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The typical porn problem I see on forums here is a husband using porn and a wife understandably upset by that. I was in a conversation today with a woman who seems to be ok with porn, and I didn't know how to argue my case. She said before she married, her then-boyfriend admitted to using porn and she was ok with it as long as they did it together. In marriage, she says that she and her husband enjoy watching porn together. I told her I didn't think porn was a good idea, but I admitted I was thinking of the case where the husband does it in secret, hiding it from his wife. I still don't think it's a good idea for couples to watch it together, but I didn't know how to defend that belief.

She also said that she believes men in general have a higher sex drive than women and she's ok with her husband, as she put it, "taking care of himself," if, say, she's asleep. I gave her the MB advice that sexual needs should be met exclusively by each other's spouse. She says she's crazy in love with her husband, they have a very open and honest relationship, and she's very happy with her marriage. Is it ok for a husband to take care of himself? My general feeling is no, but again, I didn't know how to argue that point.

Later in the day, thinking about this, I think the answer to the self-satisfaction question is that it deprives your spouse of the opportunity to deposit love units in your love bank. I'm wondering about the case of unmatched sex drives. If a wife doesn't want to have sex as often as her husband and is ok with him masterbating, that doesn't sound ok, but I don't know why.

(In case you're wondering how I could be a conversation like the above with a married woman, please don't berate me for that. We started talking about marriage in general, and she brought up the subject. I tried to extricate myself from the conversation when she started sharing information that I thought was too personal. She probably would've gone on, but she sensed I was uncomfortable with the conversation.)


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It is the contrast effect. It is rare the RL woman who can match the physique of a porn actress, and the danger is that the husband will find his wife less attractive in comparison, especially if she isn't up for it as often as he is, and he instead pleasures himself with images of women who appear to not only be always up for it, but also game for anything!

Same with masturbation. It can cause a man (or woman) to become accustomed to their own touch, and therefore make consensual sex less satisfying.

And yeah, from now on just say, "I am not comfortable talking about sex with you, Mrs. So-and-So. I think you should talk to your husband about that. Bye!"


Marriage is the triumph of imagination over intelligence. Second marriage is the triumph of hope over experience.
(Oscar Wilde)
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Here also is Dr. Harley talking about why POJAing porn is still wrong.
Radio clip on POJAing porn


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Blended Family with 7 kids between us
Too much hurt and pain on both sides that my brain hurts just thinking about it all.



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I don't think until you sell someone on MB that you'll change their view of porn. My wife and I love MBs. My wife doesn't have any issues with porn; we watch it together occassionally.

I've never really been much of an alone porn watcher. And I've never understood comparing my spouse to a woman I'd see in porn or in a movie or a TV show or anything like that. I don't understand guys that would rather watch porn than have sex with their spouse.



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I am sure you and your wife mean well by watching porn togerher, but that does not mean that it is right, although modern media are trying to tell us that.

1.
Would you want your daughter to become a porn star?
If no, then how can you stand looking at young girls who have been put in the situation that they have to have sex with people they didn't know or even like in front of a bunch of other people holding a camera. Oh, it can happen to your daughter too if she finds the wrong boyfriend.
Or do you think these girls did not dream of becoming princesses when they were young? You are looking at the shattered dreams of real people, damaging themselves to the point they will never have normal (sex) lives again, when you thing you are watching a fantasy world of fantastic sex.
Please consider this while looking at someone elses poor daughter.

2.
The contrast effect is a psychological process. You cannot opt to do it or not to do it, just as you cannot opt not to feel at least the slightest bit of contentment when someone praises you. If you don't need images from other women then why do it?

3.
There are a host of reasons why many women don't object when their husband wants to watch porn together. They have been told in women's magazines that it spices up your sex life and that jalousy is for patheticly insecure women. They have been given the impression it is a glamourous and modern, joyfull thing to do. On the other hand there are girls who get to be fond of it, because it arouses them quickly. Others don't want their husbands to think they are prudish and want him to feel she is playfull and open for new things. But what women would want to complain if her husband told her he would much rather see her, than some poor plastic hooker on screen?

Please think about it.

wishing you a happy marriage,

Happyheart

Last edited by happyheart; 08/12/12 01:42 AM. Reason: Spelling

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Heere's what Dr. Harley says about the contrast effect.
Originally Posted by Dr. Harley
I'd be opposed to a particular husband viewing pornography if there was absolutely nothing wrong with it except that it made his wife feel uncomfortable. Any violation of the Policy of Joint Agreement should be avoided. But there are reasons to avoid it, even when a wife enthusiastically agrees to it. One of the most important is known as the "contrast effect."

If you compare one sexual experience with another, the more stimulating experience will make the less stimulating experience seem boring in comparison. If you compare one naked woman with another, the one who's more physically attractive will make the less physically attractive woman appear to be unattractive. That's why I caution men to avoid pornography because it's unfair to his wife to be compared to an 18-year-old girl who has been specially selected for her physical assets.

Most wives know that I'm correct in my analysis. They don't want their naked body to be compared with an 18-year-old's naked body. And they don't want their husbands to be fantasizing about what it would be like having sex with that 18-year-old. They view such fantasies as unfaithfulness.

The same can be said of husbands touching other women inappropriately, even if they have the woman's permission to do so. Most wives feel terribly threatened by such behavior.

Wanting to view pornography, and enjoying it when they do, is normal for men, and not usually a sexual addiction. But most wives do not, and should not, accept it. I feel that it greatly diminishes the value and purpose of marital sex.
What is Sexual Addiction


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Blended Family with 7 kids between us
Too much hurt and pain on both sides that my brain hurts just thinking about it all.



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The contrast effect is a psychological process which produces a physiological result.

One base component of that contrast is novelty. Pornography provides and endless bevy of novel visual stimulation.

Dr. Harley has written and talked about men's sex drive decreasing and leveling out when they have a satisfying sex life with their wives. One of the reasons is acclimation. It's not just men and/or married men who experience lower sex drive over time with the same partner. It happens in most mammals. [sarcasm]Because psychologists are perverts, they have done several experiments over the years exploring this phenomenon[/sarcasm].

The effect of novelty (coupled with images of women who can spend a good amount of time working out, afford a personal trainer and diet manager, and spend a good portion of their time and money just on managing their looks) only adds to contrast effect.

It was actually briefly talked about in the chick flick How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days as the Old Cow/New Cow study.

And let's not even get into phallus measurements. And the uneven ratios of cunnilingus/felatio/penetration etc.

I could go on... but, let's be fair.


Ladies, put down the emotional porn. No more Twilight or 50 Shades of Grey. No more John Cusack movies.

Those things cause contrast effect, too.


If you need your needs met, get Radically Honest with your spouse instead of daydreaming about eternally 17 year old vampires and werewolves, or the wierd but affable "good guy." Get Radically Honest instead of looking for the next naked chick named after her first pet and the name of the street she grew up on, and some dude with an obscure phallic reference.

Put down the book. Turn off the TV/Computer, and go do something exciting with your spouse. Then have some victory sex in the car afterwards. It will be much more rewarding.


"An expert is a person who has made all the mistakes that can be made in a very narrow field." - Niels Bohr

"Smart people believe weird things because they are skilled at defending beliefs they arrived at for non-smart reasons." - Michael Shermer

"Fair speech may hide a foul heart." - Samwise Gamgee LOTR
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Well said HHH!


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Originally Posted by happyheart
Well said HHH!
Ditto!!


FWW/BW (me)
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Blended Family with 7 kids between us
Too much hurt and pain on both sides that my brain hurts just thinking about it all.



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Good post HHH! Thanks for starting this thread Keep Learning. Good timing for my sitch smile

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Not that I'm pro-porn, I simply notice the contrast that folks are not displaying equal outrage/concern about stuff such as Fifty Shades of Grey.

I've seen a few here suggest that Romance Novels and the like are similar, but I don't see nearly as many threads suggesting women avoid the consumption of such novels due to the same pitfalls.

After all, the same contrast effect is there. Few husbands who have to work for a living can measure up to the suave millionaire who can devote 24/7 to his latest love interest, while maintaining perfect hair and not needing to work out to avoid gaining weight smile

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Keeplearning, you should spend more time examining your own wayward ways before asking others about your inappropriate conversation with a married woman.

You aren't this married woman's psychologist.
You have NO business speaking with a married woman about sex.


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EE, are you saying you feel outrage/concern about the Fifty Shades of Grey books? Because that's not how you come across, as someone who would be outraged about that. I haven't read the Grey books, but I did read Twilight, and I don't think the contrast effect is like you say with that. No one reads those books and then hopes that their man defends them in a huge battle against vampires, or that he would start sparkling. It's more like watching Mission: Impossible, you think wow that's cool, not oh I wish my H would jump from one train car to the next like that.



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Thank you HDW. I appreciate your pithy, insightful comments. Have a great day!

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I've heard plenty of negative things about 50 shades in the media. "Mommy porn" being one of them.

I haven't read it and don't plan to, not it or Twilight or romance novels, (I tend more toward horror and suspense anyway), so I can't really comment on it beyond that. I never wistfully think about how much better the men in novels seem than my husband, because they're either bad guys, or too busy chasing bad guys to woo women, lol.



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Originally Posted by Enlightened_Ex
Not that I'm pro-porn, I simply notice the contrast that folks are not displaying equal outrage/concern about stuff such as Fifty Shades of Grey.

I've seen a few here suggest that Romance Novels and the like are similar, but I don't see nearly as many threads suggesting women avoid the consumption of such novels due to the same pitfalls.

After all, the same contrast effect is there. Few husbands who have to work for a living can measure up to the suave millionaire who can devote 24/7 to his latest love interest, while maintaining perfect hair and not needing to work out to avoid gaining weight smile

Much television, and cable, has scenes that are close to porn anyway. Game of Thrones, for example, is really something.

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here is a link to the porn convo on peps thread. It explains the contrast effect from mine and HHH's perspective.

http://forum.marriagebuilders.com/ubbt/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Number=2567688&page=9


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Thanks for the link MrNiceGuy, that was very helpful!

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Porn is a scary thing. For some interesting insite to how i affects the mind take a look at the mini course that Candeo offers. It will blow your mind.

As a man that struggled with a porn addiction for most of my life. It has no place in a marriage. The damage the user does to the marriage is very hard to overcome. Even after over 2 years of sobriety the work to rebuild trust is a daily effort.

There is so much more to porn then what most people realize.

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My stbx still does not understand what a deal breaker his use of porn was in the marriage. Looking back over 28 years, I realize now that it was probably responsible for my feeling like a single parent. He rarely wanted to do anything with me and our sons on the weekends - but he always wanted to know what time we would be back. (so he wouldn't get caught). He actually thought he was being "discreet" by not using it while I was there. However, if I had company (even my 91 year old mother!), he considered me "gone" and retreated to his office. I didn't put all of this together until a year ago when I came across his recent computer history and cross referenced it with my journal entries. I never really understood why he seemed irritated when I returned from a day/weekend away with my family - or why he didn't want to join us. He was gone all week with his job, yet time with me on the weekend was not a priority at all for him. So clear now! Towards the end of our marriage, I was getting divorce consults about once a year and this would scare my H into saying he "could give it up" (not a true promise that he "would"), while also implying that it was "no big deal." He wasn't addicted! He could go "days" without it!!!

It's very hard for some men to think of porn use as a form of infidelity - but for me it was salt in the wound of the (3 year) affair he had halfway through the marriage. He kept saying the affair was "years ago." Why wasn't I over it?

I forgave - but I didn't, couldn't forget. He holds this against me. Yet I knew that remembering would be key to my recovery (maintaining my sense of self esteem - if/when we divorced.) I looked at his infidelity as 'frosting on the cake' of chronic abuse in many other forms throughout the entire marriage. He cannot fully own this behavior and considers my response to it to be abuse as well.

Addictions are deal breakers in a marriage because they steal so much time from the relationship and represent independent behaviors of the worst sort.


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