
Cybersexual Addiction has become a specific sub-type of Internet addiction.
It has been estimated that 1 in 5 Internet addicts are engaged in some
form of on-line sexual activity (primarily viewing cyberporn and/or engaging
in cybersex). Early studies show that men are more likely to view cyberporn,
while women are more likely to engage in erotic chat.
Warning Signs of Cybersexual
Addiction:
- Routinely spending significant amounts of time in chat rooms and private
messaging with the sole purpose of finding cybersex.
- Feeling preoccupied with using the Internet to find on-line sexual
partners.
- Frequently using anonymous communication to engage in sexual fantasies
not typically carried out in real-life.
- Anticipating your next on-line session with the expectation that you
will find sexual arousal or gratification.
- Finding that you frequently move from cybersex to phone sex (or even
real-life meetings).
- Hiding your on-line interactions from your significant other.
- Feeling guilt or shame from your on-line use.
- Accidentally being aroused by cybersex at first, and now find that
you actively seek it out when you log on-line.
- Masturbating while on-line while engaged in erotic chat.
- Less investment with your real-life sexual partner only to prefer cybersex
as a primary form of sexual gratification.
People who suffer from low self-esteem,
a severely distorted body image, untreated sexual dysfunction, or a prior
sexual addiction are more at risk to develop cybersexual addictions.
In particular, sex addicts often turn to the Internet as a new and safe
sexual outlet to fulfill their compulsions without the expense of costly
900-lines, the fear of being seen at an adult bookstore, or the fear of
disease among prostitutes.
Understanding what
makes Cybersex addictive.
Sexual compulsivity over the Internet is not just a result of deviant
individuals engaged in acting out, but with remarkable speed, the mental
health field has witnessed those with no prior criminal or psychiatric
history engaged in such behavior online. The ACE Model of Cybersexual Addiction
is used to explain how the Internet creates a cultural climate of permissiveness
that actually serves to encourage and validate sexually deviant behavior.
The ACE Model examines the Anonymity of online interactions
that serves to increase the likelihood of the behavior, the Convenience
of cyberporn and sexually-oriented chat rooms making it easily available
to users, and finally, the Escape from mental tension
derived from the experience which serves to reinforce the behavior leading
to compulsivity.
The anonymity of electronic transactions provides
the user with a greater sense of perceived control over the content, tone,
and nature of the online sexual experience. Unlike real life sexual experiences,
a woman can quickly change partners if her cyber-lover isn't very good
or a man can log off after his orgasm without any long good-byes. What
if a man privately wondered what it would be like to have sex with another
man? What if a woman always wanted to try bondage? Within the anonymous
context of cyberspace, conventional messages about sex are eliminated allowing
users to play out hidden or repressed sexual fantasies in a private lab,
without the fear of being caught. For anyone who has ever been curious
about bondage, group sex, urination, homosexuality, or cross-dressing,
cybersex offers a private, safe, and anonymous way to explore those fantasies.
Therefore, individuals are more likely to sexually experiment as online
users feel encouraged to engage in their adult fantasies and validated
by the acceptance of the cyberspace culture.
This leads to the second variable of the ACE Model, the convenience
of cyberporn and adult chat sites provides an immediately available vehicle
to easily fall into compulsive patterns of online use. Industry estimates
that 9.6 million users, or about 15% of all Web users, logged on to the
10 most popular sex sites in the month of April 1998 alone. There are an
estimated 70,000 sex-related Web site with 200 new adult web sites that
include pornography and interactive chat rooms are being added per day
(Swhartz, 1998). The proliferation of sexually oriented chat rooms provides
a mechanism that encourages a persons initial exploration. A curious
husband or wife may secretly step into the "Dominance and Submission
Room", the "Fetish Room", or the "Bisexual Room",
only to be initially shocked at the erotic dialogue, but at the same time,
sexually stimulated by it. The ease of availability serves to promote sexual
experimentation among those who normally would not engage in such behavior.
The most vulnerable individuals seem to be those who suffer from low self-esteem,
a severely distorted body image, untreated sexual dysfunction, or a prior
sexual addiction.
Many people may automatically believe that the primary reinforcement
of the online sexual act is the sexual gratification received from the
experience. Studies have shown that sexual stimulation may initially be
the reason to engage in cybersex, however, over time, the experience if
reinforced through a type of drug "high" that provides an emotional
or mental escape or an altered state of reality.
For example, a lonely woman suddenly feels desired by her many cyber-partners
or a sexually insecure man transforms into a hot cyberlover that all the
women in the chat room want. The experience not only provides sexual fulfillment,
but allows a subjective mental escape achieved through the development
of an online fantasy life where a person can adopt a new persona and online
identity. The courts have already argued the role of online compulsivity
as a mental disorder in the defense of online sexual deviancy cases. For
example, one landmark case, the United States versus McBroom, successfully
demonstrated that the clients downloading, viewing, and transferring
of Internet pornography was less about erotic gratification and more about
an emotional escape mechanism to relieve mental tension.
Gender significantly influences
the way men and women view cybersex. Women prefer cybersex because
it hides their physical appearance, removes the social stigma that women shouldn't
enjoy sex, and allows them a safe means to concentrate on
their sexuality in new, uninhibited ways. Men prefer cybersex because
it removes performance anxiety that may be underlying problems with premature
ejaculation or impotence and it also hides their physical appearance for
men who feel insecure about hair loss, penis size, or weight gain.
Treatment for Cybersexual
Addiction:
If cybersex has impacted a significant relationship, then click on the
link to learn more about our exclusive new booklet: Infidelity
Online: An Effective Guide for Rebuilding Your Relationship after
a Cyberaffair.
If you and your marriage have already been hurt by Cybersexual addiction,
then read Caught in the Net,
the first and only recovery book on Internet addiction
to help rebuild your relationship.
-
If you need immediate help, please contact our Virtual
Clinic to receive email or live chat counseling sessions.
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