. For those who wish repair, deepen understanding via talking exercises that examine each partner’s perspective and values; recognise that love isnt sufficient alone to fix impulse-driven harm and partners arent interchangeable – realistic goals must be aligned with capacity, safety, and the reason the behaviour occurred.

When to pursue individual counseling versus couples therapy after discovering infidelity in Long Island

Start individual counseling if one partner reports severe guilt, panic, suicidal ideation, dissociation, or persistent avoidance; reserve couples counseling for when both partners can commit to transparency and structured accountability practices and have completed at least 4–6 stabilization sessions.

If you are here, clinicians frequently answer direct questions about where to begin and what to expect; they help clients move between individual and joint work, help them find realistic goals, and challenge unrealistic expectations about immediate reconciliation.

If joint work stalls, return to individual sessions focused on skill building and accountability; clinicians should give clear milestones for restart, answer outstanding safety questions, and ensure both can feel safe before resuming couples meetings.

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