While most people assume men cheat purely for sex, research tells a different story—one that’s messier, more fragile, and frankly harder to swallow. Dr. Alicia Walker’s research on men using Ashley Madison revealed something uncomfortable: these guys weren’t hunting for better sex. They were hunting for validation, attention, and someone to tell them they weren’t failures. The kicker? Most never actually asked their wives if they felt emasculated or unappreciated. They just assumed the answer and went shopping for ego repair elsewhere.
Here’s where it gets worse. These men didn’t just stumble into affairs—they carefully vetted partners based on who’d stroke their egos best. They wanted excessive compliments about their looks, sexual performance, and how brilliant they were. They needed someone who’d listen to the same work stories on repeat with rapt attention and agree, yes, your wife totally doesn’t appreciate you enough. They often hid these interactions or downplayed them, creating secrecy that further eroded trust emotional boundaries.
The validation-seeking shows up in their sex lives too. Men with clinically low desire who engage sexually for external validation—to prove something, to feel wanted—report markedly lower satisfaction than men motivated by genuine internal desire. Their partners report lower intimacy and satisfaction too. When sex becomes another checkbox for external approval rather than connection, everyone loses. Controlled sexual motives—engaging in sex to please a partner or avoid conflict—correlate with higher sexual distress for both partners.
The tragedy here is the communication failure. These men knew they were fragile. They recognized their outsized need for validation. But they didn’t tell their partners. They created a gap between what they needed and what their spouses could reasonably guess, then blamed the relationship for not filling needs nobody articulated. Silent expectations aren’t fair play—they’re relationship sabotage. This stands in stark contrast to women on Ashley Madison, who were primarily motivated by sexual needs rather than emotional validation and often maintained positive relationships with their husbands.
Engagement, commitment, even marriage can’t quench this thirst because the problem isn’t the relationship itself. It’s the refusal to be vulnerable enough to say, “I need more reassurance than seems reasonable, and here’s specifically what that looks like.” External attention feels easier because strangers don’t require that level of honesty or self-awareness. But easier isn’t better. It’s just avoiding the actual work.







