Archives for category: Young people and porn usage

 PRUK has been lucky enough to make contact with Ellen through oneinsixwomen. Here she writes about her first experience of using porn.

Technically, I suppose, my first exposure to porn was when I was ten or eleven and I found some of my brother’s magazines whilst snooping in his room one afternoon. I remember being fascinated and horrified at the same time. These were photos of women who hid nothing, and their casual boldness scared me because it was so alien to everything I knew. I went back again and again to look at these magazines when there was no one at home. That was my first experience of porn but what I saw later was so different it made those magazines look like fashion mags.

When I was in my late 20s I spent a Saturday afternoon playing card games on my computer. The internet was only accessible via dial up so I wasn’t on there much, but this day I decided to search for more card games. I clicked on a link that said ‘free card games’ and suddenly I was at a porn site. It was that simple. I didn’t go searching for porn; I had never even imagined seeing it. There was no secret craving for porn and I was completely shocked that I’d landed on this site. In truth it was fairly tame. It was photographs only, and at this point I didn’t even know you could watch porn films online; I thought you had to buy videos at a sleazy shop for that. The pictures were rougher than what I’d seen in my brother’s magazines and the women looked … more demeaned, I guess. They seemed more humiliated, more like victims. I understand now that their humiliation was what attracted me. It resonated with my own experiences of being shamed, put down and emotionally abused. I didn’t go to porn because I wanted to see naked women or, later, because I wanted to see women have sex. I wasn’t aroused by the women; I simply identified with their powerlessness, with the way they were treated as worthless objects. It made sense to me.

That afternoon I forgot about the card games. For the first time, I typed the word ‘porn’ into a search engine. I can remember shaking, and my heart was pounding from fear. I felt like I’d crossed a line, taken a step that I couldn’t have imagined ever taking. Obviously I’d seen pornographic images before, in the magazines, but actually typing ‘porn’ into my computer was something very different. I wasn’t looking at something I’d stumbled across accidentally; I was deliberately choosing porn. And making that choice for the first time wasn’t exciting or liberating or fun. It was simply terrifying.

Within weeks, I knew all the search terms that would quickly find me the images I wanted to see. Within months, I’d discovered movies. A little while after that I found porn fiction, where I could read about impossibly degrading acts that couldn’t happen in real life. I had an entirely new language of code words, abbreviations and acronyms. I knew the names of acts that I hadn’t even known existed a few months before. I was an expert at finding what I wanted to see. Finding my chosen content got faster, easier, more streamlined … but it never stopped being terrifying, and I never stopped hating myself for it.

Copyright oneinsixwomen 2011


Back in late spring this year we were preparing a conference workshop on the subject of pornography and a changing society. Looking for some ideas to kick off the session, we thought about the well-worn angle of innocent search words on the Internet. So, for a few minutes we played a little game. It’s not an original idea; indeed, if you key ‘what search terms return porn words’ into your browser, you’ll see others have already gone there. However, actually playing the game proved quite heartening.

It appears that while at one time ‘eat’, ‘sunny’, ‘small’, ‘big’ and ‘nuns’ might have brought hardcore sex pictures and links to your screen, these searches actually returned very little that was erotic, let alone pornographic. There is a difference between image and web word searches, but not of the order that ‘net nanny’ world would have you believe.

There are search terms you might be surprised by, though. PRUK wouldn’t advise you to search, for example, the term ‘mature’ on the web and certainly not in images mode unless you have safe search turned on ‘all the way’, otherwise you’ll be looking at ‘Mature Moms’, ‘Milf Housewives’, ‘Granny sex’ and way more …

Finding porn on the Internet is not difficult, but it might be just a little more difficult than some people would have you believe. Here at PRUK we know that innocent people come across porn on their home PC not so much because of innocent searches they undertake but because someone in the family has used the computer and left a download or unlocked file that could provide an unpleasant experience if discovered by someone else when and were they least expected it.

Click to read our tips for porn recovery

We thought about this post for a while before putting it on the blog. Searching through the stats of our first eight weeks of the Porn Recovery UK blog raised an important point. Two sorts of people find our blog: there are the people we write it for who are looking for help, information and support about porn usage and addiction; and then the people who are searching for porn itself but land up on the site because of the number of times we use a particular search term. We got to thinking about how useful it might be to use the search terms in a post so that more people searching for porn might come across our site. Why? Because we know that there are many people unhappy with the way they use the Internet for porn, and coming across our site might allow them to pause, stop and consider for a moment. They might even come back at a later point and read the site if they are distressed by their engagement with porn and discover something useful about it or themselves. So, here are some selected search terms and phrases people have used to find us in the last eight weeks:

PHRASES
life outside porn
www.porn
porn stats
porn statistics 2011
turned on: intimacy in a pornized society
virtual sex and the internal world
past kays catalogue underwear pictures
my porn blogs
stephanie porn
extreme porn counselling uk
17 year porn picture
porn categories
girl cute sex video
prepubescent penis
poems on porn
porn usage
pornize
statistics and information on pornography in 2010
motion picture of a man’s penis entering a woman’s vagina
hard sex vagina penis photo
sex porn
porn statistics uk
benny hill private porn
home pussy porn
problems giving up porn
stephanie porn

KEY WORDS
Porn, wounded, girls, helpless, fucks, usage, young, female, recovery, pornography, stats, 2010, 2011, porno, recovery, uk, blog, hardcore, extreme, sex, vagina, penis, photo

PEOPLE SEARCHES
julie bindel
gail dines
heather woods

Click for welcome page

1. ‘The most-often identified reason for over-indulgence in pornography between 2007 and 2010 was the Internet.’ (Source: Duncan E. Stafford therapy-space cambridge)

2.’Rapists and child molesters use less pornography than a control group of “normal” males’ according to Green (1980) (Source: Milton Diamond, (2009) Pornography, Public Acceptance and Sex Related Crime: A Review)

3. In a survey of 1,057 adults in the UK, 30 per cent of the women (aged 18–24) reported watching free porn sites. (Source: BBC/TNS survey, 2011) 

Routes into pornography use have changed considerably over the last few decades. While Marc’s story (click here) is representative of the way young men were introduced to porn before the Internet was such an integral part of life, Jake’s story shows some of the new dangers that current generations face. Jake, like many other young men and women, has had a much swifter and more hardcore initiation. Internet pornography has also led to criminal charges being brought against him.

Jake was born in 1990. During his childhood, he had been given many warnings about the dangers of sex. His early freedom and childhood explorations of many sorts had been curtailed due to being heavily monitored in his movements outside of the house. He was not able to investigate his neighbourhood without numerous checks and balances being put in place by his parents. ‘I think my mother was always fearful that I’d be abducted,’ he said. Overall, Jake’s lack of freedom during his childhood resulted in a parallel lack of personal knowledge of his emerging curiosity of differences in the human body. The whole idea of sex, he reported in therapy, was something ‘very secret’ and ‘probably wrong’ – even though he was very much aware of sexual images and ideas in the multimedia-led early twenty-first century childhood he was growing up in.

‘There was loads of talk about girls in the playground and most of all at Saturday football.’ There had been a high proportion of Southeast Asians at Jake’s school. ‘Looking back on it, I guess they were all very hard working and kept themselves away from us. I suppose that made them much more interesting to us boys. First there was all that stupid stuff that people said about Asian girls; clearly no one had a clue. My friend said their private parts went sideways, like their eyes … sounds pretty racist now I say it out loud, but it wasn’t like that when we were kids. Well, you don’t know until you’ve looked, do you! Everyone was saying they all looked fit, young, you know …’ When working with people in this subject area, you are aware that there are constant little clues being dropped about what they want to talk about. I registered Jake’s talk of youth.

‘The biggest kid in our class was Mash. He was already doing Chan [a female classmate] when we were about 13.’ Jake described how ‘Mash and Niddy ran up to the girls on the sports field and tried to lift their skirts or grab their boobs. Then we’d get something … in a PSHE lesson … that told us how “wrong it was”, but I just used to think how great it must have been to be like them. I remember trying to imagine myself with Chan. I used to masturbate thinking about winning her over in some kind of romantic dual. I’d probably watched too much Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon!’

‘About that time I also got lent an 18 video game where you could get women to ride BMX bikes, and one of the settings was to have them do it in the nude. They were all very teen schoolgirls but with big boobs. You could collect tokens that let you visit a strip bar – the more tokens you collected in the game the more you got to see in the strip bar – it was all very hot for me at my age – you were kind of controlling the action, not just watching it. There were a lot of schoolgirl pigtails in that game, I seem to remember. It just so tapped into that Japanese anime look for me, as well as how “dirty” sex was and how available girls should be.’

Emphasising the media relationship and availability of sex through it, Jake was also aware of a rumour that Mash and Niddy had made a video of Chan on a mobile phone. ‘That did it for me. People were saying you could see all her girl’s bits but I don’t know … I guess I was really shy then. I was a late developer – my pubes didn’t grow until I was about 15 so I always felt a bit inadequate next to Mash and the crew. I didn’t actually get a girlfriend till I was 19.’

The end result of these early influences were that Jake very quickly turned to the main source of pornographic supply – the Internet (despite the fact that his parents had put a parental lock on certain features of the laptop). ‘They’d written the password on the back of the box so I could surf whatever I wanted anyway. I can remember feeling really shaky as I opened up Google. You know that feeling when you’ve drunk too much coffee? Just like that … I simply put “Asian pussy” into the search box. I don’t know if you know the sort of thing you get on these sites. Let’s just say, I didn’t get pictures of kittens …’

I nod with a slightly exaggerated action, hoping to convey acceptance for him, to allow him to have the freedom to tell me what he feels he needs to. Jake has been sounding me out, leaving clues as to what he has been viewing since those early days with erotic games and beginning to view the Internet for pornography. He wants to know what I will and won’t pick up on before he risks working with me.

When he tells me that he has had a recent visit from the police and that his computers have been removed I am clear where porn has taken him.

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