Monday, April 13, 2020
Internet Users Turn Addicts Essays (946 words) -
  Internet Users turn Addicts    Matchmaker.com: Sign up now for a free trial. Date Smarter!    Internet Users  turn Addicts    If you're an Internet user, you know who  you are. They are among all of us in society, although many may choose  to not acknowledge that they too, frequently use the Internet. As I sit  here and look across the street, I see a man in front of his own computer;  the screen glowing against the window behind him. He does not use his personal  computer for work, he is a farmer. He has become what is known as an "Internet    Junky".    The addiction begins innocently. At the  start, you are not even aware of the possibilities that may form from your  excessive computer use. You begin to take an avid interest in e-mailing  with your friends and family. Once the novelty of keeping in touch with  your colleagues wears off, and researching starts to bore you, you may  possibly expand your computer usage to chatting. Yes, chatting. It is something  that is becoming more acceptable in our lives, but it is still looked down  upon by many skeptics. Chatting through the Internet involves choosing  an appropriate nickname for yourself (IE: Fisherman), and then finding  a room where you feel compelled to spend time in. Once you've entered the  room, other fellow chatters may say, "Hello...a/s/l (age/sex/location)  please."    And so begins the addiction. Once you become  involved in meeting people online, it is difficult to break such a habit.    You may even make a daily habit of it. People have been found to carry  out exactly the same behavior, not only across the nation, but across the  globe. In any one room, you may come across people from five different  countries of the world. Granted, not everyone who stays online for hours  on end, are enveloped in chatting, but it is more often then not, the cause  for Internet Addiction Disorder (IAD). (Goldberg, MD)    The prevalence of Internet Addiction Disorder  has been increasing in number, hence a support group, among many, The Internet    Addiction Support Group (IASG) has been developed. IAD, a "maladaptive"  pattern for Internet use, is leading to impairment and/or distress caused  by three (or more) of the following, at any time in a period of one year:    "A) A need for markedly increased amounts of time on Internet to achieve  satisfaction, B) Markedly diminished effect with continued use of the same  amount of time on Internet.", C) Reduction in Internet use which has been  prolonged. (Goldberg, MD)    Symptoms of Internet Addiction Disorder  include: "A) Psychomotor agitation, B) anxiety, C) obsessive thinking about  what is happening on Internet, D) fantasies or dreams about Internet, E)  voluntary or involuntary typing movements of the fingers." These symptoms  begin to cause conflict in "social, occupational, or another important  area of functioning." People who become addicted, use the Internet to relieve  or avoid withdrawal symptoms, which are similar to those brought on by  the halt of drug use. The disorder is recognized by the "persistent desire"  or "unsuccessful efforts" to minimize the Internet use. (Goldberg, MD)    On June 14, 1998, ABC news reported that  an "Internet crazed" Cincinnati woman was arrested for neglecting her three  young children. The woman reportedly spent 12 hours straight online, while  her hungry kids were locked away in a room so she could be online without  interruption. (Associated Press)    The Internet is rapidly becoming an addictive  source to a lot of its users. Use of the Internet include: students, housewives,  and business professionals. Some of these users spend a minimum of thirty-eight  hours per week on the "net"; hence, losing touch with reality and reeking  havoc on their studies, family lives, and even their careers. Based on  level of addiction, there are three groups of Internet addicts: A) the    "I'm-not-addicted-users", B) the "I-only-use-it-when-I-have-to-users",  and C) the "Internet Junkies." (netaddiction.com)    The "I'm not addicted users" are those  who try to convince themselves that they are not addicted to the Internet.    This group includes college students who don't go online during the day  to prove to fellow classmates that they can do without getting online;  only, to stay up all night in a chat room. College students are not the  only people who fit in this category though. In general, these users are  addicts but portray themselves otherwise in the presence of people. The    "I only use it when I have to users", are those who make convenient excuses  to go online. And finally, the "Internet Junkies" are unlike the addicts  in the previous two groups, these users neither sneak online nor make excuses  to get online. They put their lives on hold while    
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