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Breaking Down the Porn Addiction Craze with a Plymouth, MN

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In recent years we’ve begun to take small steps as a society in making it ok to discuss our sexuality and the challenges that it can present in our lives and relationships. One result of this change has been increased openness and conversation around porn use. Unfortunately, this has led to a lot of sensationalism and buzzwords being thrown around. Primarily, porn addiction. Today I want to really take a look at the idea of porn addiction. As part of this discussion, I’ll also include how ideas around healthy personal sexuality show up in our relational sexual experience as well.


“Porn Addiction” Isn’t Actually a Thing

To address the elephant in the room right away, let’s talk about porn addiction. To put this as clearly as I can, porn addiction doesn’t exist. This may cause some backlash or frustration for some but hear me out. Addiction is a very real and very serious concern. Addiction refers to a specific situation in which a thing is, in and of itself, addictive. Alcohol, Meth, nicotine, caffeine. These substances have legitimate chemical compounds that cause addictive feedback loops that can alter and control brain chemistry. No one is going to be retching on the floor going through porn withdrawals because they don’t exist. Now, all this being said, porn use can certainly mimic some addictive behaviors, but there is one incredibly important difference when it comes to porn use. This difference is that porn is an incredibly effective maladaptive coping skill. When an individual is in pain, they seek any way to make that pain stop. They will lie, steal, cheat, and even cause harm to their lives and relationships to make that pain stop. Our primal drive to escape from pain is one of our most powerful and instinctive motivators. So, when someone discovers that porn can make that pain go away, even for a short time, they become compulsively driven to return to it. What they are “addicted” to is not being in pain, not the porn itself. All of these same things could be said of a shopping “addiction.” For instance, somebody who is struggling with their mental health may find that buying new things gives them a brief high, where they can feel good. They may even drive themselves to financial ruin or cause major conflict in their relationships because they can’t stop buying things. It’s the only way they know how to make the pain stop.


How Pain and Porn Relate, Really

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