Archives for posts with tag: EVAN’S Blog

EVAN has agreed to collaborate from time to time with Porn Recovery UK about his process of working with a 30-year porn habit. Here’s his seventh blog.

I’ve just come back from a therapy session and I’m still thinking about why, when I’ve been doing so well, I should choose to sabotage myself. I’ve just been talking about how I can see that self-sabotage is a pattern in my life – both at work and at home. I can see how I’ve been using porn to smooth out pretty much all my emotional ups and downs – just like taking a tablet. It really closes down my horizons, closes down my thinking and then my feelings. It’s really interesting to be faced with how vulnerable I am to porn. Clearly not all people who use it are like me. I long for the idea of being able to just go ‘porn-lite’.

My therapist talks about my choices, how I have to decide where to set the bar of what I can view and what I can’t. I thought I was doing okay with that idea, and then I binged on the stuff. I took myself to a really dark place with it yesterday. I looked for the destructive stuff to me. Talking about it in therapy just now, I can see how I am using it to punish myself. I’m not going to write about those details here (at least not yet – if ever) but I can see how I’m trying to work through my past messed-up stuff.  My therapist made an analogy to the way people sometimes use sexual fantasies to work out past sexual trauma – like when people have been abused. Although nothing like that happened to me, there is relationship stuff that I can see I’m trying to fix – or is it destroy? – when I look at the heavy, nasty porn.
I’m not going to beat myself up here but I do wish I could have the beautiful sexy images without it triggering me to the dark stuff. I’m not one of the lucky people who can use porn without consequences – even though my therapists says they really do exist.

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EVAN has agreed to collaborate from time to time with Porn Recovery UK about his process of working with a 30-year porn habit. Here’s his sixth blog.

I’ve only masturbated three times this week – despite having magazines and R18 DVDs. I’ve started a couple of times and felt bored, zipped up and got on with something else. It’s like something has disconnected in me at the moment. It’s not a bad feeling, just very different. I know it’s because I’m keeping away from the net. A couple of times this week I’ve just thought, at the oddest moments, wow, I’ve not been thinking about sex all afternoon … or … all evening. I just know if I had been on the net it would have been different. The Internet would have kept me there for an hour or so before it finally fired up my interests. Breaking this cycle is what success is all about for me. I can, for the first time in a long while, say ‘I feel good!’

CLICK FOR THE FIRST SIX OF EVAN’S BLOGS

‘EVAN’ has agreed to collaborate from time to time with Porn Recovery UK about his process of working with a 30-year porn habit. Here is a much longer-than-usual blog from him about his psychotherapy process.

Therapy sessions are helping me to order things in my mind a little more now. I’ve started to get a grasp of the idea that porn is a very big and diverse subject for me, that I’m not responsible for it – just my own use of it. I’m also really beginning to get to understand that masturbation isn’t bad! It never has been, but the way I’ve been engaging with it could have been. The Internet drove my compulsivity.

I’m starting to see the shape of my time with porn, that when I began to use [erotic materials], it was exciting; the women in the pictures were gorgeous, sexy and beautiful. They were not, to my mind, degrading themselves in sexual acts I’d rather not write down.

When I compare what I started with and where I am now it makes me sad. Those magazines I used to look at as a young man seemed exciting. I didn’t look at them 10 times a day; I didn’t even look at them every day. The women in the pictures I was masturbating to looked ‘happy’ and sexy. They were glossy, artful images of women who looked interested in being naked in front of a camera. If my girlfriends of the time had been in those pictures, then I’d still have taken them home to meet my mother! Well, perhaps not my mother. Then there was the much more artistic/fetish stuff. I remember feeling I was a bit of a connoisseur when I looked at those black and white magazines or bought the coffee top, hardback books. When I think about them now, I see them as being part of my sexual identity, my way of being.
And then there was the Internet …

I started with the Internet in a very different place to the magazines. The endless source of new, free pictures, then the streaming videos. I couldn’t control my looking and I didn’t view or go looking for the same ‘sexy and beautiful’ images I’d used in magazines. I went beyond the artistry of fetish and into the darkest places I could find.

Therapy is making me find words for what I sought out: degradation, exploitation, violence. Those words don’t sit pretty on the screen. I sought out the degradation of women; I supported the exploitation of women; I looked to watch violence acted out on women.

It surprises me that I cried in the last session. I sat with another man in a closed room and let my feelings out about the place I’d taken myself to. I cried as a father of two beautiful girls. I cried as a man seeing the loss of his own sexual life. The Internet is totally the PornNet for me.

It’s only just occurring to me in my last couple of sessions that I have a life away from porn on the Internet and I’m realising as I talk in therapy about so much more than porn – it makes me feel a little bit hopeful.

‘EVAN’ is in psychotherapy. He has agreed to collaborate, from time to time, with Porn Recovery UK about his process of working with a 30-year porn habit. Here’s his fourth blog.

I’m so disappointed in myself. If you have ever tried to give up Internet porn, you’ll know the feeling. A whole load of things got on top of me at work yesterday. I feel quite depressed – what’s the point! It’s five days to go until my next therapy session, I’m sleeping in the spare room, I’m struggling with it all.

I’ve promised myself I’ll be honest in this process. Yesterday I flipped the laptop open. I had some thought in my mind that I could stop, but the drive for the high… it was the meaning of the word desperate.

As I started off the whole process I realized I’d been planning it all out unconsciously. I had made circumstances so that I’d find myself with the time alone. I knew which site I was going to use, what I was going to search for. I really wanted to close the laptop, disconnect myself from this stuff, be good, ahhhh! I even thought about how bad this was going to look on the blog.

After I’d used, I had this distaste for myself. I wrote it all down, I’m taking it to therapy and I promised myself, if nothing else, I’d tell the truth in this entry – not pretend that I hadn’t looked or that there was some external factor that ‘made me do it’. If you are trying to give up porn, know there are set backs. My advice – don’t just try to do this work on your own; you’ll simply lie to yourself.  I think now I’m ready to listen to someone else’s suggestions of how to get through this mire.

‘EVAN’ is in psychotherapy. He has agreed to collaborate, from time to time, with Porn Recovery UK about his process of working with a 30-year porn habit. Here’s his third blog.

How long can I go around in this mood? I’ve not had sex for six weeks and I’ve not  even masturbated for the last five days. I’ve set myself a target not to masturbate until Jessica let’s me back into the bedroom. I’m feeling really ‘tight’ in my whole body. My therapist asked me why I was being so extreme – trying to stop porn and ‘tormenting’ myself like this? Maybe he is right that I am being extreme; maybe I am trying to sabotage my own recovery.

Not masturbating for five days might not sound a long time to you, but that’s the longest I’ve been without an orgasm in pretty much my whole life. I’ve masturbated since I was really young. I can’t remember from what age exactly but I do know I was in my first house so, I can’t have been more than six years old. I’ve masturbated pretty much twice a day (and sometimes even more) since we got broadband. Knowing my ‘struggle’ is being recorded like this is giving me some purpose and point – it’s one of the first times in my life I feel I’ve got something positive to associate my porn life with.  Now I feel I’ve got something to prove.

‘EVAN’ is in psychotherapy. He has agreed to collaborate, from time to time, with Porn Recovery UK about his process of working with a 30-year porn habit. Here’s his second blog.

I dreamed about sex. I think I must be scared that I’m giving up all of sex – not just porn. It’s 8.50am now, and I feel bad tempered. I’ve just woken up, and the girls have already gone out shopping. Normally, this would be a great chance to masturbate to Internet porn. But I’m sticking to my resolution. Every time I think about porn I say to myself, ‘I’m not doing that at the moment.’

I decided to get up and write an entry. I want to write how much I love Jessica and my girls – Lucy and Maxine. I feel more comfortable writing this here and talking about my issues in therapy than I do with Jessica, though. I realise that there is still a lot for us to sort out since she discovered what I’d been up to on the Internet. I wish we were back together sleeping in the same bed.

‘EVAN’ is in psychotherapy. He has agreed to collaborate, from time to time, with Porn Recovery UK about his process of working with a 30-year porn habit. Here’s his first blog.

We spoke about not giving up Internet porn all in one go, about ‘not making anything the last time’. The idea is if I said I was ‘giving it up forever’ I might just be setting myself up to focus on porn even more. It all made sense in the session, but I got up this morning and I’ve decided that I have finished with the Net – this is it!

Later, I’m going to round up all my porn and decide what to do with it. Am I really going to stop using it? I was 13 years old when I first started using proper porn. That’s exactly 30 years ago. I have a 30 year-old habit to give up. It feels like I’m doing well in the sessions. It feels much easier to talk about it than I thought. But now I really have to do the work.

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