Why do people cheat in relationshipsโeven when they love their partner? You are about to discover the surprising psychology behind infidelity, the most common emotional triggers, and the proven steps to prevent cheating before it starts.
Click below to watch the full video

Click below to watch the full video
When Betrayal Feels Like a Fire….
Imagine building a houseโbrick by brick, sweat on your face.
Itโs yours.
Imperfect, but real.
Then one day, you take a break.
You step away for a moment.
And when you return, half the house is on fire.
Thatโs what betrayal feels like.
Last time, you learned how to rebuild trust after infidelityโwhat it looks like to stand in the fire, trying to salvage whatโs left.
But today, weโre rewinding the story.
Weโre asking the harder question:
Why do people cheat in the first place?
And more importantlyโhow can you stop it before it ever begins?
Who Are We to Talk About This?
Hi, Iโm Lolaโone half of a very real, very human marriage with my husband Ola.
Weโve been friends for 20+ years, married for over 17+, and for a small stretch in the middle… we almost didnโt make it.
We lived through distance.
Pain.
The kind of quiet battles you donโt talk about at dinner parties.
But from that rubble, we built something stronger than we had before.
And now, we help others do the sameโthrough our site LolaandOla.com and our book Get My Marriage Back (grab your free copy at www.GetMyMarriageBack.com).
Letโs Talk About Why People Cheat (The 5 Real Truths)
When it comes to infidelity, most people only focus on the symptomsโnot the source.
But if we donโt understand why people cheat, we canโt ever hope to prevent it.
Truth #1: Cheating Is Wrong, But Itโs Not Your Fault
Letโs get one thing straight: If someone cheats on you, itโs not your fault.
Not your looks. Not your income. Not your communication skills or how tired youโve been lately.
Cheating is a reflection of the cheaterโs internal brokennessโnot your value.
You are not responsible for someone else’s betrayal. They made a choice, and that choice speaks more about their integrity than your worth.
🧠 Journal of Marital and Family Therapy reports 22% of married men and 14% of married women have admitted to cheating. And thatโs just the ones who admit it.
Truth #2: People Cheat Because Theyโre Trying to Emotionally Survive
Itโs not always about lust.
Itโs about something deeper: emotional survival.
Most people who cheat arenโt heartless villains.
Theyโre emotionally exhausted, mentally burnt out, and relationally disconnected.
Cheating becomes a misguided attempt to copeโa temporary band-aid on a deep emotional wound.
Truth #3: Emotional Needs Are Survival Needs
Physical cheating gets all the headlines.
But often, itโs not the main issue.
People cheat because they feel unseen, unheard, and unwanted.
Instead of opening up, they seek validation elsewhere.
48% of those who cheated said the main reason was emotional dissatisfaction.
Thatโs nearly half.
Itโs like trying to quench thirst with salt water.
It only makes things worse.
Truth #4: Cheating Isnโt Just About Sex
If youโre hiding a text, minimizing a screen, or sharing intimate feelings with someone outside your relationship… thatโs emotional cheating.
In many cases, it cuts deeper than physical betrayal.
💬 60% of Americans say emotional affairs are worse than physical ones (Pew Research Center, 2018).
Itโs not just about the bodyโitโs about emotional real estate.
And once you start renting that space to someone else, trust begins to erode.
Truth #5: People Cheat Because of Lifelong Programming
No one wakes up and says, โToday, Iโll blow up my life.โ
Infidelity is often the result of layers of past trauma, broken relationship models, and unhealthy coping mechanisms.
Itโs like walking through life with a cracked compass.
Even if you want to go north, you keep ending up lostโbecause your internal guide is broken.
3 Ways to Prevent CheatingโBefore It Starts
Now that weโve unpacked the โwhy,โ letโs dive into the โhow.โ
You can protect your relationshipโwithout paranoia, without control, and definitely without tracking devices.
Prevention Tip #1: Donโt Cheat (Yes, Starting With You)
Sounds obvious, right?
But cheating doesnโt start with the actโit starts with small justifications.
- โItโs just a text.โ
- โItโs harmless flirting.โ
When you normalize those โharmlessโ moments, you set your relationship up for disaster.
You canโt demand loyalty while playing with boundaries.
Integrity starts in-house.
Be the partner youโd want your partner to be.
Prevention Tip #2: Be the Safest Place for Your Partner to Be Themselves
Let your partner feel like they can bring their fears, flaws, fantasies, and everything in betweenโto you.
If youโre the safe place, they wonโt need to go looking for comfort elsewhere.
🧠 A 2017 University of Denver study found that couples who feel emotionally safe are 60% less likely to cheat.
So instead of being the person your partner hides from, be the one they run to.
Prevention Tip #3: Work on Yourself First
You canโt control your partnerโs actions.
But you can control your own emotional health.
Do the work.
- Heal your trauma.
- Seek therapy.
- Set boundaries.
- Get honest with yourself.
Healthy people create healthy relationships.
Itโs not just romantic adviceโitโs emotional math.
Real Story: Redemption After Betrayal
One of our clientsโmarried with kids, seemingly happyโfound himself in an affair.
He told us:
“I didnโt plan to cheat… it just happened.”
But we both knew that wasnโt true.
Cheating didnโt โjust happen.โ It was the result of unspoken pain and years of emotional avoidance.
Once we unpacked it, he and his wife started the hard work:
- Marriage coaching
- Vulnerable conversations
- Friendship rekindled through dumb memes and deep talks
Today? Theyโre thriving. Not perfectโbut deeply committed.
Because itโs not about being mistake-freeโitโs about being mistake-repaired.
You Donโt Prevent Cheating By Building WallsโYou Prevent It By Building Bridges
So, hereโs the takeaway:
You protect your relationship by:
- Practicing daily integrity
- Creating emotional safety
- Growing together and individually
And if youโre serious about preventing infidelity and building a love that lastsโget your free copy of our book right now:
FAQ: Why People Cheat in Relationships
People often cheat not because theyโve stopped loving their partner, but because theyโre emotionally unfulfilled, seeking validation, or coping with unresolved inner wounds.
Many people say yes. Emotional infidelity often feels more intimate and harder to recover from.
Yesโif both partners commit to healing, communication, and personal growth. But don’t be afraid to start the dance with self love and self help.
By building emotional safety, communicating openly, and working on your own inner healing. Prevention begins with YOU.
Couples survive infidelity by facing the pain honestly, rebuilding emotional safety, doing personal growth work, and committing to a new foundation of trustโnot just staying together, but actively repairing together.
The most common cause of cheating is emotional dissatisfactionโfeeling unseen, unheard, or unwanted in the relationship.
Cheating is often a maladaptive coping mechanism triggered by emotional or psychological distress, past trauma, or faulty relationship programming that leads someone to seek relief or connection outside the relationship.
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