Does shame cause cheating—or is it just an excuse? Discover the real cause of cheating and why shame isn’t the reason your husband keeps lying.
Here’s the truth: Cheating is not a mysterious emotional accident. It’s a pattern. A predictable one. And if you’ve been caught in the confusion, these 7 myths will help you see it clearly.
Nope. Shame doesn’t cause cheating—it follows it.
He cheats, he lies, he gets caught… and then he feels bad. That’s not a root cause. That’s a consequence. Saying shame caused the betrayal is like blaming the fire alarm for the fire.
This one gets used to flip the script: He just doesn’t feel emotionally connected.
But guess what? You can’t attach to someone who’s lying to you. Infidelity and porn use destroy connection. If he feels detached, that’s not a disorder—it’s the direct result of his own behavior.
Translation: Don’t speak up. Don’t react. Don’t be upset.
This tactic silences victims. The moment you say, “This hurts me,” he yells, “Stop shaming me!” It’s just another way to dodge accountability and keep you in line.
There’s a myth that religion causes more cheating because it adds shame. But research shows the opposite—religious people use porn less and cheat less. Guilt doesn’t drive betrayal. Choice does.
You are not his recovery plan.
You’re allowed to be angry, to say, “No, I’m not safe here.” Supporting his so-called recovery doesn’t mean tolerating lies, manipulation, or repeat offenses.
Cheating is not a response to your behavior. It’s a habit he chose long before you found out.
You could be the most attentive, sexually available, emotionally present partner on the planet—and he’d still cheat if he wanted to. It’s not about you.
No, it’s not.
It’s a deception problem. A control problem. A lack-of-integrity problem.
Cheating isn’t caused by miscommunication—it’s caused by deliberate choices to lie, betray, and blame.
It’s simple: he wants to do it. And he chooses to do it.
If he’s cheating, he’s not “broken.” He’s not “misunderstood.” He’s not “ashamed.” He’s doing what he wants—and using shame, attachment theories, and therapy language to get away with it.
If your husband continues to lie, gaslight, manipulate, and turn the tables on you about his behavior, understand that this is emotional and psychological abuse. To discover if you’re emotionally abused, take this free emotional abuse quiz.
Anne: I recently saw a video floating around social media. It had an example of how to, “Not shame the addict.” This video put the addict in t
Published on 3 weeks ago
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