Partnering Online

July 29, 2016   •  Posted in: 

Recent technology has presented us with a new, potentially devastating forum for inappropriately sexualized relationships. The Internet with its anonymity and wide-open content can tempt us to cross physical and sexual boundaries.

On the Internet, relationships are formed and reinforced daily over e-mail, on bulletin boards, and in the thousands of chat rooms available for anyone with a modem connection and little time to spend. Accessibility, anonymity, and lack of accountability on the Internet make it fertile ground for nurturing sexual content.

Over the Internet, it is now possible to carry on a sexually explicit, verbal “affair” with another person while you sit in the privacy of your own home with your family watching television in the next room. With just a click of the mouse, you can send your messages to another person. By the use of a private password, you, and only you, can access your e-mail. With just a little bit of care, no one else in your house need know what you are really doing when you stay up until three o’clock in the morning.

Over the Internet, you don’t have to give out any information about yourself. Your anonymity is complete. Communicate by screen name, refrain from mentioning any physical details about where you live, and no one can find you unless you want to be found. Divulge too much on e-mail, and all you need to do is change your e-mail address. Any inquiries to your old address will come back to whoever sent them as “non-deliverable mail.” It is completely possible to keep details of your life private.

Online you can even make up details of your life. The other person has no way to know whether you are telling the truth. The temptation to construct a fantasy personality within which to hide on the Internet seems to be tremendous now. Once consigned to fantasy and shielded from accountability for what we write or think, many of our fantasies tend to meld with the sexual. Hidden, anonymous, we can say whatever we really want, and no one will gasp in shock or shake their head at us disapprovingly.

Securely anonymous, many people find themselves conducting conversations over the Internet of a highly personal and, sexual nature. Many people log on to the Internet primarily to indulge in sexual parlays. Plenty of people online are looking for another person to engage in highly sexual chat-room conversation. Some of these people have become so enamoured of each other that they have actually left spouses to initiate physical relationships with the cyber-lovers they met online.

Priorities have a way of becoming skewed. The urgent transcends the important. The flashy overshadows the ordinary. The mysterious clouds the mundane. Think about relationships you have and the important you are giving them. Ask yourself:

  • Have you ever considered a coworker from a sexual point of view? If so, who is that person? Write down the name.
  • As you review your current relationships, do you have a sense that you are being pursued by someone at work? Have you found yourself in a compromising situation where you felt uncomfortable?
  • Are you the type of person who enjoys the attention, then approval of members of the opposite sex?
  • Do you enjoy flirting with people you find personally attractive?

It can be difficult to recognize when you have strayed over a boundary and ventured into an inappropriate relationship. It can be difficult to admit that someone else you respect and have trusted is viewing you through a sexual lens. It can be difficult to find the courage to reestablish boundaries, whether it is you or someone else who has neglected those boundaries.

Recognizing a danger is the first step to avoiding it.  

Authored by Dr. Gregory Jantz, founder of The Center • A Place of HOPE  and author of 35 books. Pioneering whole-person care nearly 30 years ago, Dr. Jantz has dedicated his life’s work to creating possibilities for others, and helping people change their lives for good. The Center • A Place of HOPE, located on the Puget Sound in Edmonds, Washington, creates individualized programs to treat behavioral and mental health issues, including eating disorders, addiction, depression, anxiety and others.

 

Dr. Gregory Jantz

Pioneering Whole Person Care over thirty years ago, Dr. Gregory Jantz is an innovator in the treatment of mental health. He is a best-selling author of over 45 books, and a go-to media authority on behavioral health afflictions, appearing on CBS, ABC, NBC, Fox, and CNN. Dr. Jantz leads a team of world-class, licensed, and...

Read More

Related Posts

Is Caffeine Addictive?

By: Dr. Gregory Jantz  •  June 12, 2018

Generally, when people talk about caffeine, they’re talking about caffeinated drinks, such as coffee, tea, and soda. But caffeine is also found in chocolate and foods that use chocolate or coffee as flavorings, including ice cream and yogurt. People aren’t always aware of the amount of caffeine in some of...

The Role of Spirituality in Recovery from Addiction

By: Dr. Gregory Jantz  •  October 9, 2014

Overcoming the stronghold of addiction is an intense and rigorous process. Research has shown that people who regularly integrate spiritual practices in their life are less likely to relapse into alcohol and drugs.

How to break The Addiction Cycle

By: John Williams  •  November 10, 2019

The Addiction Cycle Do you ever sit reading your phone, reach for that second cookie and then sit baffled and disappointed when you discover it's gone? You don't remember eating it! You were acting on automatic pilot.  Something similar is true with any bad habit or addiction. Whether it is...

Get Started Now

"*" indicates required fields

Name*
Main Concerns*
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Whole Person Care

The whole person approach to treatment integrates all aspects of a person’s life:

  • Emotional well-being
  • Physical health
  • Spiritual peace
  • Relational happiness
  • Intellectual growth
  • Nutritional vitality