WIEDERMAN, MICHAEL W. Extramarital
Affairs: An Exaggerated Myth. USA Today (Magazine) v128,
n2650 (July, 1999):74. [Long
Display]
COPYRIGHT 1999 Society for the Advancement of Education
Surveys show that the incidence of sexual affairs is far less
than suggested by Hollywood and adult magazines.
"HALF of all married men and women in America have extramarital
sex," shouts the talk show host. As you stare at the television set,
you ask, "Could it be true? Are half of the married people I know
fooling around?" If you yourself have not engaged in extramarital
sex, you might wonder whether you are missing out on a more-or-less
normative experience. Of course, it is necessary to ask where these
"facts and figures" came from and what social scientists actually
know about extramarital sex in America.
Researcher Alfred Kinsey and his colleagues, in their monumental
sex surveys conducted primarily during the 1940s, were among the
first to ask Americans about such experiences. Based on their
cumulative findings, Kinsey projected that approximately one-half of
married men and one-third of married women eventually would have
extramarital sex. Kinsey's sample, although relatively large, was
far from being representative of the U.S. population. Nevertheless,
that is where the mythical figure of "one-half" was born.
During the 1970s and early 1980s, several less-than-scientific
surveys were conducted on Americans' sexual experiences, including
extramarital sex. Many of these large-scale studies were done via
surveys in magazines that asked readers to tear out, complete, and
mail the questionnaire to the publisher. In some of these magazine
surveys, the majority of respondents indicated that they indeed had
engaged in extramarital sex. However, there are tremendous sampling
problems in such studies, with the most likely result being an
overrepresentation of non-normative behavior. For one, such "racy"
surveys often were included in magazines aimed at a more sexually
oriented audience (e.g., Playboy, Cosmopolitan). Even among this
readership, people who had not had the experiences asked about
probably were least likely to complete the survey, thinking "What's
the point of wasting my time?"
More recently, social scientists have had access to data on
American sexual behavior gathered using state-of-the-art sampling
procedures. For instance, the National Opinion Research Center,
housed at the University of Chicago, conducts a biannual large-scale
survey of Americans. This project, the General Social Survey,
consists of face-to-face interviews with adults sampled so as to be
representative of the noninstitutionalized population of the U.S.
The focus is a host of demographic and public opinion items, not
sexuality. In the last several General Social Surveys, though, a
self-administered questionnaire having to do with basic sexual
experiences was included at the end of the interview. Respondents
were instructed to complete the brief questionnaire while the
interviewer waited, seal it in the envelope provided, and return it
to the interviewer, who would forward the sealed envelope to the
researchers.
In the survey conducted in 1994, respondents were asked, "Have
you ever had extramarital sex?" Although the question doesn't
provide any specific information about the nature of, or
circumstances surrounding, the act, it at least provides a baseline
for the proportion of Americans who admit to having engaged in
self-defined extramarital sex. Considering only those respondents
who ever had been married, I analyzed the data associated with this
answer, as well as possible relationships between marital cheating
and basic demographic variables such as gender, age, size of
community, and history of divorce.
Similar to past research with nonrepresentative samples, about
twice as many men (23%) as women (12%) reported having engaged in
extramarital sex, but the overall percentages were much lower than
found in past unrepresentative samples. Because numerous surveys
have indicated that the large majority of Americans find cheating to
be "unacceptable" or "always wrong," these figures probably are
lower-bound estimates in that some respondents with such experiences
likely were reluctant to admit it in a survey completed in their own
home.
Given the strong attitudinal disapproval of extramarital sex in
this country, it was not surprising that the incidence was about
twice as great among respondents who had been divorced, compared to
respondents still involved in their first marriage. Of course, there
is a "chicken-and-egg" dilemma with trying to make sense of this
finding. Perhaps extramarital sex is more common among the divorced
because, in many cases, such behavior led to (or at least
facilitated) divorce. On the other hand, perhaps it is more likely
among divorced Americans because these individuals apparently were
dissatisfied with their marriages and, hence, more likely to be led
into temptation.
Interestingly, extramarital sex was unrelated to the size of the
community in which the respondent lived--people in rural settings
and urban centers were just as likely to have had such experiences.
Although extramarital sex was related to age, the effect differed
for men and women. In just considering respondents under age 40,
near-equal percentages of men (14%) and women (13%) reported having
engaged in it. For men, however, the likelihood generally increased
with age to the point where 34% of men ages 60-69 reported having
engaged in extramarital sex. For women, the incidence peaked in the
40-49-year-old group (19%) and steadily decreased there-after. Given
that these data represent a single snapshot in time, it is difficult
to explain this apparent gender difference in the relationships
between age and extramarital sex, although a couple of primary
explanations emerge.
It may be that there is a co-hort effect in the sense that the
traditional "double standard" was more prominent among the oldest
generations. That is, perhaps the largest gender discrepancy in the
incidence of that sort of behavior exists among the oldest
respondents because those are the individuals who were raised and
spent their early adult years in a time when extramarital sex was
socially more acceptable (or at least not as unacceptable) for men
as it was for women. In addition to such a cohort effect, it may be
that it increases with age for men because the ratio of women to men
in the population rises dramatically with age. For example, U.S.
census data indicate that there are seven widows for every widower.
Perhaps men have increased opportunities for extramarital sex as
they age, due to shifting demographics.
Similarly, other research has indicated that a man's
attractiveness to women is positively related to his status and
accomplishments, whereas a woman's attractiveness to men is tied
more to her physical features. The bodily and facial attributes
considered most attractive for women are all heavily dependent on
relative youth. So, at least up to a point, men's opportunities for
extramarital sex may increase with age (as does his status), whereas
women's opportunities may peak earlier in life as physical beauty
and number of male peers decline in later life.
Perceptions and motives
Sociologists Shirley Glass and Thomas Wright approached people
sitting in the Baltimore-Washington International Airport or having
lunch in a park adjacent to office buildings in Baltimore with a
request to complete an anonymous research questionnaire on marriage.
Those who agreed to participate were asked to send it back in the
pre-addressed, pre-stamped envelope the researchers provided. The
300 currently married individuals who returned the survey responded
to questions having to do with justifications for cheating, their
own such experiences, and current satisfaction with their marriages.
Fitting the stereotype, men were more likely than women to endorse
justifications that had to do with sexual enjoyment, curiosity,
excitement, and novelty, whereas women were more likely to cite
receiving affection and falling in love. As an illustration, of
those who had engaged in extramarital sex, 77% of the women vs. 43%
of the men agreed that falling in love justified an extramarital
relationship. Conversely, 75% of the men vs. 53% of the women who
had such experiences endorsed sexual excitement as a legitimate
reason for an extramarital affair.
It appears that men may be more likely to view sexual reasons as
being more legitimate, whereas women may be more likely to consider
emotional reasons. Does this generalization hold for Glass and
Wright's findings with regard to actual experience? Apparently, the
answer is yes. Compared to men, women who had engaged in
extramarital sex indicated a greater degree of emotional involvement
with their partners. For instance, of those with such experience,
44% of the men compared to 11% of the women reported no or only
slight emotional involvement with their sexual partners. Similarly,
although cheating was related to relative marital dissatisfaction
for both males and females, women who had engaged in it indicated
less satisfaction with their marriages compared to men with such
experiences. More than half the men who had engaged in extramarital
sex rated their marriage as "happy" or "very happy," compared to
about one-third of women who had. Apparently, for men, such actions
are related less to marital dissatisfaction and emotional
involvement with the sexual partner, and men may be more likely than
women to separate sex from love when it comes to extramarital
involvement.
In a subsequent study, I interviewed young, married graduate
students enrolled at Bowling Green (Ohio) State University regarding
their perceptions and attributions related to extramarital sex. For
example, would it ever be acceptable? What would be the most likely
reason one's spouse would engage in such behavior? What
circumstances surrounding it would make the event most or least
upsetting? All 45 respondents were younger than 40 years of age,
involved in their first marriage (wed two-10 years), and were
interviewed in private, with their verbal responses written on an
anonymous form.
To start, they were asked to estimate the likelihood that they
ever would engage in extramarital sex, as well as the likelihood
that their spouse ever would do so. In line with actual incidence of
such acts, women gave higher estimates of likelihood of spousal
transgressions than men did. However, men and women did not differ
in the estimated likelihood of extramarital sex for themselves.
Despite the relative homogeneity of the sample (all were white,
relatively young, and involved in obtaining an advanced degree),
there was a fair amount of variation in response to questions about
the circumstances surrounding such an act. Although the majority of
respondents thought that the most likely reason for their spouse
cheating would involve dissatisfaction with the marriage, others
indicated that the most likely scenario where their spouses would
have extramarital sex involved being seduced, being sexually curious
or intensely attracted to the partner, or getting drunk.
With regard to the most upsetting conditions for spousal
extramarital transgressions, common responses involved spousal
dissatisfaction with marriage, falling in love with the sexual
partner, or looking for an alternative relationship. While several
respondents believed that a spontaneous, unemotional "one-night
stand" would be the most upsetting condition in which spousal
cheating might occur, when asked about the least upsetting scenario,
the most common response was also a spontaneous, unemotional
one-night stand. Overall, the least upsetting reasons for spousal
cheating typically involved factors that did not reflect poorly on
the respondent or on the marriage (e.g., spouse was drunk, had
personal insecurities, was gay). Regardless of the circumstances,
the majority of respondents believed that spousal transgressions
would result in harm to the marriage, and most would want their
spouse to disclose such involvement.
Last, I had respondents complete a previously published measure
of sex-love-marriage association. The scale measured the extent to
which the individual associated sex, love, and marriage as belonging
together (i.e., the belief that sex is best and most appropriate
within the context of a loving marriage). Those respondents who held
the greatest sex-love-marriage associations were least likely to
envision extramarital sex ever occurring or a scenario in which it
would be acceptable, and were most likely to attribute spousal
cheating to marital dissatisfaction and to want the spouse to
disclose such an act if it should occur.
Roots of extramarital sex
The limited research on extramarital sex in America reveals that
a substantial minority of men and women have experienced it, with
men being more likely than women to engage in such behavior and to
do so for purely sexual reasons. The most common reason for spousal
cheating appears to be marital dissatisfaction. This might explain
why the activity generally is regarded as devastating by the
individual who learns of his or her mate straying. The question
arises: What does it say about me, and our marriage, if my spouse
has extramarital sex? According to the gender differences found in
previous research, cheating may "mean" less if it is a male rather
than a female who engages in the act.
Even less research has been conducted on sexual involvement with
another partner by those in monogamous premarital relationships
(extradyadic contact). Researcher Katie Hurd and I conducted an
anonymous survey of approximately 400 women and 300 men enrolled in
introductory psychology courses at Ball State University, Muncie,
Ind. We assumed that, because such extradyadic involvement is
frowned upon socially, respondents might be reluctant to admit such
experience even if it had occurred. Much to our surprise, relatively
high rates of extradyadic involvement were reported by students from
this fairly conservative region of the country. For example, of
those respondents who had ever been involved in a serious, exclusive
dating relationship, 45% of the men and 40% of the women had gone on
a date with someone else during that same period.
About two-thirds had kissed someone romantically while involved
in a relationship with someone else. We also asked about extradyadic
oral sex and sexual intercourse and found that, among non-virgins,
more men (49%) than women (31%) reported having sexual intercourse
with one person while involved in an exclusive dating relationship
with someone else. Overall, 37% of the women and 28% of the men
denied experiencing any form of extradyadic sexual contact (kissing,
oral sex, or sexual intercourse). Moreover, respondents completed
the sex-love-marriage association scale described earlier, and those
who scored highest on the scale were least likely to have engaged in
extradyadic sex.
What does all of this mean? Despite social disapproval, it
appears that some form of extradyadic involvement may be normal for
American youth. Does such premarital experience lead to a greater
likelihood of extramarital sex? At this point, we do not know, but
the link certainly seems plausible. This is but one of many
pertinent questions regarding extramarital sex for which we do not
have answers. For instance, what characteristics of a potential
sexual partner make cheating more likely? Does extramarital sex
affect marriages if never discovered by the unwitting spouse?
What is clear is that extradyadic and extramarital sex do occur,
despite social taboos. More empirical attention is needed to
understand this compelling phenomenon better, both prior and
subsequent to marriage.
Michael W. Wiederman is associate professor of psychological
science, Ball State University Muncie, Ind.