Photo by Jamie Fullerton
Seven terabytes is a lot of porn to have stored away, especially considering it's 2015 and there are literally millions of videos you can just stream online. But does that make Ben a porn addict? No, not according to him.Mark (not his real name) similarly finds the lure of internet smut impossible to resist. Even at work, Mark struggles to keep himself from watching porn. He doesn't always succeed. Just before Christmas, a colleague spotted his filth-filled screen, and Mark spent his festive days off waiting to see if he'd be fired. In the end, Mark kept his job, but he decided to seek help. "I'm a porn addict," he admitted.Like sex addiction—super fashionable in celebrity circles—the concept of porn addiction has attracted criticism. In a new book, Sex Addiction: A Critical History, New Zealand academics Barry Reay, Nina Attwood, and Claire Gooder claim that porn addiction is mythical; a product of "social opportunism, diagnostic amorphism, therapeutic self-interest and popular cultural endorsement." Yet while they don't believe it's an addiction, Reay acknowledges that our sex-negative culture, click-bait media, and flourishing therapy industry have combined to create a fanciful and frightening condition.Mark, and thousands of other men (few women seek treatment for porn addiction), would disagree. An online " Kick Start Recovery Program," created by UK porn addiction expert Paula Hall, has had more than 11,000 users.
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In theory, people can become 'addicted' to anything: making money, conversation, Snickers bars.
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