3 Reasons Why Healthy Relationships and Porn Don’t Mix Article
Porn depicts the human body as nothing more than a sex object and can whittle away the love and intimacy in any relationship.
Porn depicts the human body as nothing more than a sex object and can whittle away the love and intimacy in any relationship.
Even though the Super Bowl looks different in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, human traffickers aren’t practicing social distancing.
The opposite of addiction isn’t the absence of porn consumption—it’s a connection to what’s real. Where is your grounding connection in life?
Pornhub reportedly profits from nonconsensual videos and real rape tapes—here are the latest examples they don’t want consumers to know about.
“It all started when I began noticing him staying up. Then one day I was going through our computer history and there I found it: loads and loads of porn.”
“We tried to be intimate but he could not achieve an erection. So he ran downstairs to watch porn while I lay there waiting for him.”
So what actually is sex trafficking, and how does it work?
A struggle with pornography is never easy to overcome, but when both partners are in it for the right reasons, what’s on the other side is so worth it.
“I Googled what I should do as the girlfriend of someone struggling with porn. Everything I read said since we were not married, I should just break up with him. This just wasn’t good enough for me.”
The response to the article was immediate, resulting in Pornhub announcing three major policy changes they say will prevent the sharing and continuous circulation of nonconsensual images and videos.
The need for intimacy isn’t something that can be replaced with silicone, webcams, or holographic experiences, no matter how many features and improvements it may have.
Porn kills love by streamlining artificial sexual experiences, and discouraging a need for intimacy by demeaning everything exciting about real connections.