8 Ways You Can Support Someone While They Quit Porn Article
Here are a few tips that can help you support a loved one—friend, family, or significant other—while they choose to stop watching porn.
Here are a few tips that can help you support a loved one—friend, family, or significant other—while they choose to stop watching porn.
“[Quitting porn] has helped me to see women as people, instead of objects. To see them as beautiful minds, not just as body parts.”
Want to quit watching porn? If you have a porn habit but want to quit, you’re not alone. Here are some tips that will start recovering!
It’s not surprising that these numbers have skyrocketed, but that’s only half of the equation. Young people are being exposed to porn much earlier, but porn is often much more extreme than it ever used to be.
Incel communities claim to be a place for young men who have not had sex to receive mutual support. However, analysis of topics and threads on incel forums shows that most discussions lean toward expressions of violence, rage, and despair.
We sat down with Alex and Candice, a couple whose marriage was brought to the brink due to Alex’s consumption of pornography.
What started as a natural curiosity about sex at 9-years-old eventually escalated into a compulsive habit.
Eddie Capparucci, Ph.D. discusses the ways in which pornography affects the consumer and their relationships.
When it comes to evaluating schools, many safety concerns are involved, but do schools realize that students are being exposed to or consuming pornography while at school?
There are emotional reasons people keep going back to porn—reasons that are not crazy or deranged, reasons that don’t make them a “bad person.”
Research shows that porn can fuel disconnection—and that doesn’t only translate to those you’re in a romantic relationship with.
Research indicates that consuming porn is linked with more negative body image, lower self-esteem, and poorer mental health.