Tracy Schorn
Tracy Schorn is an American cartoonist, former journalist, book author, blogger known as "Chump Lady", and founder of the online community known as "Chump Nation", made up of survivors of infidelity. One reporter noted, "For cheaters, there's Ashley Madison. For the cheated upon, there's Tracy Schorn".
Career
Schorn was the state news editor at the AARP Bulletin and has written for AARP, Smithsonian, and Reader's Digest. Her criticism of the term "conscious uncoupling" was noted by The New York Times.Schorn has been forging a new narrative about infidelity that champions self-respect and self-care for those cheated on. Schorn believes infidelity is abuse, and uses straight talk, snarky cartoons and humorous terms like "schmoopie" and "spackling" to affirm her motto "Leave a cheater, gain a life". Her own experience as a "chump" inspired her choice to focus on infidelity and the "reconciliation industrial complex" as her subject matter. She has written about therapists and their "dual accountability" fallacy. She recommends acknowledging and learning from mistakes as part of coping with heartbreak. She says affair partners "need the triangle, the unwitting chump, to give their affair the frisson of danger".
Schorn advises cheated-on parents to remain respectful of their child's love for the cheating parent, but to give truthful, age-appropriate reasons for separation and divorce.
She advises the 'other woman' to confess to the cheated-on partner, arguing "the least you can do is return a little of their dignity and tell the truth".
Schorn's podcast with Sarah Gorrell is called "Tell Me How You're Mighty".
Tracy Schorn's blog, Chump Nation was credited in the acknowledgment of Liars, by Sarah Manguso
Schorn has blogged about both public figures glamorizing infidelity and public figures engaging in extramarital affairs.