Telling People what they want to hear

It gives me hope when I come across common sense expressed in everyday language. I had one of those moments on coming across a quote from sociologist John Shelton Reed.

He dared to point out that “a survey tells you what people think they ought to say when a stranger knocks on the door and begins asking suspicious questions.” If all surveys posted that disclaimer, you would see greater honesty in studying human behavior.

In co-incidental timing the morning after coming across that quote, the results of a new study came out proclaiming “the ability to predict affairs and relationship break-up.” This study, like many, was based on a survey. In this case, it was based on the responses of 772 people (507 women and 272 men).

The reporting of the study results makes it sound like there is now a way of accurately predicting affairs, even though other researchers made similar claims based on body type, genetic predisposition, or some other newfangled angle.

The articles make for splashy press releases but haven’t really explained or reliably predict cheating on a wide-scale basis. This is why I remain skeptical about these news stories which come out during slow news cycles.

What I do know is that when cheating happens, it shocks you and rocks your marriage. At those times you start rethinking and evaluating your marriage. It triggers serious soul searching.

At those moments what’s important is how you deal with it. That’s more important than predicting it or knowing what caused it. Chasing after the cause soon after discovering the affair will have you chasing your tail.

Instead of wasting your focus and energies on chasing after predictions and causes, better use of them would be on identifying what you can do about it now. When you look at what you can do instead of what you should have done, you’ll make better progress in recovering from what happened.

In the video “Overcoming the Affair Crisis“, I go into ways of dealing with what you can do. Taking action gets you through recovery much better than blaming.

Would you rather spend the next two hours looking for who to blame or what you can do about it now? Which option will improve your relationship?

Reading through the latest study is entertaining, but doesn’t show you what’s needed in improving your marriage.

If you want to move forward, it helps to know what to do and when to do it. Click and download your copy today.

Keeping it Real,

Jeff

You Might Also Like To Read:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Popular Posts