The Porn Myth - New York Times
In the end, porn doesn’t whet men’s appetites—it turns them off the real thing.
At a benefit the other night, I saw Andrea Dworkin, the anti-porn activist most famous in the eighties for her conviction that opening the floodgates of pornography would lead men to see real women in sexually debased ways. If we did not limit pornography, she argued—before Internet technology made that prospect a technical impossibility—most men would come to objectify women as they objectified porn stars, and treat them accordingly. In a kind of domino theory, she predicted, rape and other kinds of sexual mayhem would surely follow.
The feminist warrior looked gentle and almost frail. The world she had, Cassandra-like, warned us about so passionately was truly here: Porn is, as David Amsden says, the “wallpaper” of our lives now. So was she right or wrong?
She was right about the warning, wrong about the outcome. As she foretold, pornography did breach the dike that separated a marginal, adult, private pursuit from the mainstream public arena. The whole world, post-Internet, did become pornographized. Young men and women are indeed being taught what sex is, how it looks, what its etiquette and expectations are, by pornographic training—and this is having a huge effect on how they interact.
But the effect is not making men into raving beasts. On the contrary: The onslaught of porn is responsible for deadening male libido in relation to real women, and leading men to see fewer and fewer women as “porn-worthy.” Far from having to fend off porn-crazed young men, young women are worrying that as mere flesh and blood, they can scarcely get, let alone hold, their attention.
Here is what young women tell me on college campuses when the subject comes up: They can’t compete, and they know it. For how can a real woman—with pores and her own breasts and even sexual needs of her own (let alone with speech that goes beyond “More, more, you big stud!”)—possibly compete with a cybervision of perfection, downloadable and extinguishable at will, who comes, so to speak, utterly submissive and tailored to the consumer’s least specification?
For most of human history, erotic images have been reflections of, or celebrations of, or substitutes for, real naked women. For the first time in human history, the images’ power and allure have supplanted that of real naked women. Today, real naked women are just bad porn.
For two decades, I have watched young women experience the continual “mission creep” of how pornography—and now Internet pornography—has lowered their sense of their own sexual value and their actual sexual value. When I came of age in the seventies, it was still pretty cool to be able to offer a young man the actual presence of a naked, willing young woman. There were more young men who wanted to be with naked women than there were naked women on the market. If there was nothing actively alarming about you, you could get a pretty enthusiastic response by just showing up. Your boyfriend may have seen Playboy, but hey, you could move, you were warm, you were real. Thirty years ago, simple lovemaking was considered erotic in the pornography that entered mainstream consciousness: When Behind the Green Door first opened, clumsy, earnest, missionary-position intercourse was still considered to be a huge turn-on.
Well, I am 40, and mine is the last female generation to experience that sense of sexual confidence and security in what we had to offer. Our younger sisters had to compete with video porn in the eighties and nineties, when intercourse was not hot enough. Now you have to offer—or flirtatiously suggest—the lesbian scene, the ejaculate-in-the-face scene. Being naked is not enough; you have to be buff, be tan with no tan lines, have the surgically hoisted breasts and the Brazilian bikini wax—just like porn stars. (In my gym, the 40-year-old women have adult pubic hair; the twentysomethings have all been trimmed and styled.) Pornography is addictive; the baseline gets ratcheted up. By the new millennium, a vagina—which, by the way, used to have a pretty high “exchange value,” as Marxist economists would say—wasn’t enough; it barely registered on the thrill scale. All mainstream porn—and certainly the Internet—made routine use of all available female orifices.
The porn loop is de rigueur, no longer outside the pale; starlets in tabloids boast of learning to strip from professionals; the “cool girls” go with guys to the strip clubs, and even ask for lap dances; college girls are expected to tease guys at keg parties with lesbian kisses à la Britney and Madonna.
But does all this sexual imagery in the air mean that sex has been liberated—or is it the case that the relationship between the multi-billion-dollar porn industry, compulsiveness, and sexual appetite has become like the relationship between agribusiness, processed foods, supersize portions, and obesity? If your appetite is stimulated and fed by poor-quality material, it takes more junk to fill you up. People are not closer because of porn but further apart; people are not more turned on in their daily lives but less so.
The young women who talk to me on campuses about the effect of pornography on their intimate lives speak of feeling that they can never measure up, that they can never ask for what they want; and that if they do not offer what porn offers, they cannot expect to hold a guy. The young men talk about what it is like to grow up learning about sex from porn, and how it is not helpful to them in trying to figure out how to be with a real woman. Mostly, when I ask about loneliness, a deep, sad silence descends on audiences of young men and young women alike. They know they are lonely together, even when conjoined, and that this imagery is a big part of that loneliness. What they don’t know is how to get out, how to find each other again erotically, face-to-face.
So Dworkin was right that pornography is compulsive, but she was wrong in thinking it would make men more rapacious. A whole generation of men are less able to connect erotically to women—and ultimately less libidinous.
The reason to turn off the porn might become, to thoughtful people, not a moral one but, in a way, a physical- and emotional-health one; you might want to rethink your constant access to porn in the same way that, if you want to be an athlete, you rethink your smoking. The evidence is in: Greater supply of the stimulant equals diminished capacity.
“For the first time in human history, the images’ power and allure have supplanted that of real naked women. Today, real naked women are just bad porn.”
After all, pornography works in the most basic of ways on the brain: It is Pavlovian. An orgasm is one of the biggest reinforcers imaginable. If you associate orgasm with your wife, a kiss, a scent, a body, that is what, over time, will turn you on; if you open your focus to an endless stream of ever-more-transgressive images of cybersex slaves, that is what it will take to turn you on. The ubiquity of sexual images does not free eros but dilutes it.
Other cultures know this. I am not advocating a return to the days of hiding female sexuality, but I am noting that the power and charge of sex are maintained when there is some sacredness to it, when it is not on tap all the time. In many more traditional cultures, it is not prudery that leads them to discourage men from looking at pornography. It is, rather, because these cultures understand male sexuality and what it takes to keep men and women turned on to one another over time—to help men, in particular, to, as the Old Testament puts it, “rejoice with the wife of thy youth; let her breasts satisfy thee at all times.” These cultures urge men not to look at porn because they know that a powerful erotic bond between parents is a key element of a strong family.
And feminists have misunderstood many of these prohibitions.
I will never forget a visit I made to Ilana, an old friend who had become an Orthodox Jew in Jerusalem. When I saw her again, she had abandoned her jeans and T-shirts for long skirts and a head scarf. I could not get over it. Ilana has waist-length, wild and curly golden-blonde hair. “Can’t I even see your hair?” I asked, trying to find my old friend in there. “No,” she demurred quietly. “Only my husband,” she said with a calm sexual confidence, “ever gets to see my hair.”
When she showed me her little house in a settlement on a hill, and I saw the bedroom, draped in Middle Eastern embroideries, that she shares only with her husband—the kids are not allowed—the sexual intensity in the air was archaic, overwhelming. It was private. It was a feeling of erotic intensity deeper than any I have ever picked up between secular couples in the liberated West. And I thought: Our husbands see naked women all day—in Times Square if not on the Net. Her husband never even sees another woman’s hair.
She must feel, I thought, so hot.
Compare that steaminess with a conversation I had at Northwestern, after I had talked about the effect of porn on relationships. “Why have sex right away?” a boy with tousled hair and Bambi eyes was explaining. “Things are always a little tense and uncomfortable when you just start seeing someone,” he said. “I prefer to have sex right away just to get it over with. You know it’s going to happen anyway, and it gets rid of the tension.”
“Isn’t the tension kind of fun?” I asked. “Doesn’t that also get rid of the mystery?”
“Mystery?” He looked at me blankly. And then, without hesitating, he replied: “I don’t know what you’re talking about. Sex has no mystery.”
December 1st, 2007 at 11:05 am
pansies for porn
Too many men have exchanged their strength and their magnificence for worthless lies and empty fantasies (PORN) leaving you shallow, hollow people who know everything about surviving and nothing about really living. Men have become enslaved by evil and have given up all that is worth passionately living and sacrificially dying for.
To be a MAN is to choose to act with courage, commitment and perseverance on behalf of the women and children in our communities. It is to hate all that objectifies and demeans them and to embrace with a passion every opportunity have to stand up for them and intercede on their behalf. Only then will men be worthy of the manhood to which you are called.
Men who choose to use pornography are immature and self-centered and are incapable of real love.
December 1st, 2007 at 11:10 am
I find that the discussions about Porn are similar to those of juries that find it hard to convict someone of driving while drunk.
It’s really hard to condemn someone for doing something bad that you do yourself. I think that is at the heart of this issue.
Porn is so all-pervasive that we have either become inured to it, or we are addicted and don’t want to risk it going away (or at least more difficult to obtain).
I recommend anyone who would like to learn more about this problem pick up a copy of SALVO Issue 2, Spring 2007.
Lots of facts and figures. The most scary is the rise in child pornography.
As far as victimless…talk to a wife of someone who’s been addicted to porn. Talk to the lost souls that are participants (can’t call them actors) in the filming of pornography….
No one can claim this is a victimless crime. It is not.
December 1st, 2007 at 11:13 am
I work in community mental health — primarily with the chronically mentally ill and substance abusers. At the other end of the building, we have children’s mental health services. All of the professionals I associate with on a daily basis agree that pornography objectifies people and encourages imitation of inappropriate sexual activity. Oddly, many of them are quite comfortable with the idea of teens and adults having sex as often as they like and with whomever they want whenever they want. They don’t see that as a problem (go figure). However, a walk down the hall and a quick vote revealed that they all feel that pornography encourages to child molestation, rape, and harmful sex practices like anal sex (which results in anal prolapse, which the doctors here say is bad). So, just from a professional mental health standpoint, pornography isn’t considered healthy.
Opposing pornography isn’t just for Christians anymore.
December 1st, 2007 at 11:17 am
Pursuit of Happiness?
Pamela Paul, author of the book, Pornified, notes statistical and anecdotal evidence that indicts pornography for destroying our ability to relate to one another and ourselves,
Extensive Statistical research & 100s of interviews finds that regular viewers or pornography were
-less happy
-more likely to suffer from impotence
-more likely to engage in risky/illegal sexual activity
-more unhappy with their partners and themselves
-women devastated by their husband’s/boyfriend’s addiction
-normal sexual appetites progressed to violent & criminal behavior after being numbed by fantasies on the net
-wasted work hours from online porn during the business day & at home
-subsequent lost opportunities for dating/professional prospects and
-self-image degradation
-normalizing behaviors that 20 yrs ago would have been nearly criminal
-young girls sexualizing themselves
-younger and younger men obsessed over porn-star persona
-people who prefer fantasy to reality
-objectification of women
Source: SALVO issue 2 spring 2007
But of course, it isn’t harmful, and makes everybody happy.
December 2nd, 2007 at 1:22 pm
Pornography destroys marriages and relationships. I should know because I used to be a stripper. I know that 99% of my customers had a wife/girlfriend/love interest. I had this customer who was usually very open with me and we would talk about his wife sometimes after giving him 10 dances I told him I was too tired and to take the next $20 and buy his wife something nice. Do you know what he said?“Yuk, no I want you.” Only later to find that he just spent his family’s grocery money. Most of the time these things would roll off of my back but it really bothered me to discover the truth as a person I really liked him but he was immune un-impervious to us women. Even worse I got a new boyfriend, after falling for him very deeply I met his dad who was a long time customer of mine. He never spoke a word of it to me, but he knows it does get easier with time but there were times I wanted to melt into the floor and die. Good thing his father has always been very kind and respectful to me but I will never forget how he spoke of his wife he would grab at me and say that she would have never let him do this with her. I asked him then if he was still attracted to her and he told me the short answer “No” he said she was getting older and unattractive, that she didn’t try to better herself and for him he needed an adventurous woman. If you met these church going righteous people you would never know there was a single problem or that this man would ever be in a strip club but that id the sneakiness of it. That is the shear uncontrollable urge that taunts men everywhere they look on every commercial, every magazine especially geared towards them. Now as a stripper let me tell you a secret, it is a fantasy of course we don’t complain while were trying to get money, we think you are the coolest, and we want to be your friend. Those lights are very deceiving if only you saw those girls in the dressing room without the red and black lights. You see a girl in the picture at the perfect angle inviting you in with perfect lighting, makeup, hair and silky smooth legs. This is the most deceiving part Men I an not calling you stupid but you should see how differently I am treated from when I get all glimmered up to when I just need a shower. All women get frizzed hair, sweaty and stain on their shirts at times. You men seems to keep the residual image of what ever it is and hold it there form your girl in poor lighting that points out her flaws holding the screaming child tot eh girl who is naked with a smile and a cinched up shirt. Now I wish I was immune to what si going to happen to me, I will get older, my heart will be broken. Pornography and strip clubs should not be readily available and glaring our men down. No woman sees her life playing out like this with the man she married out with a hooker or starring another woman down. I wish it to be true with all my heart that like in the bible she is like a fine wine of all the women she is the finest and that is all you need.
December 2nd, 2007 at 1:27 pm
Okay and I realized one more thing about the fantasy…the more time men think about this fantasy the harder it become for them to go gooey over the strengths of his woman. If he is thinking of a woman in fantasy so without imperfections he finds him self less attracted to the way his wife kisses his cheek or ties her shoes it become blahhhhhh, I would know only because I have asked a lot of questions. Things men used to find sexy and amazing about their women are not so amazing after the picture of the starlet in the perfect angle with her bits waiting. This is not real solely a fantasy, I have a confession…I started getting heavily into bondage. I am a woman not a man so it isn’t solely about men here. I would think about it most of the day. I would play these certain parts I thought I enjoyed over and over and it would continue to run through my mind. The more I did this I found myself thinking about it and when I was with my boyfriend I would become turned off by the way he was touching me even when I told him to practically rape me it wasn’t the right way because I already had the fantasy in my mind. To get past this I had to concentrate on new ideas and things I found to be sexy about what we were doing but it never really went away. I believe it was god or something that came to me because I had a dream that was absolutely horrible me and three of my friends when into this guys house to use a phone he had us locked in with no escape and was over powering us. He started raping my friend right in front of me it was the scariest most disgusting thing I’ve ever seen. This was my friend here and I started to run and separated from the group somehow we were outside I was banging on doors for someone to let us in…I heard him behind me say, “They don’t have jurisdiction here.” I ran as fast as I could but he kept gaining on me I woke up before he got me because I don’t think my brain could’ve comprehended that one. I do not want this I knew it. I don’t have any desire to watch bondage again and if anything reminds me of it I get all grossed out. It’s true what they say to you might think its fun to begin with but I start comparing and assessing the couples to my relationship and my body. It drives me crazier so I don’t watch it anymore.