Gambling is a Bad Habit Hard to Break, a Habit that can
Kill a Marriage Dead.
Gambling is one of those increasingly common marriage problems that are often over looked despite
over 50% of compulsive gamblers having been divorced. As with many bad habits, gambling
has a real negative impact on family life with the habit often leading to serious financial
problems as well as neglect of partners and children and sometimes proving to be a catalyst for abuse.
The National Gambling Impact Study Commission reported that
more than 15 million Americans have a serious gambling problem often generated from boredom, a need for change, the adrenalin rush or as a
result of marital or family conflicts. Gambling is becoming an ever increasing marriage problem and it’s a bad habit that has serious consequences with regard to family and personal life.
Very few people have any kind of understanding of the
devastating impact that the gambling habit can have. Gambling is one bad habit that if it
grabs a hold it takes over your entire life, wrecks you marriage, alienates your family, leaves you in financial ruin and destroys your
life. Like alcohol abuse, gambling is often a root cause for domestic violence and child abuse.
Gambling starts as just a bad habit, something that you do when you’ve got some spare time but it quickly worms its way into your routine
and becomes and all encompassing and hard to break addiction that rules your life.
The escalating habit has been made worse with gambling
becoming even more common as a result of the onset of internet gambling. There are now around 1,700 gambling websites all vying for
business and just waiting to encourage more and more people into the regular gambling routine. Online gambling is a really bad habit to get
into with the 24/7 access from the comfort of your own home, the loss of the sense of reality when gambling away money and the ease at
which the gamblers can add more funds.
Research has shown that online gamblers are more likely have
the most serious gambling habits / addictions and the families of those addicted suffering a greater intrusion into their everyday
lives.
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