Everyone knows that electronic romance is less real than the
kind you forge through personal contact.
Everyone, that is, except Katie Roiphe. Perhaps she was trying
to be contrary; perhaps she was trying to reduce an idea to its absurd extreme;
perhaps she does not much care about human connections; perhaps she was craving
attention.
Whatever the reason, Roiphe’s suggestion that internet
romance is more real than the other kind marks her as an unserious thinker.
Here’s her idea, in her words:
Lately
there has been a great deal of public handwringing about whether the temptations of Internet communication have corrupted
our ability to forge normal or healthy or real relationships (whatever those
might mean).
Or this:
There
is an idea floating around that words or photographs don’t “count” in a way
that touching counts, or sitting around together having a cup of coffee counts,
but this seems naive, or overly simple.
Allow me to refer back to the work that MIT Professor Sherry
Turkle has done on his topic, most recently in her book Alone Together. My comments on it and the topic here.
Turkle offered the picture of a group of teenagers sitting
around a dinner table, each furiously texting on his or her iPhone, not one of
them deigning to converse with another.
They text, Turkle suggested, because they do not know how to
converse. Thereby, their relationships
are impoverished and they are become desperate for any form of human
connection. Some even call it love.
Assuming that Roiphe really means it when she says that
online romance is the real thing, we are within or rights to ask what she means
by online romance.
Here’s her description of something she believes to be a
love connection:
A married
man sees a friend for dinner when visiting a city. Afterward, via email, he
confesses his feelings for her. (We talk about liquid courage, but what about
screen courage? For many people the screen dissolves inhibitions. They are protected
by the workable illusion that it is just them and their screen, and that
everything under the sun turns on and off with a click.) Anyway, this man very
quickly launches into explicit fantasies via email. His friend tries to tell
him nicely that she is not interested in an affair. He sends her 10-15 emails a
day. Is this real? Or does the theoretical nature, the pure crack-cocaine
fantasy of the thing disqualify it from the reciprocal physical entity we would
think of as an authentic romantic connection? Is he cheating on his wife? Or
just toying with fantasy as one does in dreams?
You do not have to be too wise in the ways of the world to
know that this is not real romance: it’s harassment. A dozen emails a day containing
sexually explicit fantasies is not a sign of true love. It is not a romantic
gesture. At best, it is desperate; at worst, it is threatening.
The man is not “toying with fantasy”—a regrettable and meaningless
phrase—he is toying with her. He expresses no interest in her; he does not care
what she feels; he is using her for reasons that do not need to be made
explicit here.
Take another of Roiphe’s examples, even more pathetic than
the first:
In
another example drawn from life, a married banker, sort of a modern Updike-
character type, restless, with tiny children, at home in the suburbs, sends a
Facebook friend request to a writer whose work he likes. She accepts, and he
sends her a message saying, “thanks for accepting. It made me nervous to send
that request.” She writes back, “Why nervous?” And he writes, “The usual
psychosexual married man reasons.” Pretty quickly after that he launches into a
graphic fantasy about her. Not the real her, as he had never met her in life,
though they have friends in common, and could very easily have met at a party,
but his idea of her.
This is even less threatening to the family in that house in the suburbs than
the previous example. The writer is a total stranger. They will never meet. But
it is not quite the same as a dream, which we would all agree is innocent,
because there is, however abstractly, another person there.
A man who sends a message to someone he does not know
describing a graphic sexual fantasy about her is not in love. He is not
interested in making a human connection.
At best, he is inviting her to act a role in his fantasy. At
worst, he gets off on threatening women.
Roiphe’s assurance that the two will never meet does not
ring very true. What if the man decides to meet up with his fantasy girl, the
better to enact his fantasies? What if he does not care whether she likes it or
not? Doesn’t his mode of communication suggest that he is completely
unconcerned with her feelings?
If that is anyone’s idea of love and romance, I recommend
that they get some help.
Here’s another real story, one that I heard several years
ago at a social event. It shows the danger that lurks in Roiphe’s bad idea.
A 16-year-old French girl developed an online romance with a
16- year-old boy who lived in Argentina. They exchanged pictures and messages
to the point where the girl was convinced that she had found true love. One day
she picked up and flew to Argentina, only to discover, upon arriving, that the
boy in question was really a 40-year-old woman.
Why are online relationships less real than offline
relationships? Let me count the ways.
When you develop a relationship with someone you met online
you know nothing more about the person than what he has offered. You do not
know whether the words he writes are his or someone else’s. You do not know
whether he means it or is just saying it in order to manipulate you. You do not
know whether the picture he is posting is really of him.
A real conversation with a flesh-and-blood human being involves
multiple levels of communication: words, voices and gestures. Online
communication removes all but the words.
If you choose to get involved with a stranger you met online
you are flying blind.
Roiphe is right about one thing: “the screen dissolves
inhibitions.” Being anonymous and being at a distance allows you to say things you would never say to a living, breathing
human being who is sharing dinner or a sofa with you.
I know that the therapy culture tells people that their true
feelings are the ones they are hiding, to themselves or others. I suspect that
the opposite is true: if you can’t say it to someone’s face then it's not really you.
The fact that an especially salacious fantasy is flitting
across your mind does not mean that you own it or that you need to act on it.
Roiphe seems to suggest that true love involves disrespectfully
sharing grotesque and gross fantasies? Why would anyone believe such a thing?
For all she knows the men are copying the fantasies from a
book. If they did not copy them from a
book, perhaps they gleaned them from porn sites.
In today’s modern world men watch internet porn. It gives
them ideas. If they watch too much they will become trapped in the virtual
world of virtual sex and become desensitized to real stimuli.
They might even arrive at a point where the only way they can
get aroused is to think that they are acting out something they saw on YouPorn.
If a man has a shred of dignity left he may well respect his wife too much to share them with her. Were he to do so he would be
embarrassing himself and diminishing her. Better to hide behind a mask of
anonymity and foist it on a naïve and unsuspecting writer.
8 comments:
But this is not a victimless act.
There is a person on the other side of that screen.
In the cases that I have been most familiar with, the people the men pick are those "damaged goods." The women that have just come out of a a bad relationship, or have never had a good one. Way-back ex-girlfriends. Girls who have "always picked wrong."
So when the men start up these internet conversations, these fantasies have every chance of turning into something real, and wreaking havoc on their actual lives.
I myself have had men from my "way-back" try to re-connect with me, and the moment they started crossing the line, I cut the communication off for good. I read advice column entry after entry about this, it is incredible... You could write these stories about abuot a guy (or girl) anywhere in the world, and insert a dozen names you know. It seems to be that prevalent...
It is dangerous, in that *some* of the fantasy penpals WILL respond, and the spiral can go all the way to the bottom.
For an entertaining perspective on online porn don't miss Don Jon's Addiction when it comes out.
Wow!
Somewhat related;
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/real-life-stories/i-hired-a-honeytrap-to-catch-my-man-cheating-787468
"On the internet, nobody knows you're a dog": classic cartoon, NEW YORKER, IIRC.
Someone, somewhere confused Roiphe for a serious thinker? Not possible. Serious narcissist. Exhibitionist. Moral child.
And really, not such a good writer. Just kind of out there."
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