Women hooked on cybersex

Find out if your partner could be addicted to online sex

By Kathryn Dorrell

When Bob Timberland* was approached by a friend who asked him to install software on her computer to block her habitual use of sex websites, the computer programmer was stunned. Timberland hadn't thought of women as being users (let alone abusers) of cybersex. And his friend -- a professional who seemed to lead a healthy and ordinary life -- certainly didn't appear to fit the bill of an individual who was struggling with Internet sex addiction. Yet, according to stats published in In the Shadows of the Net (Hazelden Publishing & Educational Services, 2001) about 40 per cent of individuals addicted to cybersex are women -- women of all ages and backgrounds.

What is cybersex?
Cybersex is the use of graphic, online sexual material. It runs the gamut from viewing pornographic photographs and downloading and watching pornographic movies online, to having sexually explicit chats that often simulate sex with other Internet users, and using web cams that allow you to request the live performance of sex acts.

"Women tend to be more likely to be hooked on cybersex that includes conversation and some modicum of relationship," says Dr. Marion Goertz, a registered marriage and family therapist in Toronto. "They still want to know and be known to some degree; whereas men often report liking the anonymity of response to a visual form with no interest in knowing any personal data about the person's image they are using for purposes of stimulation."

Why do women use it?
"Women access Internet porn sites for either information or gratification," says Dr. Goertz. "The anonymity of the Internet allows them to explore, connect and be informed in a private, controlled setting. This doesn't mean that they will pursue any of the options presented but they want to be more in control of their sexual experiences."

Studies show that, over time and through repeated use, the use of cybersex provides an emotional or mental escape -- even a "high" -- and this is when the behaviour can become a compulsion. This is evident when women continue to spend time on sex sites even though they know their job productivity is slipping and their behaviour puts them at risk of being fired, their relationships with family and friends are suffering and they are spending more money or going into debt to download pornography from the Internet.

* fictional name was used

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