2f: About porn
Kira at 20-forty.com discusses Pornography and Relationships.
A tool.
A hammer is a tool. You can use one hammer to shape metal, another to pound nails to construct buildings or make a fence. The Beatle’s song “Maxwell’s Hammer” covers a macabre use for a hammer. You can use a hammer to separate parts stuck together to make a repair, or to demolish something. Like all tools, the hammer is used best when you choose the right hammer for the task, and develop the skill to know when and how to use it.
Porn – a broad topic.
Porn can be something like that. In many ways the term “pornography” or “porn” is about as specific a term as “hammer” or maybe even “tool”. Because there are a lot of different topics lumped in the category of erotic, sexually stimulating, material. Porn includes books, magazines, pictures, videos, home movies and production Hollywood epics (Remember “Linda Lovelace for President”? Hilarious, with Huck Phlegm and the gang.) With care, you can find individuals, couples, and groups enjoying sex – having fun. There are variations that focus on about any interest a provider thinks might interest *someone*.
An education.
For those new to erotic feelings and intimate relationships, pornography can inform, help to ease the transition from discovery to confident partner. See how some acts are done, reassure that some experiences might be more enjoyable than they sound, at first.
Some porn is hollywood production stuff, with idealized ‘super model’ type players and acrobats and clowns doing the performing. Yet many also show “successful” interactions between average type .. people. And this can be reassuring, to know that you don’t have to hold out for a Loni Anderson or a Burt Reynolds to enjoy sex.
OK, so Burt and Loni images are old. Look at their early movies. I mean “hold out for hot partners”, not “wait until you can’t tell see the dimples for the wrinkles.” Sheesh.
Stimulating.
And here we come to the assumption about porn. That the reason to pursue porn is for sexual gratification. And that is pretty much accurate, I guess.
But gratification varies from person to person. Some find porn therapeutic, a safe way to work through trauma or difficulties. Others use porn between partners, or as a hobby. Or a lifestyle.
Sharing vicarious stimulation (porn) isn’t all that new. There have been strip clubs, “Party” records and tapes, stag films – all make sexual stimulation a public event. Sharing as a couple is fairly new, culturally, in the United States. As women have expressed more interest in porn the amount of female-centric and couples-oriented material is more available.
Alternate Universe.
Some find porn to contain niches that focus on particular concepts, or acts, or body types. Pain, and thrills – danger.
All porn, by it’s label, violates accepted cultural taboos in the United States. Yes, sex is natural. It doesn’t necessarily follow that taking pictures of sex is natural. There are very few art exhibits or books written about human dung (poo), for one instance. We have taboos about rape, and tying people up. About sex outside marriage, or with “unacceptable” partners. And these all become niches of porn. Look at the headlines – despite world wide “crackdowns” by various law enforcement agencies, even Kiddie Porn still exists today, for those interested in creating or view such material.
There is “soft” porn – mostly about people frolicking in various (mostly accepted, plain vanilla) sexual acts. This violates taboos of watching others, engaging in sex to be watched, mixing up partners without emotional bonds or marriage.
There are “hard” porn and niches that often appeal only to those specifically drawn to that variation. And there are ‘variety’ venues that cross lines. Pick from commercial productions to home efforts. Magazines publish “letters” and “articles’ in widely varying categories from Unexpected Encounters to Voyeurism to Forbidden Fruit to groups.
Too much.
The joke goes: How much sex is too much? Answer: More than I am getting. (Response applies to everyone.) This could be asked of too much drinking, or too much smoking, or too much reading, or too much porn.
The psychologist in the CBS video clip that Kira includes in her post makes about the only reasonable definition for any addiction problem: When it begins to affect your family and/or work.
Humans are thrill seekers. We are hard-wired to repeat actions. There is little to discern between a “good work ethic” and a habit, or even an addiction. The major difference is degree of focus – how much pain and effort is required to change the behavior.
How much porn is too much? When is the attention given to viewing porn, or pursuit of finding porn, destructive? The time, effort, and resources we have available to devote to any activity is limited. What we devote to porn comes from something else. If, over time, we develop a great deal of skill at using or finding porn – that is time not spent building relationships with family and friends, with developing useful work or survival skills, or maintaining our responsibilities to self, family, and community.
One among many.
In that sense, of limited time to maintain and develop skills and responsibilities, porn competes with cell phone usage, texting, IM, emails, TV, blogs, YouTube (Will it blend? Numma Numa, etc.) and other electronic media to divert us from rich human experiences, well nurtured families, and strong communities.
Choose wisely.
Reasonable points, but I also think you a beeing QUITE tactful.
Too much in my personal opinion for my partner to want to be watching porn would be once a month. If he wanted to go to a strip bars with his buddies more than once a year, I wouldn’t like it either. If he’s got his nose buried in you-tube videos, x-rated books, whatever – and that would have been time WE could have been in bed making love or having wild monkey sex – also a problem…
But of he masturbated almost every day, I’d think that was normal. As long as he wasn’t doing THAT instead of us having sex.
Sex is healthy. Immersing yourself in porn or fantasies to a degree that is high as a distraction from facing real life just isn’t a good thing. Which I sorta think you mentioned.
Loving Annie’s last blog post..Best Diet Advice EVER !
Loving Annie,
Sex is intertwined closely with how we romantics define a relationship.
I counter that if he was masturbating for extended periods on a regular basis – or taking two hours to clean and wax the car every other day, or spending half days at the park with the dog every day, or ..
Anything that focuses too much time and effort on part of our lives – from sleep and work to drugs and TV sports – takes time and effort away from other opportunities.
Yes…. unless it is your passion/career. And even then there is too much sometimes. Oy, a healthy life is a balance, isn’t it ?
Did you get the cookies ?
Loving Annie’s last blog post..Best Diet Advice EVER !
Loving Annie – the cookies are wonderful. My congratulations to the fine cook!
I was amazed that they arrived intact, but then you outdid yourself with the packing, too.
Blessed be!