Love and Marriage in the Shadow of Infidelity: A Therapeutic Perspective.

Every year seems to chip away at our families, love, respect, and friendships

I was reminded of this while reading Alfred Adler, the renowned Austrian psychiatrist and psychologist of the 19th century.

In his book, Adler argues that if we feel interest and affection for someone, we must embody all the qualities that such interest demands. These include:

  • Honesty
  • Being a good friend
  • A sense of responsibility
  • Loyalty and trustworthiness

I believe that anyone who hasn’t managed to build a loving and committed relationship needs to recognise where they may have gone wrong.

Adler wrote this in 1913—111 years ago! His insights still resonate today.

Of course, problematic relationships have always existed, but back then, expert psychologists didn’t suggest things like, “Don’t interfere with each other; give each other space. Cheating before marriage is perfectly natural. Wedding stress can lead to infidelity, and these issues can be resolved and forgiven.”

Now, however, this is the prevailing attitude in both Europe and America. The year is 2024.

I’ve received couples therapy training from various institutes in America and Europe, and I continue to learn from different schools of thought.

Sadly, the situation isn’t promising for those who share Adler’s perspective.

We’re taught to tell clients who have been cheated on that reconciliation is possible and that peace can be restored.

As one of the few couples therapists who believes that remaining in a relationship marked by infidelity can harm both partners’ self-respect, I focus my sessions on empowering the betrayed partner.

In those moments, I no longer see a couple; I see someone who has been deceived and disrespected.

I help this person remember their worth and cultivate self-love and respect.

As for my training instructors, they tell couples that these situations can be mended. And from what I can see, they genuinely believe in this possibility.

If even deep-seated traumas can be healed, can the pain of a loved one turning their back on you, deceiving you, and developing feelings for someone else truly be resolved?

Can that knowledge simply be erased from memory? Can we accept it as normal?

According to the latest trends: yes.

They argue that instead of shouting at the child who spills milk, we should simply clean it up. That’s their analogy.

As I listen, I can’t help but chuckle wryly. However, I keep my “backward” thoughts to myself for fear they might disrupt their business.

After all, sharing my views might even make them feel unethical. Critiquing so-called experts often leads to backlash.

Yet I have long since dismissed them in my heart, guided by my respect for love. I know that attempting to correct their beliefs is futile.

Their underlying thought on infidelity among couples is simply this:

“If you didn’t value each other despite everything, you wouldn’t have come to me and spent so much money seeking my support.”

Yes, this is what they say amongst themselves—with a hint of mockery and a sense of superiority, forming a commercial coalition.

Now, to them, I’m one of their own.

In it for money, business, and exploiting people…

But I’m nothing like them.

I refuse to trample on people’s souls, their self-esteem, and most importantly…

Love.

Passion.

Family.

Money can always be earned.

My preference is to earn it for the greater good.

As long as people focus solely on their wallets, neither society, family, nor individuals will ever find peace.

In summary:

Don’t keep dishonest individuals in your life, especially those who betray you.

Spend your money not on those who cheat but on those who respect you.

Avoid seeking couples therapy to address infidelity…

No one deserves to be cheated on.

After all, there is no one else quite like you.

I wish for you to find someone who makes you feel special and unique.

Roy Lichtenstein, We Rose Up Slowly, 1964

Couples Therapist Pinar S.

Love Lessons from Prairie Voles: What Rodents Can Teach Us About Commitment

The prairie vole is a well-known animal, especially in the scientific community, for its fascinating mating and monogamous behavior. Researchers have long been captivated by this small rodent, studying what makes its rare commitment to lifelong partnerships so intriguing. I fully understand that a well-educated neuroscientist might not learn much from this paper. Even I knew about prairie voles around 10 years ago… Considering that I was still a teenager with a developing prefrontal cortex, it shows that this information is widely popular—it’s not (only) that I was particularly wise back then.

Ah, the lovely prairie voles… I’ve always been very fond of them. I once had a dream where I told someone about my concerns for a rodent in distress. Not a cat or a dog, like literally everyone these days!

Today, as a devoted researcher of mating behavior, I was rereading the world-renowned research article on, well… yes, prairie voles.

Published in Nature back in 2006, when I was still a little girl playing with Barbies, Edwards and Self were researching why only a small number of animals are strictly monogamous. It’s monogamy or the highway, as they say!

https://www.nature.com/articles/nn0106-7

They found that different amounts of neurotransmitters, and thus their receptors (which go together like love and marriage), were at play.

For the curious non-neuroscientists: there’s a tiny, addictive area in our brains called the “nucleus accumbens,” which is highly associated with excitement and pleasure.

It’s the endpoint for dopamine, sent from another reward center called the VTA, and it generates motivation—motivation to pursue a partner, 🦑

find good food, 🍄

study neuroscience, 🧠

or even learn the R programming language for better statistical analysis.

Surprising as it may be, I’m spending all my motivational output from my beloved mesolimbic pathway on things that aren’t rose petals, porcini risottos, or lovers serenading from beneath my balcony. Of course, R and neuroscience are definitely worth the sacrifice of my youthful, romantic days!

But let’s get back to the real stars—those adorable prairie voles!

They should be role models for all men (and some women, though less frequently) who put a ring on someone and yet court others with a heartbeat.

From what humanity’s flaky commitment trends have taught us, trusting a man to stay loyal can be… tricky.

Meanwhile, these sweet little munchkins remain like fairy tale dreams, rarely coming true (p-value 0.000000000001 and effect size Cohen’s d being 0.000000000001).

In non-statistical terms (since I am no statistician and shall not speak like one), finding a man with the loyalty of a prairie vole is like finding a 500-carat pink diamond on the pavement—possible, but not very likely!

Male prairie voles have more D1 and D2 (dopamine) receptors in their nucleus accumbens. Specifically, they have more D1 receptors, which inhibit them from cheating—or, in more polite terms, from approaching a stranger female—once they’ve bonded to a beautiful female vole via their D2 receptors.

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2994774/

Long critique short:

Get your human males checked for their dopamine-related genes (DRD4, COMT, and DAT1) to learn their genetic predisposition for cheating, a.k.a. wandering off with other women while you could be raising their child.

https://www.genexdiagnostics.com/promiscuity-gene-drd4-test

And lastly, I forgot to mention: male prairie voles bond for life, which is why they are the sweetest rodents—sweeter than chipmunks and capybaras!

Long live prairie voles, for better or worse, for richer or poorer, in sickness and in health!

Neuroscientist & Neuropsychologist Pinar S.