I'm A Marriage Expert — The Most Startling Thing I Learned About Men On Ashley Madison

What men want from an affair.

Last updated on Aug 20, 2024

Man on Ashley Madison is cheating in starling ways. Konstantin Postumitenko | Canva
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You know how when you're single, meeting someone and getting married seems like the absolute dream? The stress of marriage can't be worse than the stress of burning out yet another toy, can it?

Yes, yes it can. I'm living, breathing, and cheating-proof. 

After being the picture of faithful during my 18-year marriage, I found myself on Ashley Madison, a dating site for married people. 

RELATED: I Was Hacked On Ashley Madison, But It’s You Who Should Feel Ashamed

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You might think of cheating sites and immediately think of men and Ashley Madison, but women cheat there, too. However, roughly 15% of profile users on that site are women, it's reported.

The reasons I wound up on Ashley Madison are probably similar to why everyone else who visits winds up on Ashley Madison. I realized just how lonely I felt in my marriage, and we'd beaten counseling to death.

Like many long-term relationships, we fell victim to the demands of our society, finding ourselves living like hamsters on a wheel — going to work, coming home, taking care of the kids, and doing household duties like eating, sleeping, and then back to work.  

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And while hamsters might be attractive to some people, I am not one of them.

To make matters worse, I was dealing with an empty nest. My daughter was in her second year of college and my husband had started a new job that required him to travel most of the time, and he very seldom called home.

what I learned about men on ashley madison Liza Summer / Pexels

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At 46 years old, one thing I knew for sure was that I was no longer willing to “settle” in my life, and it was up to me to change it. 

Was visiting Ashley Madison and starting my secret life of cheating the best way to change things up? Obviously not, but it was better than remaining stagnant. 

Until that point, I lived for everyone else, taking care of everything and everyone else. What I really longed for more than anything was passion and feeling desired. 

I could count on one hand the number of times my husband and I were intimate in one year. My libido and his libido greatly differed. And that's being nice about it. 

The BBC reports that a marriage is considered intimate less if they're intimate less than 10 times a year.

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Sure, you can work out a compromise with your partner if what they want in bed isn't what you want, but having prescribed intimacy is about as fun as an alien probe, or so I'd imagine. 

It was clear to me that our love languages weren’t the same. I wanted intimacy and lots of it. I wanted to feel cherished. I wanted someone to yearn for me.

In the immortal words of Real Housewives of Orange County star Vicki Gunvalson, my love bucket was empty. And that’s what led me to Ashley Madison.

So, I gave my husband an ultimatum. “If you don’t want me anymore, then I’ll have to find someone who does,” I told him. I gave him two months to change, but he didn’t make an effort to spend more time with me or show me more affection.

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So, I signed up for Ashley Madison in April 2013 and told myself it wasn't cheating because I was honest about it.

RELATED: I Get Paid Big Bucks To Spy On Cheating Husbands For A Living

Since I wasn’t sure if I was going to stay married or not, I couldn’t commit to a “real” full-time relationship.

I just wanted to find someone who had the same needs as me: attention, affection, intimacy, and friendship.

Signing up was easy. Men and Ashley Madison don't get along as well as women. On Ashley Madison, they charge men for every little thing, but women sign up for free. 

I created my profile, and I was brutally honest. I was a “virgin” to online dating and far more naive than your average cheater, so I posted my picture, used my real name, and told it all. (Looking back, that wasn't a safe thing to do!) 

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I had approximately 200 messages in my inbox by the end of the day. Jackpot. 

In the beginning, I thought I needed to “be polite” and respond to everyone who sent me a wink. That politeness lasted until I got my first unsolicited private picture.

I quickly figured out that those who were interested in me sent a written message, not just a lazy wink, or a blurry photograph of their member. Even then, I could tell which ones were canned (copied and pasted) and which men read my profile.

The worst cheaters were the traveling businessmen who wanted a girlfriend in every city. “I’ll be in Columbus next week. Can you meet me?” Lame, skeezy, and not remotely worthy of busting my cheating cherry. 

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Minus several men asking me about my cup size and requesting risky photos, it surprised me to find that many Ashley Madison members are professional, middle-aged men, most of whom have wives and kids.

Within hours, I realized that I was a rare breed on the site. I was authentic, honest, and just me — at least, that was the feedback I got. 

“A real live goddess,” they called me. I must admit, I loved the attention at first, but I was also concerned with whether or not it was authentic.

I asked myself, "What is it about these men that bring them here? They seem successful in every other area of their lives, so what makes them want to seek an affair outside of their marriage? Were they truly lonely in their marriages like me, or were they just players wanting intimacy?"

RELATED: Why Cheating Is Absolutely Terrible For Your Health

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As I read through each profile, I noticed an underlying message from each one of them: “I'm lonely in my relationship, but I’m committed and not willing to leave but cheating is fine for now.”  

Each one of them, just like me, was hoping that by joining a website, they would somehow fill a void in their life that was missing. 

On the surface, it looked like all they wanted to be intimate with “no strings attached.” For some of them, this is true. However, I met many men who wanted “that one special person to have a safe, loving, affectionate, discreet relationship with.” 

Cheating, like an onion or a parfait, has layers. Most of them weren’t the egotistical scumbags or players that I had prepared myself for.

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They were loving, kind, hard-working family men. What impressed me the most about my communications with these men is that, above everything else, they remained committed to staying in the marriage and continued to put family first.

They made sure they were at their kids’ sports games and band concerts and there to mow the lawn on Saturday. I learned that what they were missing most wasn’t just intimacy — it was acknowledgment, appreciation, affection, and love.

Was signing onto Ashley Madison and looking to cheat the best way of fixing their foundering marriages? No — at best, it was a cheap Band-Aid.

Each of us yearns for the love, attention, acknowledgment, passion, playfulness, and joy that we experience early in dating and marriage. I realized that choosing to have an affair outside of my marriage was never going to fix my relationship.

We all know that after a few days, that band-aid turns grimy, sticky, and almost impossible to rip off without wincing. 

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I wanted something real, not something part-time. This would mean that I had to learn to love myself (gag, such a cliche but one for a reason) and learn that giving my husband an ultimatum and cheating wasn't going to change anything for the better. 

I had to take the real leap, move on, and look for the love and affection that, not just me, but everyone deserves. 

RELATED: The Most Surprising Reason People Cheat, According To Research

Lora Lucinda is a Certified Core Energy Coach, Energy Leadership Master Practitioner, Relationship Expert, and Divorce Support Specialist