I Was Fine with Porn and the Commercial Sex Industry, Until I Worked in a Brothel Article
“I worked at the front desk of a brothel, and the sex buyers wanted exactly what was in porn. They would complain to me if they did not get it.”
“I worked at the front desk of a brothel, and the sex buyers wanted exactly what was in porn. They would complain to me if they did not get it.”
Much like “traditional” online porn as we think of it today, there are willing and unwilling participants in the camming side of the sex industry.
“What teen boys learn about sex from porn impacts teen girls, too. My female students talk to me about relationships and I hear a lot of anxiety.”
On any mainstream porn site, it doesn’t take long to find any number of racist titles that promote offensive and unwarranted ethnic and racial stereotypes.
“It’s not worth it. Then you have to make further negotiations with yourself like, ‘Will I do torture porn? Will I do fetish porn? Will I do…forced sex?'”
At the very least, porn is something that usually makes consumers feel they’re doing something that doesn’t benefit their relationships. How’s that healthy?
Your decision to leave porn behind can inspire others to do the same. And as demand lessens, the industry weakens. Choosing to ditch porn is powerful.
“After our first son was born, I found it in the search history again, I felt betrayed and sick to my stomach scrolling through descriptions of women that looked nothing like me.”
Women can be addicted to porn too. It’s not just a “male problem.” I was married and had children before I confided in my husband.
Under the guise of a sleep study, one man drugged and raped 100 women, and made $100,000 selling the videos of it to porn sites.
Billie explained her fashion choices in a short video ad for Calvin Klein. The reason she hides behind baggy clothes might be different than you expect.
Research shows that trauma is normal. If you’re dealing with symptoms like this in the wake of discovering a partner’s porn obsession, you’re not alone.