Here are the latest comments from our readers. regarding Overcoming Infidelity Read read then all and submit your own comments Thursday Dec 29, 2005Its all about deceipt and lying. If the other partner is aware and by "not objecting to the activity" thereby condoning the behavior, then it changes from cheating to abnormal marital behavior. The reasons given for the female cheating in this website is very simplistic and generalised. Women are just as complex as men in the many reasons they use to justify extramarital events, many of which are NOT emotional affairs, but driven by deeper and possibly less socially aceptable instincts. (Nature or Nurture?) Wednesday Dec 28, 2005in a marriage in which both spouses agree that it is acceptable to have sexual relationships with other people is termed open marriage and the resulting sexual relationships are generally not considered marital infidelity, at least from a non-legal standpoint. The law in some areas may not recognize open-marriage agreements and thus such extramarital sex may be considered adultery nonetheless. Sometimes only one party in an open marriage will opt to have other sexual relationships, in which case the one who does not do so is referred to as a wittol: sometimes called a "contented cuckold". Wednesday Dec 28, 2005Infidelity can have a whole bunch of different definitions because some couples may have different ideas of what constitutes infidelity. For example, a person may not want his or her partner flirting with anyone else to flir to them is considered infidelity. Some people may be confortable with their partner having only oral sex, or may allow them sexual intercourse with others, or something in between. A person who is identifies as heterosexual may accept his or her partner engaging in homosexual but not heterosexual acts with others. because of all these factors, infidelity is now exactly a simple subject Wednesday Dec 28, 2005When a partner cheats and they are filing for divoce, The sexual partner of a person committing adultery or infidelity is often referred to in legal documents, especially divorce proceedings, as a co-respondent. The person whose spouse has been unfaithful is often labeled a cuckold. Originally, the latter term was applied only to males, but in more recent times women have been characterized in this way too.
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