나쁜 남자에게의 배신은 더 좋은 기회다. Being cheated on can be GOOD for you: Women betrayed by unfaithful partners end up in stronger relationships later in life: VIDEO

카테고리 없음|2016. 5. 1. 14:45


Being cheated on can be GOOD for you: Women betrayed by unfaithful partners end up in stronger relationships later in life

While women can suffer short-term grief and a sense of betrayal when they discover their partner has been cheating 

   심리학자들은 5천명을 대상으로 연인관계의 헤어짐 현상에 대한 설문조사를 했다.

나쁜 남자에게 배신당한 여자는 결과적으로 행운아라고 할 수 있다.
그들은 나중에 더 좋은 선택을 할 수 있었다는 결과가 나왔기 때문이다.

하지만 불성실한 남자친구(바람 피는 등)를 사귀는 여자는 점차 루저(실패자)의 모습을 보인다.

황기철  콘페이퍼 에디터

ki chul, hwang conpaper editor 


  • Psychologists asked 5,000 people about their relationship break-ups 
  • Women who were cheated on tended to make better choices in the future
  • They also experience personal growth outside their relationships
  • But the new women with their unfaithful partner turn out to be the losers 

When a woman's partner cheats on her, the betrayal and grief she experiences afterwards can be difficult to get over.

But researchers have found that women who lose their unfaithful man to another women may actually be winners in the long run.

They say the experience she gains from the infidelity of their partner helps them make better mate choices in the future.


 

And perhaps most gratifyingly of all, their partner's new woman is actually the ultimate loser.

Dr Craig Morris, an evolutionary biologist at Binghamton University in New York, who led the study, said: 'If we have evolved to seek out and maintain relationships, then it seems logical that there would be evolved mechanisms and responses to relationship termination.


Scroll down for video 

'Over 85 per cent of individuals will experience at least one (break up) in their lifetime.

CAN ADULTERY LEAD TO A HAPPY MARRIAGE? 

Sleeping with other people could be the key to a happy marriage, previous research has claimed.

Scientists said 'outsourcing' areas of the relationship - including sex - can make couples happier.

They also claimed we increasingly expect our spouses to be best friends, counsellors and career coaches.

But despite the long list of demands, we are spending less time with them than before.

As a result, our complex psychological needs aren’t satisfied and most marriages of today are worse than those of the past.

Professor Eli Finkel, a psychologist at Northwestern University, reviewed existing research on the psychology, history and sociology of relationships.

He said an agreed, non-monogamous relationship would, in some cases, work best. 

'Our thesis is that the woman who "loses" her mate to another woman will go through a period of post-relationship grief and betrayal, but come out of the experience with higher mating intelligence that allows her to better detect cues in future mates that may indicate low mate value.


'Hence, in the long-term, she "wins". The "other woman", conversely, is now in a relationship with a partner who has a demonstrated history of deception and, likely, infidelity.


'Thus, in the long-term, she "loses".'

Working with colleagues at University College London, Dr Morris conducted an online survey of 5,705 people in 96 different countries about their relationship breakups.


Their findings showed that while discovering an unfaithful partner could have negative short-term effects, in the long run it actually benefited women.


They said women who had been cheated on tended to be more psychologically attuned to making better choices about partners in the future.


Writing in the Oxford Handbook of Women and Competition, Dr Morris and his colleagues said this may have evolved to help women cope with competition for partners.

'Female competition for male attention is multifaceted,' the researchers said.


'Typically psychological and relational in nature, this competition may be no less damaging than physical violence more commonly used between males.


Researchers said around 85 per cent of us will experience some sort of relationship breakdown, but those whose partners are unfaithful can come out as winners, while the new women in the adulterous men's lives (stock picture) tend to be the ultimate losers in the long run

Researchers said around 85 per cent of us will experience some sort of relationship breakdown, but those whose 

partners are unfaithful can come out as winners, while the new women in the adulterous men's lives (stock picture) 

tend to be the ultimate losers in the long run

 

'If negative emotions exist because they provide an evolutionary advantage then emotions arising from the loss of a mate to a sexual rival may potentially motivate actions that could make one avoid this scenario in the future.'

The experts added that as well as helping women make better choices about their future partners, it may also aid their personal development in other areas of their life.


Dr Morris said the findings could also help women cope better with the emotional trauma that follows a relationship breakup.

He said: 'They can learn that they are not alone - that virtually everyone goes through this, that it's okay to seek help if needed and that they will get through it.'


The researchers believe the long-term psychological benefits of an unfaithful partner (stock picture) may have evolved in women to help them cope with competition from other females in the past

The researchers believe the long-term psychological benefits of an unfaithful partner (stock picture) may have evolved in women to help them cope with competition from other females in the past


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3561185/Being-cheated-GOOD-Women-betrayed-unfaithful-partners-end-stronger-relationships-later-life-mistresses-nearly-lose-out.html#ixzz47NYBqqRb 


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