L o v e , S e x & H e a l t h
The Porn Factor
In the Internet age, pornography is almost everywhere you look. But what is it doing to real-life relationships?
By Pamela Paul
January 19, 2004
Health
In a Friends episode titled "The One with Free Porn," Chandler
and Joey discover to their delight a free pornography TV
channel, which they leave on and watch endlessly for fear it
will go away. Later, a startled Chandler reports to Joey, "I
was just at the bank, and there was this really hot teller, and
she didn't ask me to go do it in the vault." Joey describes a
similar cold shoulder from the pizza-delivery woman. "You know
what?" Chandler concludes. "We have to turn off the porn."
Chandler may be on to something. Call it the porn factor. Whereas
pornography was once furtively glimpsed at dimly lighted
newsstands or seedy adult theaters, today it is everywhere. It
pours in over the Internet, sometimes uninvited, sometimes via
eagerly forwarded links (Paris Hilton, anyone?). It titillates
24/7 on steamy adult cable channels and on-demand services (the
pay-per-view reality show Can You Be a Porn Star? made its debut
this month). It has infiltrated mainstream cable with HBO's
forthcoming documentary series Pornucopia: Going Down in the
Valley. And in ways that have only begun to be measured, it is
coloring relationships, both long-and short-term, reshaping
expectations about sex and body image and, most worrisome of all,
threatening to alter how young people learn about sex.
In recent years, a number of psychologists and sociologists have
joined the chorus of religious and political opponents in warning
about the impact of pervasive pornography. They argue that porn
is transforming sexuality and relationshipsfor the worse.
Experts say men who frequently view porn may develop unrealistic
expectations of women's appearance and behavior, have difficulty
forming and sustaining relationships and feeling sexually
satisfied. Fueled by a combination of access, anonymity and
affordability, online porn has catapulted overall pornography
consumptionbringing in new viewers, encouraging more use from
existing fans and escalating consumers from soft-core to
harder-core material. Cyberporn is even giving rise to a new form
of sexual compulsiveness. According to Alvin Cooper, who conducts
seminars on cybersex addiction, 15% of online-porn habitues
develop sexual behavior that disrupts their lives. "The Internet
is the crack cocaine of sexual addiction," says Jennifer
Schneider, co-author of Cybersex Exposed: Simple Fantasy or
Obsession?
Yet most users say sex online is nothing more than good (if not
quite clean) fun. According to a 2001 online survey of 7,037
adults, two-thirds of those who visit websites with sexual
content say their Internet activities haven't affected their
level of sexual activity with their partners, though
three-quarters report masturbating while online. The vast
majority of respondents85% to 90%according to Cooper, who
heads the San Jose Marital and Sexuality Center, which conducted
the study, are what he calls "recreational users," people who
view pornography as a curiosity or diversion.
The question is, Can even recreational use be unhealthy? A 2003
online study by Texas Christian University found that the more
pornography men watch, the more likely they are to describe women
in sexualized terms and categorize women in traditional gender
roles. Mark Schwartz, director of the Masters and Johnson clinic
in St. Louis, Mo., says porn not only causes men to objectify
womenseeing them as an assemblage of breasts, legs and
buttocksbut also leads to a dependency on visual imagery for
arousal. "Men become like computers, unable to be stimulated by
the human beings beside them," he says. "The image of a lonely,
isolated man masturbating to his computer is the Willy Loman
metaphor of our decade."
Other psychologists are more tolerant. Most men use pornography
in secret, and as long as it doesn't affect their relationships,
some say that's O.K. "If a client is enjoying a healthy use of
pornography without his wife's knowledge, I would counsel him not
to tell her," says psychiatrist Scott Haltzman, who studies men
and relationships. Yet many therapists say such behavior creates
a breach of trust. Spouses often view porn as a betrayal or even
as adultery. The typical reaction when a woman discovers her
husband's habit is shock and "How dare he?" According to
therapist Lonnie Barbach, based in Mill Valley, Calif., many such
women "feel like they're not good enough. Otherwise, why would
their mates be seeking this?"
Sometimes pornography tears couples apart. At the 2003 meeting of
the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers, two-thirds of the
350 divorce lawyers who attended said the Internet played a
significant role in divorces in the past year, with excessive
interest in online porn contributing to more than half of such
cases. "This is clearly related to the Internet," says Richard
Barry, president of the association. "Pornography had an almost
nonexistent role in divorce just seven or eight years ago."
Page 1 of 2 1 | 2
Next > >
|