miercuri, 10 decembrie 2025

Care soții iși inșeală cel mai mult soții?


Have you ever wondered which female professions are linked to higher divorce and infidelity rates? Well, it’s not surprising really; the usual suspects abound: Nurses, teachers, corporat e jobs.

But the field with the highest infidelity is actually not some high-powered career path. It’s homemakers.


That doesn’t mean raising kids is easy. It’s not. Doing it well takes emotional labor, patience, and responsibility. But modern life has completely changed what that role actually looks like once children reach school age. And that change matters more than anyone wants to admit.

The reason is simple, but it’s probably not what you think.

Being a homemaker, if done the right way, isn’t easy, and it takes a lot of time and effort, especially when the kids are young. But modern life has really changed what the homemaker role looks like when the kids reach school age. And that shift completely alters the day-to-day reality in ways most people never talk about.

Think about it… a hundred years ago, running a household was nonstop survival-level work. Laundry took hours. Meals took all day. Basic food prep was physically demanding.

This is what doing laundry looked like back in 1820. You needed real muscle for it, because it was brutally hard work, no matter how old your kids were.

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Have you ever wondered which female professions are linked to higher divorce and infidelity rates? Well, it’s not surprising really; the usual suspects abound: Nurses, teachers, corporate jobs.


But the field with the highest infidelity is actually not some high-powered career path. It’s homemakers.


READ MORE: Is Justice Jackson’s judicial buffoonery giving black women a bad name?


That doesn’t mean raising kids is easy. It’s not. Doing it well takes emotional labor, patience, and responsibility. But modern life has completely changed what that role actually looks like once children reach school age. And that change matters more than anyone wants to admit.

The reason is simple, but it’s probably not what you think.

Being a homemaker, if done the right way, isn’t easy, and it takes a lot of time and effort, especially when the kids are young. But modern life has really changed what the homemaker role looks like when the kids reach school age. And that shift completely alters the day-to-day reality in ways most people never talk about.

Think about it… a hundred years ago, running a household was nonstop survival-level work. Laundry took hours. Meals took all day. Basic food prep was physically demanding.

This is what doing laundry looked like back in 1820. You needed real muscle for it, because it was brutally hard work, no matter how old your kids were.

And making dinner in 1822 took most of the day.

The reality is that being a housewife today is a helluva lot easier than it used to be. Modern conveniences have done away with most of the physical grind. A lot of the hard work is automated, outsourced, or delivered right to the front door. Once the kids are in school, hours open up in a way that simply didn’t exist in earlier generations.

And that’s where the psychology kicks in…

Recently, one expert broke this down in a way that made a lot of really uncomfortable sense. In a clip that’s been making the rounds on X, he explains why idle time, boredom, and a desperate need for validation collide a lot more often in homemakers than people might think. Especially in modern households where daily survival is no longer the job.

Women with extra time on their hands can start to feel bored, unfulfilled, and underappreciated, and that’s when things start to go from“home-y” to “hoe-y.”

Highly-respected divorce attorney James Sexton walks through the patterns he’s seen over years of experience, compares modern life to how things functioned historically, and explains how boredom, excess time, and lack of purpose quietly turn women into full-blown cheater s.



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