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Caught in the Net: How to Recognize the Signs of Internet Addiction--And a Winning Strategy for Recovery

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In Caught in the Net, Kimberly Young shares the results of her three-year study of Internet abuse. Often using the words of the Internet addicts themselves, she presents the stories of dozens of lives that were shattered by an overwhelming compulsion to surf the Net, play MUD games, or chat with distant and invisible neighbors in the timeless limbo of cyberspace. For Internet addicts as well as their parents, spouses, friends, and employers, Caught in the Net offers guidance on where and how to seek help from counselors, therapists, and other professionals who take this affliction seriously. For mental health professionals, this book provides insights into the nature and causes of internet addiction and encourages counselors and therapists to expand their addiction recovery programs to address the specific problems of Internet addicts.

256 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 31, 1998

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About the author

Kimberly S. Young

12 books8 followers
Kimberly Young is a licensed psychologist, an author, and an internationally-known speaker on Internet addiction. In 1995, she founded the Center for Internet Addiction and since then she has written numerous articles on the topic including four books, Caught in the Net, Tangled in the Web, Breaking Free of the Web, and Internet Addiction: A Handbook for Evaluation and Treatment. She is a professor at St. Bonaventure University and her work has appeared in hundreds of media outlets including The New York Times, USA Today, Time, and Newsweek, and she has appeared on The Today Show, Good Morning America, CNBC, CNN, and ABC World News Tonight. She has written creatively on and off since she was eight-years-old, mainly working on poems and short stories. While recovering from retina re-attachment eye surgery, she was homebound for several months and decided to pursue her creative writing more seriously. The Eighth Wonder is her first novel.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Eyjólfur Örn Jónsson.
60 reviews7 followers
July 1, 2011
As a child of its time this book is quite seriously out of date but nevertheless holds a certain status as it quite literally started a serious discussion about problematic internet use. Today, internet use has quite literally skyrocketed and peoples use of the internet has changed dramatically with the advent of MMOs and social networking sites both of which are not covered by this book. However, Young had a point when she published this book and that point remains quite valid today; some people will have a difficult time regulating and controlling their behaviour online and this will be a major problem that should be of concern for mental health professionals. In my work as a clinical psychologist today I meet people on a daily basis who have lost control of some aspect of their internet use and are suffering for it. I look forward to seeing an updated version of this book in the future.
Profile Image for L.A. Jacob.
Author 19 books11 followers
May 27, 2013
Although out of date (it talks about MUDs and MOOs and AOL chat rooms, and we have since graduated to MMO's), the steps for recovery are still pertinent. This combined with "Cyber Junkie" is an excellent addition to those who want to kick the 'Net habit. However, it's not worth the $30.
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