Porn: even more addictive than Barack and McCain
There's no escaping the media buzz surrounding the US election. It's everywhere and endless , and I can easily believe that people are getting hooked. With up-to-the-minute news updates, fever-pitch blogging and fierce online debates, it's strong stuff indeed.
So I read Mike Elgan's observations at Datamation.com with interest. He lists the striking parallels between Election Addiction and Porn Addiction, and brings some intriguing insights to the whole topic.
For people struggling with porn, some of Mike's observations are right on target. Let me explain...
"Election Addiction is justifiable in part because it's rare and temporary"
We often find ourselves using similar justifications for porn habits. This is particularly applicable when we're getting the stuff for free: shared P2P downloads and torrents, rare passwords, hacked paysites and videos posted on non-pornographic sites that will surely be taken down at any moment.
Many addicts will recognise the internal reasoning: "Yeah I'm cutting down on porn, but this file/site/download is RARE! It'll never be available again... if I don't download it now... just this one file and then I'll quit..."
Nothing stirs up our gotta-have-it instinct more than access to rare or 'special stuff'. In recovery, we really start to wonder what all the excitement was about. It's embarrassing really.
"Like Online Porn Addiction, Election Addiction is fueled by skilled professionals"
Hollywood produces 400 feature films a year. According to Adult Video News, the porn industry churns out 11,000. That's big, lucrative business.
The porn industry drives technical innovation. Porn drove the VHS video market and it also drove broadband internet; it now looks likely to influence the next generation of movie format, which it has chosen as HD-DVD.
So we're talking about a sophisticated and savvy industry that continues to expand. Compulsive consumers are repeat customers, to put it mildly.
"We're unprepared for it because some of the Internet applications are so new to us. New Web 2.0 tools like Digg, YouTube and Facebook are enabling Election Addiction like nothing the world has ever seen"
And for every Digg, YouTube or Facebook, there's is now a porn equivalent with many thousands of participants.
Porn video sharing, webcamming communities, porn bookmarking, porn blogging. There's no shortage of web 2.0 porn resources to feed our habits.
Which leads us to the next observation...
"It feeds off of the Election Addiction of other people. It's viral"
Many of us remember the old, pre-internet days of feeding those porn urges. Seedy bookstores and sticky cinemas, often operating on the fringes of the law. Awkwardly shuffling past other customers was the only contact we had with fellow porn enthusiasts.
Things are different today, of course. The slick and socially connected sites put porn in a very different light and on the whole, that's probably no bad thing. But for people struggling with porn, it provides additional, deluded justification.
"Camming... homemade porn... DVD-ripping... everybody's into it." Bored with vanilla porn sites and movies, more and more people are making their own. Filming themselves or their (often unaware) partners, they contribute to sharing and voyeur communities.
For the compulsive porn user, this means an endless source of fresh porn, and some regrettable experiments with their own cameras. Again, recovering addicts look back with cringing embarrassment.
I'll wrap this up with a final quote from Mike Elgan:
The Internet is simply the Mother of All Enablers, providing a medium through which addicts can indulge real addictions, including porn, gambling, news, video games and socializing (a.k.a. social media addiction).
At least in a few weeks time, the election fever will die down and avid watchers will get on with their lives. For porn addiction, there's no such end in sight.


2 comments
Wow great post. I'm addicted
Wow great post. I'm addicted to porn AND the US elections but at least one of them is over today.
I so agree with what you say about the professional cunning of the porn industry. Through their websites and movies, everything has become faster and more vivid. I'm old enough to remember when porn films were for couples, or at least had some kind of story even if it was rubbish. The acts shown were close to what real people do.
Now, most porn is churned out for the obsessed guy who wants to cut straight to the action, and the action has to be weirder and harder so he doesn't get bored and go somewhere else. They have to keep him hooked and fast-forwarding to get to their next download or movie or whatever.
Even though I see this very clearly, I'm still watching the stuff. I find it troubling though.
I would have to add that I
I would have to add that I recently realized that I had become addicted to Blog Commenting ~ using a generic email address I found myself signing up with sites so I could lash out with my own blog comments. Being that I am a porn fueled compulsive masturbator I think this is another form of escape, especially since I am posting under an assumed identity rather than using my real name.
In reading your post Jason on ridding oneself of the stash ~ I have also decided to get rid of my blog post privileges and possibly my secret identity as well.
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