Pornography
Can Ruin Your Sex Life
A couple years ago, I stumbled across some research and
articles about pornography and the negative effects it could be having on men
and their sex lives. I found it interesting, but never gave it too much thought
It caught my attention because not only had I struggled with
sexual anxiety and had bouts of inability to perform in the past, but I had
also talked to a lot of friends who struggled with the same issues, men often in
their 20s and 30s, men who shouldn’t have been dealing with performance issues.
Then after some research, I found a recent survey by
Esquire that showed that 43% of men reported difficulty getting or
maintaining an erection at least some of the time, with 24% reporting that they
had difficulty “more often than I’d like to admit.”
According to the science, porn is a “supra-normal” stimulus —
it activates the normal reward mechanisms in our brains, but it does so at such
a high level that we perceive it to be way more pleasurable than the average
arousing stimulus. But our brains become desensitized and develop a need for
even more novel stimuli in order to reach the same level of arousal and
excitement. Thus begins the spiral into more hardcore porn and higher
quantities of it. In some cases, men can develop a psychological addiction to
pornography and it can begin to interfere with their sex and social lives. In
rare cases it can be debilitating in both.
Researchers debate whether or not porn addiction is a real
addiction, but the semantics don’t change the fact that many people experience
real problems with porn. It’s been implicated in things like unhappy and
unsatisfied partners, as well as depression,
anxiety, and loneliness. Not to mention it
completely skews your perception of what beauty is and gives you unreasonable
standards for sex with the women you meet. If you’ve ever gotten an otherwise
beautiful girl naked in your bed and been unable to ignore the tiny blemishes or
asymmetries to the point where you have trouble getting turned on, then you
know what I mean.
Chances are you’re not a porn addict, but if you’re a man
under the age of 35, I imagine that the abundant access to porn has affected
you more than you realize. Think back to the first time you watched porn. The
mere image of a beautiful naked woman was probably enough for you. But sadly,
for many of us, over the years we devolve into darker and more twisted porn
habits.
And worst of all, the younger you were when you began
watching porn, the worse all of these effects generally are.
I am quoting from the book mentioned below: read what he wrote and some way out experiment He proposed........
In a book written by Mark Manson titledbook on attracting women , he shared something He referred to as the “masturbation diet” in his chapter about motivation.
It involved eliminating
porn and limiting masturbation to 1-2 times per week. The goal of the “diet”
was to revitalize and motivate guys who had trouble being motivated enough to
pursue women in the face of their anxiety.
I had done it on and off in the past
whenever I needed a kick in the ass and it worked for me. Often within a week
or two. But I had never considered keeping it or making it a permanent habit in
my life.
| it distroys you without you knowing it |
Late last year,
the “no more porn” stuff really caught fire on the forum here, and a number of
men hopped on the bandwagon on my (now defunct) forum and agreed to not look at
porn for 60 days. We all kept logs on the thread and it turned out to be a
raging success. According to him, Most of (us) made it through the 60 days unscathed and became
true believers. Porn had been negatively affecting our sex lives he said.
For some it was a major shift and very difficult. For
others, the changes were minor and simple. For everyone, the consensus seems to
be we’re glad we did it. Personally, I have been watching porn since I was 13 He said,
and had been watching it almost daily for 8-10 years when he began this
challenge.
He said :......
From the Above Author
Relapse and
Experimentation
I jokingly call it a “relapse,” but in early-February I was
pulling 14-hour work days and not getting out much, so I hit up the good old
YouPorn to blow off some… err, steam. Yeah, that’s it, blow off steam.
On my first return to porn post-reboot, a few things had
changed:
1.
Porn I used to enjoy now felt excessive, dehumanizing
and honestly, not very attractive. There were a few videos I saw where I
couldn’t believe I used to watch stuff like that.
2.
I couldn’t help but notice how unhappy and inauthentic
the girls in the videos often were. Not to say I haven’t noticed some of the
actresses obviously faking their way through a scene in the past, but this was
deeper. Like you could tell they just weren’t very happy people and didn’t have
much self-respect. I know this both a) sounds weird to be thinking about while
getting your fap on, and b) should not surprise anybody. But it actually became
so apparent that it was hard for me to stay turned on in some cases.
So what does this mean? Is porn the devil? Should you never
watch it? Is it ruining your sex life as we speak?
I can only answer for myself. For me, yes, porn had a
noticeable impact on my sex life and I’m much better off not watching it. And I
know there are a number of guys out there who had far more dramatic benefits
than I did. But it’s clear that if I watch it on any consistent basis for
more than a few days, it negatively affects my sex life. I honestly wish I had
stopped watching it years ago, as it would have saved me a lot of struggle for
motivation and embarrassment in the bedroom.
By Geocklyn
Footnotes
MARK MANSON
1.
Hilton, D. L.
(2013). Pornography
addiction – a supranormal stimulus considered in the context of neuroplasticity. Socioaffective
Neuroscience & Psychology, 3, 20767.
2.
Koukounas, E.,
& Over, R. (2000). Changes in the magnitude of the
eyeblink startle response during habituation of sexual arousal. Behaviour Research and Therapy,
38(6), 573–584.↵
3.
Stewart, D. N.,
& Szymanski, D. M. (2012). Young Adult
Women’s Reports of Their Male Romantic
Partner’s
Pornography Use as a Correlate of Their Self-Esteem, Relationship Quality, and
Sexual Satisfaction. Sex Roles,
67(5-6), 257–271.↵
4.
Schneider, J. P.
(2000). A Qualitative
Study of Cybersex Participants: Gender Differences, Recovery
© 2015 Infinity Squared Media LLC
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