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By Tiffany McMan | December 7th 2009 02:17 PM | 18 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
Poor man and how sad for the family and the women in his life.  Quite a lot of them it turns out and mainly young and probably naive. 

I always have to remind myself that the behaviors of addiction and substance abuse are the symptoms and not the underlying brains deficit/disorder.
It appears that those of us born with a shortage of a certain kind of dopamine receptors are in the sorry situation of having our brains drive us, largely unconsciously and compulsively,  to get more dopamine externally by overdoing it doing things that cause dopamine to flow in our brains. 

In the case of a sex addiction like Tiger's, having sex triggers dopamine production, which his brain craves because he was born with fewer dopamine receptors than normal people.

These are usually "fun" and "exciting" and also risky, life threatening and things that can hurt both ourselves and those around us.  It is very sad, often tragic but a medical condition like any other.

Like people with substance abuse illness, like alcoholism, these people can also be highly social, extroverted, creative, fun to be with, attractive, accomplished but much of this comes from an underlying deficit in their brain which they were born with.  

Their brains simply don't have the normal brain's ability to manage normal life and stay calm and feel relaxed or focussed without continual, aggressive, active, compulsive activity.  It's exhausting for them and those around them. These brain disorders are also chronic, deteriorating and incurable.  But, in a few cases, the symptoms can be managed - maybe.
Tiger had to inherit this disability from one or both of his parents.  His father was clearly a highly focused, very demanding type of mind.  Apparently one that kept Tiger in line.  Sometimes it takes like to know like as people suffering from alcoholism have found out.

Remember that the disordered mind always has very clever behavior and explanations to get around obstacles to their addiction or seemingly acceptable after the fact rationalizations for the damage.
What do you think?  What's your experience with people with these illnesses.

Comments

Tiffany McMan
Here is a funny article from Psychology Today and the typical heroic, macho, cool spinning of a tragic addiction.  People suffering from addictions are very good at doing this.  Most people buy it.  
Of course, Tiger's career as a spokesperson is over and he and his familylife have been destroyed but this guy sees a lot of cool characteristics and benefits!  LOL

December
6, 2009, Addiction


What
Makes Tiger Tick: Sex Addict or Skilled Gamer?


Tiger's golf skills
translate to conquests in the bedroom



http://www.psychologytoday.com/files/u25/Tiger%20Driving.jpgAs his sex
partners
 topple previous records,
people naturally tend to label Tiger's sexual activity a sexual addiction
In fact, his sexual persona is actually the translation into the bedroom of the
skill, dedication, and imagination he demonstrates on the golf course. 


There are some actions
whose commission immediately gives rise to their own justification - as a
mother killing her infant does post-partum depression.


Something similar occurs
with cheating. If someone has a single affair, they have strayed, and may be
forgiven. If someone has a series of affairs, then they are philanderers, and
we know they are insincere lovers and spouses.

http://www.psychologytoday.com/ads/max/www/delivery/lg.php?bannerid=47&campaignid=21&zoneid=23&loc=1&referer=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.psychologytoday.com%2Fblog%2Faddiction-in-society%2F200912%2Fwhat-makes-tiger-tick-sex-addict-or-skilled-gamer&cb=8b94c28bc4


If someone has an astronomical set of sex partners, on the other
hand, then they are sex addicts. Excess becomes its own excuse. Why
else would a man with a beautiful wife like Tiger Woods have so much
extramarital sex if he weren't addicted?


Yet, as Tiger's
mistresses surface in clubs and Denny's around the country and world, we can
reflect on the skills and attitudes that allow one human being to conduct so
many affairs.  And Tiger's gifts for sexual exploitation of women resemble
the skills he brings to his golf game:



  1. Total concentration. Tiger has the ability to devote his attention to the
    matter at hand - whether sinking a putt or seducing a woman - as though
    nothing else exists.

  2. No outside interests. Tiger HAS no interests other than golf and girls.
    That Tiger meets women at clubs, family restaurants, and work-out spots is
    because, aside from golf courses, this is his entire life.

  3. Numbers are all. Tiger's life is defined by numbers - commentators and
    fans endlessly repeat how many tournaments he has won and how much money
    he has earned. Now they can add his concubine totals.

  4. Cold insincerity. Tiger has made an art out of saying only what fits
    his public persona and career goals. Talking to Tiger is like
    addressing the imaginary tiger in the cartoon Calvin and Hobbes.

  5. Technique and stamina. Just as Tiger combines mental and physical prowess -
    and emotional coldness - to take control of golf courses, he seems to do
    the same in the bedroom - at least the women seemed to enjoy their sex
    romps.  According to one: "On a scale of 10, I would give him a
    12."

So, rather than being a
sex addict, the same single-mindedness, skill set, and gift for robotic
calculation that make Tiger Woods the world's greatest golfer make him an
avatar of the bedroom.  Rather than an illness, his sexual exploits are
the stuff of the Tiger legend.


 





Tiffany McMan
Interesting, so fewer dopamine receptors, which are determined at birth and set for life could be an effect?  I guess that's the plasticity idea.  Any research on that?  Gee, everything is being studied now a days.  There must be something you read on this?
So the brain is born with genetic deficits but that's not a disease of a body organ or a medical condition?

Sex addiction is not a "physical" addiction?

So, in your world, it's a matter of morals, character and someone being weak.  Which you personally are not challenged by.  That is very nice.  

That's certainly the most commonly accepted view and pretty much everyone agrees with you.  It's also the easiest and quickest way to make sense of the terrible afflictions of brain disorders so I understand the appeal.   Much in science makes my head hurt too. 

Wasn't the Psychology Today article funny?  Guys really do mainly see having relations with a lot of different girls as cool.  I guess it is.

Tiff :-)



Tiffany McMan
It is interesting how quickly scientific talking about things gets turned into personal moralizing.  I suppose that's the easiest way for our brains to handle complicated things.   It is a lot less work for my brain to talk about what I say is right or wrong then boring and complicated facts, research and data.

Certainly the moralizing approach is by far the most accepted by people everywhere.  I heard on NPR that the Taliban justify their drug trade by saying the users of the drugs are just immoral European non-Muslims!  Bad people so to speak.

Oh well.  That's not going to change.

Amazing...you think this is a "complicated" thing? Hardly...so you suppose that this guy just got a dose of dopamine right after this thing blew up in his face, cause he is currently all about being the family man and changing his ways. It has long been the theme to do as you please and ask for forgiveness later....

Tiffany McMan
I don't really read any science or knowledge or even experience in your comments, but just your own personal opinions about how things are supposed to be.  I guess that's OK, though everybody has an opinion.  Not sure what that contributes. 

Sadly, rehab very rarely "works" if at all.  There is no way to fix a system-wide disordered brain.  Symptoms can be managed for some brain disorders, but even that's not possible yet with addictions.

"Doomed" pretty much covers it.  Of course, some brains are more or less disabled.  Like heart disease, or any other medical and organ disability, there are individual degrees of the illness.

It's best to remember the behavior is not the illness but the symptom.  Shortness of breath is not the illness of heart disease but a symptom.   Treating the lungs doesn't help.

The continual unwinding of Tiger's life from what apparently is an acute case of sex addiction is a tragic reminder of how destructive these illnesses can be and how often having a lot of money or power/prestige can mask the consequences.  For awhile.  Eventually, they always come out and tear lives apart, usually for generations before and after.   My pastor says the bible refers to 6 or 7 generations.

Looking at these horrible diseases as moral failings is the way pretty much everyone makes sense of them.  It doesn't track the science at all and certainly doesn't help the victims, suffers and society.  But it's the least taxing for our own brains and also feels good to write people off as bad guys/girls.  At least I always feel a little sense of relief and superiority. 

Tiff :-)

Risky behavior or not, it is more than obvious that there are two other components at work here within Tiger's cognitive processing:

1. Arrested emotional development and
2. the inability to love.
If he loved his wife, he would send for her while he is away, and she would come, nanny in tow. It is quite obvious, Tiger is not a participant in the marriage, and when Elin tries to involve him, he considers her a nag, so he avoids her, therefore avoiding a quarrel which would escalate into physical damage to the premises. Since he is so immature, he has not acquired the same finesse with humanity as he has with golf: to compromise - too much work - not enough payback. (He acts out on the links and is a poor loser, remember?)

He sniped to her: "YOU ruined Thanksgiving! Are YOU HAPPY now?" Projection or what!!

So, he runs away to Never Neverland where no one can make him a man; in this case it is Vegas. He believed, "What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas", as only a Peter Pan (and Tinkerbell) would.

On Thankgiving, he ran away again rather than dealing with the disappointments he has caused. Only that time, a tree stopped him from running very far.

He has neither an addiction, nor any dopamine defect. He's merely an irresponsible brat, who is unable to put himself in another's position (empathy)

I believe Dr. Otto Kernberg would coin it: "Narcissistic Personality Disorder".

In his eyes, Elin is simply a baby maker with superior genes; she recognizes that, and she'll be gone witin 6 months. She has a full life ahead of her. She doesn't need the psychological abuse and invalidation he projects on her. Her mother has already been through it so that'll be a big help for her.

He only wants to stay married for image; he cannot fail at anything.

My advice to Tiger: LISTEN TO RUDYARD KIPLING
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wpcNFll5yOM

Case closed.

Tiffany McMan
Pretty much everybody agrees with the bad actor, lack of willpower, immoral behavior explanations.  If we were voting those would win by a landslide.  That is certainly the easiest way to make sense of it all and usually the addict will agree since, it's what people want to hear.

There is no scientific or medical basis for those views.  But neither is there for a whole lot of other things we all believe about medical or scientific matters.

If someone is looking for a scientific explanation, there is a pretty well researched and well understood one.   Kind of boring actually.  Pretty mechanical.

If not, that's fine to.  You're in the majority and will find lots of media supporting the moralistic views.

Medical explanations of addictions and other brain disorders also feel deeply unfair to most people and we know our brains are hyper-sensitive to feelings of unfairness.  I believe so are dog brains.  Even to our own detriment.

I suspect it's pretty much impossible to understand how powerful these medical conditions are to compel behavior.   Unless your brain has these disorders. 

Remember the behavior is not the illness, just a symptom. 

So it goes.  Wasn't Kipling deeply racist?

Tiff :-)

Tiffany McMan
Oh yeah, sex addiction is tricky because the substance is another person.  You can't get a fix without another person.  Of course, a lot of times they have the same addiction. 

Did his wife not know?  He certainly isn't hiding anything!

Tiff :-)

Fred Phillips
Hi, Tiffany, Gerhard. I clicked to this page because the "What People Are Saying" box showed people (mainly you) were saying a lot about... something... here. 

I don't care about Tiger's sex life, though I feel for his kids and hope they get through this with minimal trauma. But I really appreciate the interchange between the two of you.

The question at hand is multi-faceted, and you have managed to touch on its moral, endocrinological, cognitive, family therapy, genetic, and psychological aspects. This is as it should be; messy problems can't be solved from the vantage of only one paradigm. Despite skirting close to personal insult, which of course makes for better reading, you have staked out an impressive multi-disciplinary approach to what's going on with Tiger. And of course, his family.

Glad you didn't uncritically embrace the addiction model. It's difficult to distinguish sex addiction (if such a thing exists) from normal horniness, and there's a wide range of opinion about what constitutes normal.

Anyway, let me throw in still another paradigm, quoting from my August 11, 2008 blog at consciousmanager.blogspot.com on John Edwards’ affair:
USA Today laments that politicians don’t learn from history. The very leaders who denounce another politician’s extramarital affair, the newspaper says, eventually commit the same act.
No, it’s not that they don’t learn from history.  It’s that we don’t learn from primatology.

Apes vie to be the alpha male for one reason only: to spread their genes widely.  To get laid a lot.  And you don’t get much more alpha than President of the United States.  Why people were surprised by the behavior of Kennedy or Clinton (or Gary Hart or Gary Condit for that matter) is beyond me.

As the lady sang, “… that’s why I fell for… the leader of the pack.”

Leader of the pack, or Wilt Chamberlain and his 20,000 sex partners, or world's greatest golfer, same thing. I followed up on the occasion of South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford's Argentinian affair:
The (apparently) many who are still astonished by the common hypocrisy of family-values Republican officials didn’t (apparently) read my blog on why, from a primatological point of view, it’s not astonishing at all.

But ours is a nation, and theirs is a party, where denial of human evolution is also common. Maybe that’s why we are loath to learn from primatology.... People who won’t believe they are related to monkeys seem uncommonly eager to make monkeys of themselves.

So we cannot let denial - whether political, psychological or religious - keep us from calling on all applicable paradigms. Even though the risk (of too much multidisciplinarity) is that we paralyze ourselves with imponderables about the nature of human nature and whether morality can trump the less attractive elements of our nature.

And wouldn't it be fascinating if the drive to be top dog, in sport or politics, turned out to be a mechanism for coping with a shortage of dopamine receptors?

Fred Phillips
This might be a good place for a frivolity break, with the famous chess game between two of Jerry Seinfeld's organs: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aEC7FK0xVTQ

Tiffany McMan
Indeed, there are lots of different perspectives on behavior.   The one that is least accepted and popular, and also accessible to easy understanding (but if I can understand it it can't be real hard!) are the brain science and medical facts.  They are also kind of boring compared to all the other things discussed. 

To see behavior as driven by our wills rather than underlying brain conditions is what is easiest to think about, talk about and accept.   It just feels morally wrong to think about it any other way.

Many, many cultures see the mentally ill as spiritually gifted.  Maybe they are. 

But science will never be about explanations for everyday things or accepted outside of the small group of those of us who are already convinced it helps our lives.  It's a disturbing finding that we're pretty much driven unconsciously by our brain and bodies from very old adaptations of deficits and obsolete threats.  Scary.

Have you read about the kids who eat dirt because of genetic deficits?   Same thing.

There are good reasons scientists are walled off in labs and universities and not media stars.   Science is just to complicated and disruptive of the ways we live our lives and believe to get by. 

Also, talking about sex is a real heated topic to begin with, triggering all sorts of feelings in guys.

There is a compulsive behavior parallel in a bunch of different behaviors.  Fast food pretty much targets the same dopamine deficits.  Impulsive investing and trading has the same mechanism.  So does hang gliding, rock-climbing, being a celebrity/politician.

Stress makes it all worse, not sure why.  I did see a video on that.

Like I said, kind of boring.

Tiff :-)

Tiffany McMan
It's well known, but hidden or ignored mainly, that rehab doesn't work for most.  Of course, some are less sick then others so every once in awhile.  Can't fix a genetically deficient brain.  Maybe manage the symptoms but usually not for addictions.   

The classic mental illness delusion and deflection tactic is "I'm not sick, I'm/we're special."

Of course, it can be "special" bad, sexy, a woman's man, golfer, or gifted or whatever.  Pretty clever con job, because it usually works.

What's the title of John Edward's book?  Classic deflection I think.  Half to check. 

I like to believe that I control my behavior and make conscious decisions all the time.  That feels the best.  I just can't find much science supporting that old idea.  oh well.

With addictions and other mental illnesses it's a whole lot worse.  But, of course, practically everybuddy thinks that's rubbish and hates that idea.  So best to keep among us science-friendly folks. 

Tiff :-)

Tiffany McMan
Addiction medication may help treat pathological gamblers
Pathological gambling can be successfully treated with medications that decrease urges and increase inhibitions.

People with pathological gambling disorder will continue their gambling behavior in the face of damaging consequences to themselves and their families.  Researchers sought to understand how gamblers decide whether or not to bet by focusing on two brain processes: urge and inhibition. In order to group individuals into categories that address differences in their biology, Grant separated pathological gamblers into two major subtypes: gamblers who are driven by urge (i.e., individuals who report gambling when the desire becomes too strong to control), and those who do not show normal inhibition of impulsive behaviors (i.e., individuals who report being unable to restrict behaviors even when urges are minimal or virtually non-existent).

In the first subtype, gamblers who are driven by urge responded well to treatment with medications that block the brain opioid system (e.g., naltrexone) or certain receptors for the neurotransmitter glutamate (e.g., memantine). Grant also found that family history plays an important role in refining this group even further. People with a family history of addiction responded even better to the opioid blocker, which has been shown in other studies to decrease the urge to use substances such as alcohol.

The second subtype, gamblers who have difficulty inhibiting their behaviors and react to the smallest desires, respond well to medications that act on a specific enzyme, catechol-O-methyl-transferase (COMT), which plays a major role in the function of the prefrontal cortex. Researchers found that decreasing the function of COMT can increase one's ability to inhibit their desire to gamble.

"By understanding these different subtypes, we are able to target the core biology of the illness with individualized treatment. When we look at pathological gambling as an addiction and try to understand the sense of urges and inhibitions, we are able to target the treatment with medication more effectively."

Studies improve knowledge of underlying brain changes caused by addiction

Posted On: October 21, 2009 - 1:10pm

CHICAGO — New research using animal models is enabling a deeper understanding of the neurobiology of compulsive drug addiction in humans — knowledge that may lead to more effective treatment options to weaken the powerful cravings that cause people to relapse.

Drug addiction is known to change the structure and function of the brain, affecting a person's self control and decision-making ability.

These new studies have identified brain mechanisms that help explain how addictions form, as well as the cognitive problems associated with them. Additional research findings discussed could also offer hope against addiction relapses.

Today's new findings show that:

    * Chronic alcohol consumption reduces the number of new brain cells that form in the hippocampus of primates. The hippocampus plays a key role in memory, perhaps explaining the association between chronic alcoholism and memory problems
    * After exposure to cocaine, rhesus monkeys developed impairments in learning, cognitive flexibility, and memory. This finding suggests that cognitive problems associated with cocaine addiction in humans result directly from the cocaine abuse rather than from a pre-existing trait or lifestyle factor
    * A chemical already found in the body reduces cravings in addicted rats and appears to restore normal functioning in a brain circuit associated with cocaine addiction

Other research findings being discussed at the meeting show that:

    * Advanced neuroimaging technologies and behavioral research suggest that addiction disrupts the fine balance underlying reward, motivation, memory, and cognitive control.
* Increasing evidence suggests chronic drug use may alter the brain's reward circuits on a genetic level, contributing to addiction. Focusing on the genetic effects of addiction may open new avenues for improved treatment

"Today's findings offer a better understanding of the impacts of this disease and provide a clearer approach toward treating addiction and guarding against relapse."


Maktub
In some studies, survivors of critical brain damage are statistically more apt towards addictive drug use at some point in their lives.

Tiffany McMan
Good video on human sexuality.  Way in the middle discussion od how dopamine, or lack of it, triggers sexual behavior:



Tiffany McMan
Well, I guess we know where the sex addiction genes came from.

Tiff :-)


Report: Dad's Cheating Ways Tortured Tiger

By Michael Y. Park

Wednesday December 16, 2009

The apple doesn't fall far from the tree, it seems – Tiger Woods's own dad, Earl, also cheated in his marriage to the golfer's mother, according to Woods's high-school girlfriend.

The irony? It tore Tiger apart.

"He would just call crying and say, 'My dad is with another woman,' and that would be all he could say," Dina Parr tells E!. "He would be so upset, so I just tried to be there for him and listen to him."

Parr says she dated Woods, 33, in high school and during his freshman year in college, and kept in frequent contact with him while he was on the road. Tiger's father, who died in 2006, was the athlete's closest advisor.

"My dad was my best friend and greatest role model," Woods said in a statement on his Web site after announcing his father's death. "He was an amazing dad, coach, mentor, soldier, husband and friend."

"He loved his father," Parr says. "And I know that was the one thing about his dad that he could never get over. So yeah, it's interesting that it's turned out that he's doing the same thing."

Tiger has been alleged to have had affairs with a dozen or more women, and admitted his infidelity as his professional and personal life have begun to unravel.

In a recent interview on New Zealand TV, however, Tiger said it was mother Kutilda he ruled the household, not his dad.

Tiffany McMan
Any kind of addiction is no joke.  Moralizing and personal blaming the most comfortable explanation for pretty much everybody but it flies in the face of two critical things:
-  Moralizing ignores the medical causes of the destructive behavior
-  Moralizing does nothing for the real and terrible consequences of these illnesses

Tiff :-)

Tiger Woods' Affairs Cost Billions in Stock Market

By LiveScience Staff

posted: 28 December 2009 03:40 pm ET

Tiger Woods' extramarital affairs could cost you if you hold stock in
a company he sponsors or a mutual fund that holds stock in those
companies.

A new study — not yet published in a journal — finds the market
value lost to companies that had the golfer as a sponsor is already as
high as $12 billion.

The estimate is separate from whatever money Woods himself may lose as
a result of his missteps. The golfer was thought to make about $100
million a year in endorsement income.

"Total shareholder losses may exceed several decades' worth of Tiger
Woods' personal endorsement income," said Victor Stango, a professor of
economics at the University of California, Davis and co-author of the
study.

Stango and a colleague looked at stock market returns for the 13
trading days that fell between Nov. 27, the date of the car crash that
ignited the Woods' scandal, and Dec. 17, a week after Woods announced
his indefinite leave from the sport. They compared the stocks to the
total market and to competing stocks, plus they looked back four years
to get a sense of how the stocks have historically done in comparison
to the market and to competitors.

The study focused on nine sponsors: Accenture; American Express;
AT&T; Tiger Woods PGA Tour Golf (Electronic Arts); Gillette
(Proctor and Gamble); Nike; Gatorade (PepsiCo); TLC Laser Eye Centers;
and Golf Digest (News Corp.).

Overall, the researchers figure the scandal reduced shareholder
value in the sponsor companies by 2.3 percent, or about $12 billion.

"(This) pattern of losses is unlikely to stem from ordinary day-to-day variation in their stock prices," the researchers wrote.

Investors in the three sports-related companies (Tiger Woods PGA
Tour Golf, Gatorade, and Nike) fared the worst, the study found. They
experienced a 4.3-percent scandal-generated drop in stock value,
equivalent to about $6 billion.

On the other hand, Accenture, a global management consulting firm, experienced no ill effects following the accident.

"Nike and other premier sports-related sponsors are special for an
athlete like Tiger Woods," said UC Davis economics professor
Christopher Knittel. "They are themselves powerful brands that add
value to Tiger's brand and create other financial opportunities for
him. This gives a premier sports sponsor the bargaining power to
capture some of the profits generated by an endorsement deal with Woods
– so that if the Tiger brand is tarnished, those profits may decline.
Our study measures that decline."

The pace of losses had slowed by Dec. 11, the day Woods announced
his leave from golf, Knittel and Stango found. But as late as Dec. 17,
shareholder had yet to reverse their losses.


"Our findings speak to a larger question of general interest in the
business and academic communities: Does celebrity sponsorship have any
impact on a firm's bottom line?" Stango said. "Our analysis makes clear
that while having a celebrity of Tiger Woods' stature as an endorser
has undeniable upside, the downside risk is substantial too.

Tiffany McMan
It's interesting that even the Mng Editor of a Science blog is wedded to the free will idea.   Even though it flies in the face of the medical and brain science and really only leads to moralizing and blaming and not fixing these conditions or the behavior that accompanies them.

But with increasing evidence that moralizing is largely unconscious and a good short-cut for our brains that makes sense.

Tiff :-)

 "From LiveScience By Jeanna Bryner, Managing Editor posted: 29 December 2009

Like years past, this one has been a whopper for high-profile philanderers. Psychologists aren't surprised, as guys are wired to want sex, a lot, and are more likely than gals to cheat. The behavior may be particularly likely for men with power, researchers say, though they point out that despite the genetic propensity to sleep around, cheating remains a choice, not a DNA-bound destiny.

The list of powerful individuals whose marital transgressions came out this year includes Tiger Woods, David Letterman, former senator John Edwards and South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford.

The obvious question, perhaps most perplexing when it comes to wealthy men who had beautiful wives and seemingly enviable lives: "What were they thinking?"

(I have noticed that men who are hyper-focused on beautiful women and marry them are compulsive about having new beautiful women to pursue.  Conversely, women who are hyper-focused on getting men's attention through sexuality could be described as addicted to triggering testosterone in men, often resource-rich men. Tiff)

Turns out, they may not have been thinking consciously about the acts at all.

"I'm guessing these things don't happen at the forefront of their brain," said Scott Reynolds, assistant professor of business ethics at the University of Washington in Seattle. "They aren't things he sits down and calculates out. It's in the background."

Even if their brains did register the infidelities, high-profile philanderers have so much power and control over their lives they likely couldn't imagine getting caught, scientists say. And with past as their guide (wins on the links for Woods and the Hill for Edwards), even if they did get caught, they could control the fallout and stay on top.

(There is good evidence that power: wealth, celebrity, etc, just helps to hide addictive behavior and enable it more easily. Of course, that can just make the consequences accumulate. Tiff)

Some indiscretions were more surprising than others, with Mr. Family Values — Edwards — coming to mind. The acts are not so surprising for scientists who study this stuff, however. They know that even the most upright, squeaky-clean person can have an extramarital affair, and perhaps they are more likely to do so.

"People don't necessarily practice what they preach," said Lawrence Josephs, a clinical psychologist at Adelphi University in New York.  "It's not clear to what extent people's ethical values are actually running what they do or don't do."

Case in point: "The Playboy subscription rate is highest in the Bible Belt," Josephs told LiveScience.

(There is growing evidence that public and strong aversions to things can indicate an strong unconscious attraction.  Trivers reports this with homosexuality.  Religious folks appear to often have the same defensive mechanism.  Tiff)

Whatever the cause of each extramarital act, mistresses and multiple romantic partners are here to stay, scientists say.

Sowing seeds

From an evolutionary perspective, men are here to sow their seeds. They desire more sexual partners and even lower their standards when it comes to one-night stands, studies have shown.

"Guys would naturally be more promiscuous if given the opportunity,"said Daniel Kruger, a social and evolutionary psychologist at the University of Michigan's School of Public Health.

(I would disagree, there is far more evidence that the large majority of men and women have evolved to be monogamous and focused on normal and parental and family behavior.  The attempt to normalize addictive behavior is a bit of blowback from the moralizing and personality explanations.  Tiff)

Add status and power to the mix and extramarital affairs are par for the course.

"These people are not only high in power, but also somebody like Tiger Woods is going to be traveling a lot and have a lot more opportunities to meet women," Kruger said. "Women fawn over these guys."

(Both genders fawn over high-resource potential reproduction mates.  With men, the resources are those that can be mobilized for childcare: mainly money and status.  With women, it's "sexy" appearance which signals the ability to pop out many healthy children.  Same is true for most species.  Why moralize about it?  Tiff)

Guys can get a biochemical boost as levels of testosterone increase when they, say, win an election or a big tournament, Kruger said.

(I believe the main boost is dopamine.  Not sure on testosterone, which I believe is mainly genetically set and sets the energy devoted to physicallity.  Tiff)

"It's like if they're put on top of the pedestal, they will feel these surges of power and higher levels of testosterone are associated with more promiscuous mating and with more success in attracting partners,"

Kruger said. "From the individual guy's perspective not only is he going to feel a greater urge, guys in general desire more sexual variety."

(A dopamine receptor deficit creates a continual sense of starving for the normal level of good feelings.  This is a constant physiological emergency alarm going off.   The body cannot ignore these feelings and they take precedence over "conscious" control.  Tiff)

The illusionof control
Celebrities and big politicians can have an inflated sense of control over their lives and feelings of invincibility.

 Tiger Woods "has an incredible sense of control in every aspect of his life," Reynolds said, including what tournaments he plays in, his schedule and sponsors. "Why shouldn't he be able to control who knows about his personal life and the reactions people have to it?"

This illusion of control, Reynolds added, mixed with lots of optimism can be a dangerous mix. "When he walks into a tournament he is fully optimistic that he is going to win, with his past as his cue," Reynolds said. "Why shouldn't he win this one." Reynolds said in the back of

Woods' mind, he may have thought, "Of course I'm going to have a beautiful wife, and of course I'm going to be able to do these things on the side and nobody is going to find out."

Another word for this optimism might be "arrogance."

(Ooops, value and moral judgment slipped in with rhetorical tool.  Tiff)

"A serious occupational hazard of being a celebrity is arrogance, to think you are better than the next guy, special, entitled, above common issues," said Joel Block, a psychologist specializing in love, relationships and sexuality. "How else to explain Tiger's reckless behavior? Did he really think that none of these women would talk about their liaisons? His fame and acclamation clouded his judgment."

Relationship Trouble?
Generalizations about men and women only go so far when trying to explain unfaithful behavior. On the individual level, various other driving forces come into play, including specifics of the relationship and personalities involved.

(Not the brain!? This also confuses correlation with causality.  If someone has sex addiction, or any addiction, their personal relationships are going to be severely troubled.  By definition, that is the a main symptom of any brain disorder along with self-harming behavior.  If your brain has a disorder, social relationships are going to be a problem.  That is the defining symptom!  Tiff)

For instance, narcissists — or those who are completely self-absorbed, relatively arrogant and have less empathy — are more likely to stray from spouses for a fling. "It's also possible that a lot of the rich and famous guys are not only high status, but they're probably fairly high on narcissism, so they basically feel entitled to affairs," Josephs said.

Some might wonder if the celebrities who got caught were having marital trouble and that motivated the cheating. Yes and no, say scientists.

"Cheating occurs for many reasons, consequently it is difficult to make a blanket statement about a marriage based on infidelity," said Block, author of "Broken Promises, Mended Hearts: Maintaining Trust in Love Relationships" (McGraw-Hill, 2001). "For example, infidelity may be driven by a need for an ego boost or a distraction to avoid personal issues or sexual curiosity."

Some relationship reasons might include hostility toward a partner or as a means of diluting the intensity of intimacy with one's partner, Block said.

The woman's role

Like any affair, Woods and Edwards didn't go it solo. Even if the mistresses or romantic others weren't officially taken, they may have known these celebs were. So why did they jump into the sack with married men?

"If women are considering someone to have a sexual affair with — if he's not going to bring a long-term investment — it's high-quality genes," Kruger said. "Somebody like Tiger Woods, he's young and attractive and he's athletic and incredibly high status; it makes him the perfect candidate for a short-term affair."

And statistics suggest that while men do cheat more often than women, the ladies do cheat.

(Duh!  Who else would the men be cheating with?  Tiff)

It should be noted that the prevalence of marital infidelity and extramarital sex varies widely depending on the definition of infidelity used and the survey referenced, ranging from about 10 percent of couples to more than half. Josephs estimates that in the United States, 20 percent to 40 percent of married men cheat, andsome 15 percent to 30 percent of women do the same.

(This is just silly.  If this were true, family based society would collapse.  It is very rare to find any kind of mental illness or -asocial behavior to be greater than 10%.  Usually it's in the low single digit. Tiff)

But they do so for different reasons.

"When men cheat it is typically about sex," Block said in an e-mail interview. "When women cheat it is more likely a trade-off — sex in exchange for attention, emotional support and regaining the feeling of being special."

(Women's hormonal and brain structure differences would makes this more diverse indeed.  Younger women are hyper-focused on childcare.  The "cougar" pop phenomena is interesting in so far as it highlights a middle-aged woman's changing drives after childcare is done.  Here too, it seems dopamine triggered by sex can be a driving force as well.  Tiff)

Block added, "This is not to imply that it's all about sex for men, or that it has nothing to do with sex for women, only that the drivers are usually different."

Women may have more reason not to cheat. "For women it might be even more risky to cheat, because guys are naturally suspicious. Guys have a higher tendency to be jealous and to suspect infidelity because they don't want to be cuckolded so they're going to be hypersensitive," Kruger said. Essentially, they don't want to put their resources into raising some other guy's progeny, at least from an evolutionary perspective.

High morals and hypocrisy

Cheating may seem particularly wrong when it involves someone like Edwards, who touted family values. But from what research has shown, morality doesn't preclude indiscretion.  Power can make a person stricter in moral judgment of others while being less strict of their own behavior, new research suggests.

To simulate an experience of power, Joris Lammers of Tilburg University in The Netherlands and colleagues assigned roles of high-power, such as prime minister, and low-power positions, such as a civil servant, to participants. The participants were then presented with moral dilemmas.

Results showed that compared with low-power individuals, high-power participants judged others more strictly for speeding, dodging taxes and keeping a stolen bike, while finding it more acceptable to engage in these behaviors themselves.

The underlying cause is three-pronged, according to the study team, which also included Tilburg University's Diederik Stapel and Adam Galinsky of the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University.  Power makes people more egocentric, and so they focus on their own needs; power reduces a person's ability to take on the perspective of others; and power makes people feel psychologically invisible.

"They become unaware that their behavior can be observed by others,"   Galinsky said.  One example would be Gov. Sanford, who voted to impeach President Bill Clinton for his transgression, and then this year admitted to cheating on his wife with a woman from Argentina, Galinsky added.

The power must be legit, however. Another experiment in this study found that people who don't feel personally entitled to their power are actually harder on themselves than they are on others. The research will be published in a forthcoming issue of the journal Psychological Science.

Perhaps we don't think of extramarital affairs as moral transgressions.   "Humans are complicated," Kruger said.

(Less and less so as we learn more about other primates and mammals. Tiff)

"For most people we don't say we're good or evil. We have these conflicting desires, because we always have all these different challenges based on differences on what would be best for our own reproductive success and that of our partners and families."

At the end of the day, it comes down to choice, Kruger says.

(Certainly the easiest way to make sense of this kind of illness and by far the popular explanation.  Not useful for fixing the illness or managing consequences though. Tiff)

"As far as the personal decisions go it's not like we're forced to do this. It's not like our genes are steering the wheel. It's a choice Tiger and others have made," Kruger said.

(His steering wheel analogy is a good one but wrong.  Having a brain disorder is just like having a broken steering wheel.  Tiff)

He added, "Even though we're talking about evolutionary bases for psychology and we do have these aggregate differences I think there is what most people think of as free will. We have a choice in these matters and we aren't genetically determined to go one way or another."

(If someone has a brain disorder, do they have choice?  There are two separate issues here:

-  Choice based on a disordered brain

-  Holding individuals, of any species, accountable for their behavior.  Of course.  There is no other way to live. Tiff)

 

 

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