Online Dating Magazine > Online Dating News > Married and Online Dating
UF Study: Online Dating is Virtually
Irresistable to Married People(July 17, 2003 - GAINESVILLE, Fla.) Oh,
what a tangled Web is weaved as rapidly growing numbers
of married people sneak into Internet chat
rooms for romantic or sexual thrills they think they
aren't getting from their spouses, a new University
of Florida study finds.
"Never before has the dating world been so handy
for married men and women looking for a fling," said
Beatriz Avila Mileham, who conducted the research for
her doctoral dissertation in counselor education at
UF. "With cybersex, there is no longer any need
for secret trips to obscure motels. An online liaison
may even take place in the same room with one's spouse."
In the words of one 41-year-old man in the study, "All
I have to do is turn on my computer, and I have thousands
of women to choose from. (It) can't get any easier
than that."
Counseling organizations report chat rooms are the
fastest-rising cause of relationship breakdowns, and
the problem only stands to get worse as today's population
of Internet users, estimated at 649 million worldwide,
continues to grow, Mileham said.
"The Internet will soon become the most common
form of infidelity, if it isn't already," she
said.
Unlike some fatal attractions, a simple click of a
mouse button ends contact – should the person
want to break it off – without any explanations
or apologies, she said.
In 2002, Mileham conducted in-depth online interviews
with 76 men and 10 women, ages 25 to 66, who used Yahoo's "Married
and Flirting" or Microsoft's "Married But
Flirting," Internet chat rooms geared specifically
for married people. The study's participants, who represented
every state, included stay-at-home mothers, construction
workers, engineers, nurses and presidents of large
corporations. Some went online for a quick "sex
fix," while others established more meaningful
connections where they talked about personal problems,
marital issues and things like that, Mileham said.
Others hoped to have a real-life affair. Still others
wanted to engage in cybersex, exchanging sexual fantasies
with someone while masturbating, she said.
The vast majority said they loved their spouses but
sought an erotic encounter online because of boredom,
a partner's lack of sexual interest or the need for
variety and fun, Mileham said.
"I'm not going to cheat," wrote one married
man. "I'm just capturing back some of those butterflies
we feel when we're young and start flirting and dating."
"The No. 1 complaint from men was lack of sex
in the marriage," Mileham said. "Many of
them said their wife was so involved in childrearing
that she wasn't interested in having sex." Because
there is no touching involved in online chat conversations,
married people often rationalize their behavior as
harmless fun, Mileham said. Eighty-three percent of
the study's participants said they did not consider
themselves to be cheating, and the remaining 17 percent
deemed it a "weak" form of infidelity that
was easily justifiable, she said.
Other research has shown, however, that most spouses
feel as betrayed, angry and hurt by online infidelity
as they would if skin-to-skin adultery had taken place,
she said.
The UF study found an escalating quality to these
online contacts. Many reported that what started as
innocent, friendly exchanges progressed quickly to
strong desires for sexual relationships, she said.
Twenty-six of the 86 study participants went on to
meet the person whom they had been engaged in an online
relationship with, and of these, all but two ended
up having a real-life affair. One 66-year-old man ended
up having 13 affairs this way, she said.
Research shows that more males than females use chat
rooms, said Mileham, who found it difficult to get
women to respond to her survey. Females are usually
bombarded with messages and can pick and choose which
messages they respond to, she said.
Al Cooper, a leading expert in the field of Internet
sexuality and the author of the book "Sex and
the Internet: A Guidebook for Clinicians," said
Mileham's research is important in helping to understand
this increasingly common phenomenon.
"We are hearing from therapists around the country
reporting online sexual activity to be a major cause
of marital problems," Cooper said. "We need
to better understand the contributing factors if we
are going to be able to warn people about the slippery
slope that starts with online flirting and too often
ends in divorce."
With the exception of two of the study's participants,
all hid their online activities from their spouses,
often "chatting" after their husbands or
wives had gone to sleep, Mileham said. But some used
this form of effortless escapism while their spouse
was in the room, she said.
Said one such man, "While I'm on the computer
my wife just assumes I'm writing a report for work." Another
man said his wife, who knew what he was doing and didn't
like it, looked over his shoulder sometimes while he
was typing, Mileham said.
Much of the Internet's appeal to married people is
the anonymity it guarantees, coupled with the no-touching
aspect, which they view as a license to be sexual,
Mileham said. One can reveal the most intimate emotional
and sexual details to an unseen stranger at any time
of the day or night, she said.
Several participants indicated they divulged more
about themselves to online partners than to their wives
or husbands. "We started chatting about life,
our marriage, what we like to eat, what sexual positions
we like the best," wrote one man to Mileham. "I
felt like I've known her in another life."
Mileham believes the time has come for the Internet
to become as essential a part of pre-marital discussions
as is whether or not to have children. "To prevent
future problems, young couples, as well as long-term
committed couples, need to talk about what role the
Internet will play in their relationship."
> Perfectmatch.com - The best approach to find the one.
<
All
Online Dating Magazine content, including the content on this page,
is ©
copyright by Online Dating Magazine and may
not be
republished or reused in any form. You do have
full permission to link to this article.
Do you agree or disagree with this
article? Have
more to add? Submit a Letter
to the Editor today or post a comment below.
|