People are simple creatures, easily tempted: the more exposure to flirting, the more cheating and changing of partners will there be. Even when you would have been content with how things were in your life otherwise, and could have patched up anything lacking in your marriage.
And when you see a spouse flirting with someone over Facebook, your romantic feelings will turn to ice.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technolo...acebook-fuelling-divorce-research-claims.html
And when you see a spouse flirting with someone over Facebook, your romantic feelings will turn to ice.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technolo...acebook-fuelling-divorce-research-claims.html
The social networking site, which connects old friends and allows users to make new ones online, is being blamed for an increasing number of marital breakdowns.
Divorce lawyers claim the explosion in the popularity of websites such as Facebook and Bebo is tempting 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.
Mark Keenan, Managing Director of Divorce-Online said: "I had heard from my staff that there were a lot of people saying they had found out things about their partners on Facebook and I decided to see how prevalent it was. I was really surprised to see 20 percent of all the petitions containing references to Facebook.
"The most common reason seemed to be people having inappropriate sexual chats with people they were not supposed to."
Flirty emails and messages found on Facebook pages are increasingly being cited as evidence of unreasonable behaviour.
http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2010/06/02/survey-shows-facebook-driving-divorce-rate/Last year a 28-year-old woman ended her marriage after discovering her husband had been having a virtual affair with someone in cyberspace he had never met.
Amy Taylor 28, split from David Pollard after discovering he was sleeping with an escort in the game Second Life, a virtual world where people reinvent themselves.
Around 14 million Britons are believed to regularly use social networking sites to communicate with old friends or make new ones.
The popularity of the Friends Reunited website several years ago was also blamed for a surge in divorces as bored husbands and wives used it to contact old flames and first loves.
http://newsfamilylaw.wordpress.com/2011/03/01/facebook-linked-to-rising-divorce-rates/"More and more I have clients coming in and I say, 'Why are you here today?' And they say, 'Facebook,'" divorce attorney Mary Cay Trace told MyFoxPhilly.com. "You can now search beyond your neighbors and your co-workers if you're trying to find somebody to replace what you think is missing in your marriage."
One woman showed MyFoxPhilly.com love notes that her husband sent an old flame from grade school that he reconnected with on Facebook.
Their 13-year marriage ended after that, and her husband's new flame also filed for divorce from her marriage.
The families had two children each.
According to a recent survey by the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers (AAML), social networking site Facebook is cited in 1 of every 5 U.S. divorces. And the country’s top divorce attorneys further claim use of social networking evidence in divorce has climbed even higher during the past five years. Of the various social networking sites out there, Facebook is cited as the primary source of evidence 66 percent of the time.
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Although most marriage woes begin outside of social networking, licensed clinical psychologist Steven Kimmons, PhD, of Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood, Illinois, says is can begin there, too.
She said, “We’re coming across it more and more. One spouse connects online with someone they knew from high school. The person is emotionally available and they start communicating through Facebook. Within a short amount of time, the sharing of personal stories can lead to a deepened sense of intimacy, which in turn can point the couple in the direction of physical contact. I don’t think these people typically set out to have affairs. A lot of it is curiosity. They see an old friend or someone they dated and decide to say ‘hello’ and catch up on where that person is and how they’re doing.”