CYBERPALS/CYBERLOVE :
WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN FOR LESBIANS? PART 1
by Martha Pearse, Ph.D.
For those of you who may be wondering, there is
a new class of Haves and Have Nots in the world: Those who have or do not
have...a life online.
For the uninitiated or unaddicted, a life online
means you have friends/lover(s)/ s or even business in cyberspace. Let's
do business another time. For now, let's talk about the fun stuff, the women's
hangouts.
If you have much of a life online, and you have
non-online friends (what a concept), there may be a conflict already. If you
have a lover/partner IRT [in real time] and a sweetie or close friends online,
you are more than likely in or about to be in big trouble. Especially if the
IRT folks and the cyberfolks do not care much for each other.
Online relationships have an intensity and at
times a seductiveness that is unparalleled in 3D, unless, of course, you have
just fallen in love. Okay, some would call it addiction. So in the spirit of
scholarly endeavor, this being a high class publication, it would be well to
examine the psychology of these involvements. Because sooner or later more of
you than not will experience them.
Lets consider this on three levels: friendship,
flirting, and romance. But before we get to the lurid details, let's see what
they all have in common, i.e. that this whole scenario is done without visual
cues.
Now, IRT, those of us who are sighted make split
second judgments upon meeting other people. We notice their gender, ethnicity,
age, size, perceived similarities and dissimilarities. Sometimes we have
instant opinions about whether the other person is attractive/unattractive,
good/bad, interesting/boring, etc. We use our senses of sight, smell, hearing,
and of course then we filter it through the psychological baggage we all carry
around.
This is not necessarily a great system, but it's
what most of us use for starters. The wisest among us will reserve further
judgment until something more illuminating comes out of human interaction --
say, kindness, character, intelligence, and/or talent. Some, of course, don't
bother taking that kind of time out of their day.
In cyberspace, all that's available is the
written word. It is a medium in which the verbally gifted have a decided early
advantage. Those who are less fortunate, however, still have plenty of chances
to join the action and ultimately they have as much opportunity to display their
character and talents as anyone else.
In the most benevolent psychological sense, it
is a gold mine. To be able to be who you are without worrying that someone will
like or dislike you because you are too fat or thin, old or young, is something
most of us value. Of course if you've always been able to get by on looks
without much to shore it up, this could be a problem. And of course, online
relationships don't always work out to be what we would like. Let us not,
however, digress.
There is something about the screen that gives
the illusion of trustworthiness. Whether it is true or not is irrelevant. In
the early research on psychological tests taken on the computer, it was
demonstrated that people are more honest in that medium than taking the same
test in a room by themselves with pencil and paper. Go figure.
Is it because the monitor does not scowl at your
comments? Does not talk back or criticize? Does not catch you in your
untruths? Or because it has an on/off switch that gives us the ultimate
control?
Whatever it is, it affords many an ease in
talking, relating, that is not available in 3D. This is even easier than
airport intimacy -- you know, where total strangers tell you their life stories,
including their worst transgressions, before you can get from Denver to Kansas
City. And you know they feel a lot better for it.
Unless one has a laser-beam focus on a specific
interest, say chess, one is looking for the same things online that one looks
for in 3D: a safe place, acceptance, the "space" to feel comfortable
and be who you really are. Perhaps the most powerful aspect of all is that
online affords a feeling of community--a community that often is missing for
most people today. If you live in the gay/ / , and
moreso if you live in a small town or in an isolated/closeted profession, the
online community is a godsend. Where else can you find several million
like-minded people?
Continue with Part II of Cyberpals/Cyberlove
Dr. Pearse is licensed clinical psychologist in
private practice in Denver. Reprinted with permission from Circles: Celebrating
Colorado's Lesbian Community, Volume 1 Number 1.
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