Cheating is a violation of loyalty to someone or something. The concept of what treason is is different for everyone, because the line that separates treason from acceptable behavior, everyone sets for himself.
Instructions
Step 1
Treason to the Motherland
In the Soviet Union, there was a type of especially dangerous state crime called "treason". Treason to the Motherland was understood as an act deliberately committed by a citizen of the USSR to the detriment of the state. It could be espionage, the issuance of state secrets to a foreign state, flight abroad, a conspiracy to seize power. Important components of betrayal of the Motherland are intent and harm caused to the Motherland. Negligence (unintentional) actions or actions that did not cause harm to the Motherland were not considered treason to the Motherland.
Step 2
Adultery
Most often, adultery is understood as adultery. Adultery is a violation of fidelity to a spouse, manifested in one form or another. In the minds of every person there is a "standard" of adultery. What is considered treason, and what is not, is determined by the person himself, and it depends on many factors: upbringing, religious views, moral and ethical foundations, social environment, and other factors.
Step 3
Components of adultery
There are three components to the concept of adultery: sexual, emotional, and financial.
Many people (especially men) see cheating primarily as a sexual aspect. For them, infidelity is extramarital sexual relations, entering into intimacy with someone else.
Hobbies, feelings, attachments, fantasies about another person - all this has to do with the emotional component of betrayal.
The financial component of treason can be understood as spending money from the family budget on extramarital affairs. There are many options for spending money on lovers. These can be gifts, trips to a restaurant, tickets to the theater, or direct financial "help".
Step 4
Cheating yourself
You can change not only your homeland and your spouse, but also yourself, your convictions, principles, views. Most often, a person changes his principles under the pressure of the company in which he is located. When a convinced teetotaler drinks, succumbing to the persuasion of friends, he is cheating on himself.