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#2 - JRL 2006-189 - JRL Home
RIA Novosti
August 21, 2006
Russia gets addicted to the Internet
Moscow. (Vladimir Dedenevsky, RIA Novosti)-There are people who go online
only to make money, or find lucrative business proposals and inexpensive goods
and services. They regard all talk about pathological Internet dependency, which
has swept tens of millions of users, as utter nonsense. The same is true of
those who browse for hours just for lack of something better to do during boring
office hours. They shut down the hateful computer as soon as the clock strikes 6
p.m. I'm not talking about these pragmatics, cynics, or lazy bones. Strictly
speaking, they are lucky. They belong to the half of Internet users for whom
close contact with computer technologies has not become a dire physical and
mental necessity. A lot of people keep Internet journals, share impressions with
other users, e-mail their soul mates, look for useful information, learn, joke,
and play without any damage to their real life. They even benefit from what the
Internet has to offer. But this does not apply to all users. The other half
cannot boast self-possession or perfect mental health.
This is what a Moscow "Internetoholic" told the Novye Izvestia newspaper
about his withdrawal pains: "During the first day, I felt like something was
missing, but it wasn't so bad. I could attribute my bad mood to foul weather,
and irritability to lack of sleep. On the second day, I was craving for new
information, but I could get it from TV. I had time to look through the mail
which had arrived in the last few weeks, and take the time to reply to it. On
the third day, I felt much worse, craving to hear the beeping ICQ. The barometer
of my mood was in between storm and hurricane. The crisis reached its peak on
the fourth day. My apartment was filled with loose papers, books, compact discs,
and other trash. My tension had hit its highest point, and I was dying to relax.
On the fifth day, I lapsed into deep apathy, which lasted until I went online."
Is this enthusiasm or sickness? Russian psychotherapist Vladimir Yesaulov has
raised this question and answered it: this is a sickness which is turning into
an epidemic in Russia. It threatens 15 million people - about half of all
Russian Internet users. The United States and Western Europe, which were swept
by an Internet epidemic a decade ago, have psychotherapy centers where doctors
have been treating Internet addicts for several years now. American
cyber-psychologist Dr. Kimberly S. Young, who was one of the first to address
the subject, claims that there are four symptoms of Internet dependency. An
addict is a person who has a craving to check e-mail, constantly wants to go
online again, whose family is displeased with his or her being glued to the
computer, and complains about growing Internet-related expenses. A feeling of
euphoria, and a desire to escape problems in real life make some people spend
hours at websites and in chat rooms.
One of Yesaulov's patients, a Muscovite named Yelena, told Novye Izvestia: "I
spend several hours a day keeping a diary on Zhivoy Zhurnal (Live Journal). But
it feels strange - I seem to be talking to people, giving them compliments, and
discussing philosophy, but when I leave the computer, my head is empty, and I'm
very sorry about the lost time."
"I have a 28-year-old married patient who was searching the web for her ideal
man," Yesaulov recalls. "Her virtual love affairs immediately turned into real
ones, and ended in failure in no time. Beautiful, smart, but childishly
self-centered, the woman was losing her sense of proportion, thinking that a
noble goal justified everything. As a result, her marriage ended in divorce."
Web pornography deserves special discussion. On average, porno accounts for a
third of all global traffic. Cynics claim that if hard porn disappeared from the
web, the world Internet industry would go down the drain. This is, of course, an
exaggeration, but it has long been known that more often than not pornography
seriously threatens the well-being of the user's family life. It is possible to
protect children to some extent by introducing passwords and limiting their
access to porn sites. But some adults are stuck to them like iron to a magnet.
Dr. Yesaulov said that very often his patients lapse into cyber-sexual
dependence - they cannot resist visiting porno sites or starting virtual
romances. An adult man compares photos of naked beauties to his wife and grows
bitterly disenchanted. As a result, he loses interest in her and his libido
weakens. But this is not the only damage. From time to time, the Russian press
reports on the ruined careers of officials, clerks, and even military men who
were caught by their superiors looking at porno sites during office hours.
Novye Izvestia explains why Internet addicts go on the web: 37% of constant
users spend their time in chat rooms, forums, and diaries; 28% play online
games; 15% take part in teleconferences; and 13% check e-mail. It is easy to see
that very few of them use the web as a source of information or an encyclopedia.
Will Russians manage to avoid Internet addiction or will Yesaulov's gloomy
forecasts become reality? There are reasons for optimism. The U.S. and Western
Europe, which have more computers per capita than Russia, have managed to solve
the problem. We can do without repeating the mistakes of others.
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