{"id":165,"date":"2020-11-30T06:23:14","date_gmt":"2020-11-30T06:23:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/stories.mysecretdrawer.co\/2020\/11\/30\/more-wives-are-cheating-than-ever-before-heres-why\/"},"modified":"2020-11-30T06:23:14","modified_gmt":"2020-11-30T06:23:14","slug":"more-wives-are-cheating-than-ever-before-heres-why","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/mysecretdrawer.co\/stories\/more-wives-are-cheating-than-ever-before-heres-why\/","title":{"rendered":"More wives are cheating than ever before. Here’s why."},"content":{"rendered":"
There could have been little to distinguish the sounds from the tumult of traffic below the windows. Horses were neighing, carriages were grinding up the dusty street, and beyond that, there was the faraway thrum of the pumping station out near the Genesee County Mills.<\/p>
Yet above the din, Newton Edward Rowell, who was a quiet, diminutive businessman, could somehow identify tell-tale noises rippling through the thin walls of his home. The banging headboard and the sinister squeaking of bedsprings were undeniable.<\/p>
He finally had to admit what he\u2019d known all along. His wife was cheating on him \u2013 and now she and her lover were in the very same bed from which he\u2019d risen that morning.<\/p>
Standing in an adjacent room, Rowell took a moment to steel his nerves for what he was about to do. <\/p>
Inhaling deeply, he then stepped out into the hallway, paused to listen to the sounds of lovemaking emanating from the bedroom, and kicked the door open.<\/p>
Rowell\u2019s pretty young wife, Jennie, shrieked in surprise – and then horror – as her husband leveled a pistol on her 30-year-old lover, Johnson Lynch.<\/p>
Startled, Lynch sprang naked from the bed and ran out, pushing past Rowell. But the angry husband caught him on the stairs and fired consecutive shots in pursuit, the blasts exploding like thunder in the narrow hallway. <\/p>
Lynch, who was a big, muscular man, was dead before he hit the landing.<\/p>
Rowell then calmly descended the stairs, stepped over Lynch\u2019s body, and headed out into the bright Batavia, New York, sunlight. Out on the street, he approached a neighbor he\u2019d known for years.<\/p>
“I found this man in my house and I shot him,\u201d he said, motioning toward his home, the pistol still dangling at his side. \u201cHe had seduced my wife. I caught him in the act.”<\/p>
The shooting on October 30, 1883, became known as the “Batavia Sensation<\/a>.” The tragic incident involved a scoundrel, a love-blinded cuckold, and something not so common back in those days: a cheating wife.<\/p> Then as now, the conventional wisdom was that men cheat more than women. That has, by all accounts and throughout the world, always been true. <\/p> But the infidelity gap is now narrowing – and it\u2019s happening at a rate that has made researchers sit up and take notice.<\/p> In fact, experts agree that more wives are fooling around nowadays than ever before. The US National Opinion Research Center’s General Social Survey shows wives were nearly 40 percent more likely to be cheating on their spouses in 2010 than in 1990.<\/p> The number of husbands who reported infidelity over the same decade stayed constant at 21 percent. That meant that wives were \u2013 even then – cheating 70 percent as often.<\/p> Tammy Nelson, a couples-therapist, says there\u2019s every reason to suspect that women are cheating even more frequently now, a full decade later. She also believes that \u2013 unlike Jennie \u2013 they\u2019re getting away with it.<\/p> While there obviously is no data on just how many women have managed to conceal their affairs, Nelson is convinced it\u2019s happening more regularly than most people assume. Women simply hide it better, she says.<\/p> \u201cTraditionally women have faced harsher punishment for cheating,\u201d says Nelson. \u201cThey have lost their financial support, risked the loss of their children, and in some countries even risked the loss of their lives.\u201d<\/p> Janice Desmond, a private investigator in New York, says she gets a rush trying to catch cheating wives in the act. <\/p> She\u2019s seen it all, she claims, from a bookkeeper leading a double life as a stripper to women rekindling romances with high school sweethearts.<\/p> \u201cThere is just more opportunity and more temptation out there,” Desmond told USA Today<\/em> in 2018. “They usually tend to be in their 40s and are generally high maintenance.\u201d<\/p> The phenomenon is by no means a uniquely American experience. Globally, Ashley Madison has become one of the world\u2019s most successful dot-com businesses with more than 50 million members. A little over half of them are women.<\/p> In 2014, the site reported that 40 percent of its Australian members were women. That was the largest percentage of female members from any single country in the world at the time.<\/p>Opportunity and Temptation<\/h2>
Boredom, Neglect, and Loneliness<\/h3>