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Cyberlife and the sociopathic experience

You are here: Home / Explaining the sociopath / Cyberlife and the sociopathic experience

October 25, 2010 //  by Donna Andersen//  51 Comments

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Two recent news items about life in today’s digital age caught my attention:

News item #1

The evolution of dating: Match.com and Chadwick Martin Bailey Behavioral Studies uncover a fundamental shift

Recent studies of more than 11,000 people revealed that one in six marriages are now between people who met through an online dating site — more than twice the number of people meeting at bars, at clubs and other social events combined

Additionally, the studies show that one in five new committed relationships, including marriages, are between people who met on an online dating site.

News item #2

Facbook fueling divorce, research claims

Divorce lawyers claim the explosion in the popularity of websites such as Facebook and Bebo is tempting to people to cheat on their partners.

Suspicious spouses have also used the websites to find evidence of flirting and even affairs, which have led to divorce.

One law firm, which specialises in divorce, claimed almost one in five petitions they processed cited Facebook.

Digital technology and the Internet have created a parallel form of life. We could call it Cyberlife.

Cyberlife is built on information—which may be enlightening, misleading, authentic or fabricated. Words on a screen may be true, false, or subject to interpretation. Images and videos may depict actual occurrences—or they may be staged, cropped, edited or Photoshopped.

In Cyberlife, information available instantaneously. Information that was once inaccessible may now be found. And information—whether correct or inaccurate—lives forever in digital caches, located wherever Google and other archives keep it.

Online exploitation

So what does all of this mean when it comes to sociopaths?

Sociopaths live by exploiting people. The Internet and other tools of digital technology give sociopaths another avenue for exploiting people. And it’s a powerful one.

Internet fraud is a huge growth industry. Here are annual dollar losses due to Internet fraud reported to the Internet Crime Complaint Center:

  • 2007 – $239 million
  • 2008 – $265 million
  • 2009 – $560 million

For sociopaths looking to exploit individuals in romantic relationships, the Internet and online dating sites allows them to fish in a very big pond. They can troll for victims 24/7, around the world. They can bait their hooks with fictitious profiles. They can work multiple targets at once, to see who actually bites.

Helpful information

Yes, the digital age gives sociopaths a lot of tools—but it also provides tools to the rest of us.

Lovefraud is proof of that. Lovefraud provides information about this personality disorder, enabling people stuck in the fog of manipulation and confusion to finally understand what they are dealing with.

Besides general information about sociopaths, the Internet allows people to acquire specific information on people they meet. Websites like DontDateHimGirl.com, Womansavers.com and Ripoffreport.com allow readers to post names of people to be avoided. Exposure works—many people have been saved from predatory relationships by finding the case studies on Lovefraud.

Seduction in the mind

One of the fascinating things about Cyberlife is that it brings into sharp focus how much of our lives take place in our own minds.

Lovefraud has heard of several cases in which people were involved online relationships, to the point of severe emotional trauma, with people who didn’t even exist! Some sociopaths play this cruel game. The sociopaths don’t get money, or sex, or a place to live. But they send flowery, romantic texts and emails, promising  future happiness that will never happen. They manipulate their victims, just for fun and entertainment.

These situations are extreme, but every relationship that starts online starts in the mind. All you have is digital information. You don’t see a person across a room and feel a twinge of animal magnetism. You don’t fall in love with the sound of their laugh. So what happens?

As the Internet Threat page on Lovefraud.com explains, 65% to 90% of human communication comes from nonverbal cues. When communicating online, therefore, 65% to 90% of the meaning is missing.

What do we do when reading email and text messages in communications with a potential romantic partner? We indulge in our hopes and dreams. We fill in the blanks with what we want the communication to mean. We fall in love with our own fantasy.

Yes, our minds can trick us. Awareness, however, is also in our minds. We can educate ourselves that these predators exist. We can learn the warning signs of exploitative behavior. We can read about the experiences of others. All of this can be done online—that’s what Lovefraud does every day. As we say here on Lovefraud, knowledge equals power.

The conduit

In the end, therefore, the information revolution, the Internet, digital technology—it’s all just a conduit, and the conduit can be used for information that is either helpful or hurtful.

But we do need to understand what happens in Cyberlife, and how messages on the conduit can be manipulated. Digital technology is a tool. How the tool is used makes the difference.

Category: Explaining the sociopath, Recovery from a sociopath

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. jeannie812

    October 28, 2010 at 10:48 pm

    Oxdrover,

    Do you think your ex- husband put this hate in your son? It sounds like serious hate towards everyone.

    I am sorry to hear this. To think that he was your little baby at one time. The little baby you coddled and loved. And he turned into THAT.

    It’s like Billy the Kid

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  2. super chic

    October 28, 2010 at 10:51 pm

    one_step, I totally agree with you that relationshits start in our own mind. I’ve had face to face relationshits in my own mind… due to the cobwebs you mentioned, I was waaaaaaaayyyy too needy and didn’t want to face the truth and/or walk away. My biggest fear was being alone, well, I’m alone now and I’m still here, so it won’t be so scary anymore!

    “We gain strength, and courage, and confidence by each experience in which we really stop to look fear in the face… we must do that which we think we cannot. ” Eleanor Roosevelt

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  3. jeannie812

    October 28, 2010 at 11:25 pm

    I am confused about something, but I think I’ll bury it in the backyard.

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  4. hens

    October 28, 2010 at 11:35 pm

    onestep what you said above is so profound. I had a crush on my X bf spath for 2 years before he even took the time to say hello…. I had all these fantasies about who he was and how we would be so perfect together – wasnt until he was running out of options that he gave me the time of day – so be careful what you wish for…

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  5. skylar

    October 28, 2010 at 11:37 pm

    Oxy
    To clarify, I didn’t mean that your son doesnt plot and plan like my exP. But my exP is more of a coward who never leaps before looking and who slithers away leaving everyone wondering wtf happened but never suspecting him. Your son has lots of time on his hands, I hope he never gets out. My exP will wait for another 25 years if need be, to get vengeance on me, because he didn’t succeed the first time. He will carefully place all pawns into position,one at a time slowly, over years. That is another reason why I have to continue studying and learning how they operate

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  6. skylar

    October 28, 2010 at 11:59 pm

    SC, Hens, one-step, jeannie,
    Maybe that’s how we learn about ourselves thru the relationshits. We can see what we were expecting and hoping for. The spath certainly sees what is in our hearts. That’s how he knows what to aim for.

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  7. silvermoon

    October 29, 2010 at 12:06 am

    “To say ‘I love you’ one must first be able to say the ‘I.’”

    Ayn Rand

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  8. jeannie812

    October 29, 2010 at 12:53 am

    Yes, Skylar

    The spath learned how to dupe us by listening to us talk. I remember wondering why isn’t he commenting? Well, because he was calculating…..

    And, yes we can only bring those expectations to ourselves. I love a bouquet of fresh flowers. So I snipped myself a bouquet out of my garden. I love going to the zoo, so I went with my sister and my son.

    My life is not the way I want it. But a man would just add more confusion to my compass

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  9. jeannie812

    October 29, 2010 at 1:12 am

    To Silvermoon

    I’m jumping in on this one.

    To say I love you they must first learn to say I.

    Jim used to mumble “love you”

    Not I love you.

    He expected a loud “THANK YOU” if he did anything for me.

    If I didn’t say “thank you” loud enough, he would loudly say “YOUR WELCOME”, just to remind me of my “rudeness”

    Yet when I did things for him he didn’t say thank you. Or if he did he said “aink ou”

    It would just kill him to give me the same curtisy that he expected.

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  10. skylar

    October 29, 2010 at 6:15 pm

    Mine avoided kissing me because he knew how much I like kissing. My favorite part of intimacy. He would rather not get a kiss if it meant giving one. The song “ONE” by U2 seems to describe it perfectly in the lyrics “you act like you never had love and you want me to go without”

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