Mike Wrote:TMore and more men can't maintain an erection, or even climax, when in bed with women / men (but not when sitting in front of a PC-screen, rummaging around for the next porn-clip that'll get them off).
I've been harassed by more than a few men whom I think watched too much porn (and get upset when I didn't act like some blonde bimbo off Suzie Sucks Seattle or whatever). Now suddenly I'm wondering if I should've "agreed" in the hopes this would happen so I could REALLY discourage them from harassing me or other women in the future by making a huge deal out of it.
Quote: An unreal expectation of sex partners to "entertain" men as sensuously as professional porn stars do, leaves many men around the world sub-consciously (and now consciously) unhappy with real sex.
Women have a similar problem with the romance genre (as well as fairytales like Beauty and the Beast) giving an unrealistic example of men to women so that when it's not so perfect they wonder "what's wrong" (and can't figure out they've mistaken fantasy for reality and thus hold unrealistic expectations). I've long thought that schools should have a BS 101 course early on before kids start getting into the habit of thinking all the shows they watch are accurate portrayals of reality (many figure it out on their own but a depressing number don't).
Quote:Dopamine-rush - a chemical secreted in the brain, when a certain kind of "extreme" is achieved (usually through increasingly perverted sex images), keeps men coming back for more. This chemical is in charge of pleasure-centers in the brain. When it runs around the body, a feeling of a "buzz of joy" overwhelms men. This keeps men coming back for more, neglecting their sex partners.
This chemical is addictive and cannot be secreted by having real sex.
I have a hard time accepting this. However, I could see that men look at porn when they're ready for sex whereas they may feel obligated or pressured to have sex at times they're not ready and/or with partners whom they're not entirely happy with at the moment or would feel judged by if they offered their true desires and thus FOR THAT REASON find it easier to jerk off to porn.
But if true, it makes me wonder if the opposite is true as well: do those in fulfilling sexual lives find porn uninteresting? :confused:
Also, what of the porn designed for couples (not to be confused with porn that has the thing he, or she, wants to try but is too scared to say directly)?
Quote:Teenage boys, as young as 17-18 have been reported to have had erectile dysfunction induced by porn. We're not talking about 50-60 year-old men, we're talking about teens in their prime!
And just where did they (and WHO are they, and who funds them?) find the teens to admit to this? :confused:
I also wonder if there were any inducements for teens to say this. I recall how many teens in my schools would give the answers they thought would give them the most reward (or least grief) than what was actually true...and also being silly or completely random (answering without even looking at the question) is also known to happen. Another thing I wonder is how many are on psyche meds (which also make for sexual dysfunction).
ETA: and btw, I wonder how many teens actually even have a real chance at a sexual relationship so that they would know...