When cracks appear on the walls of marriage, many people's first reaction is to ask 'why'. Those shirt collars that haven't returned late at night, encrypted photo albums on their phones, and suddenly changing schedules all hide more complex psychological codes than imagined. Today we won't talk about moral judgment, only dismantling the real motives hidden in the folds of human nature.

1. Compensation behavior for unfulfilled emotional needs
1. Affection Emotional Deficit in Intimate relationships
A marriage that lacks deep emotional communication for a long time is like a constantly leaking container. When one party continues to feel neglected, the brain instinctively seeks alternative emotional supplies. This need may not necessarily be sexual, it could be a thirst for appreciation and understanding Hope.
2. Misalignment in Value Confirmation
Middle aged men are more likely to confirm their self-worth through extramarital relationships when facing workplace pressure and declining physical function. This short-term value confirmation is like a sweetener, which can quickly relieve anxiety but cannot solve the fundamental problem.
2. Imbalance between Opportunity and Self Control
1. The Catalytic Effect of Situational Temptation
Business trips, social events, and other environments that are detached from daily supervision, combined with alcohol or warmth The atmosphere of ignorance can provide an outlet for suppressed impulses. The inhibitory effect of the prefrontal cortex on impulsive behavior may temporarily fail in specific scenarios.
2. Cognitive bias in cost assessment
Some people have a lucky mentality of "not being discovered", which stems from overconfidence in their own control. In fact, the probability of exposure in extramarital relationships far exceeds expectations, but when impulsiveness occurs, the rational evaluation system is often in a closed state.
III. Drivers of Deep Psychological Mechanisms
1. Unresolved Trauma in Native Families
The quality of childhood relationships with parents can affect their relationships as adults Secret mode. Some repetitive infidelity behaviors are essentially unconscious reenactments of parents' relationship scripts or compensation for the lack of attention in childhood.
2. Disguised expression of death anxiety
Middle aged men may exhibit symptoms The psychological defense mechanism of using young partners to combat aging fear is called "youth plunder", which obtains the illusion of being still full of vitality by associating with young life.
Any relationship issue is a duet, and instead of asking 'why is he doing this', it's better to think about' where does our relationship need to be repaired '. Healthy relatives A close relationship requires sustained emotional investment and mutual growth, just like a regularly maintained garden where barrenness never happens overnight. Professional emotional counseling is more constructive than solitary suspicion when warning signals are detected.
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