Turn away! Why pornography can harm your sex life. By urology professor Dr. David Samadi (2016)

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Porn is more accessible than ever, and many couples use it to enhance their sex lives. But it does more harm than good, Dr. Samadi says.

BY Dr. David Samadi Daily News Contributor. Friday, September 9, 2016

Who can forget the harrowing ordeal of Elizabeth Smart, a 14-year-old abducted from her bedroom in Salt Lake City, Utah in 2002 and held by her kidnappers for nine long months?

Fortunately, her story had a happy ending as she was rescued on March 12, 2003, just 18 miles from her home.

By all accounts, this brave young woman, who suffered horrible trauma of not knowing what her fate would be, has weathered her painful experience with grace and dignity since that time.

Recently, she has come forward to bravely talk about and share new details of how pornography made her nine months of hell even worse. She has come out with a video for an anti-porn group that is raising awareness of the harmful effects of pornography based on science, facts, and personal accounts.

Elizabeth Smart: porn ‘made my living hell worse’

The group, called fightthenewdrug.org, has a goal to educate the public of pornography’s influence on creating huge problems for relationships, its destruction for families and how porn production is often connected with sex trafficking and sexual exploitation, particularly of women.

The internet has made pornography more accessible than ever. With a few simple clicks anyone can view just about any type of pornography they desire.

Many couples may view it as an enhancement to their sex life, yet is it really the best way to bring a couple closer together? Or is it driving more of a wedge between them?

Here are ways in which pornography has a bigger, more harmful effect than we realize:

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Addiction to porn escalates

You may think viewing just a small sampling of porn won’t be harmful. But the more you watch, the more you need an ever-increasing dosage, whetting the appetite for more hardcore porn to reach the same level of arousal.

What used to disgust you now turns you on

After viewing a steady diet of porn, in time your behavior begins to change in that what used to be disturbing and disgusting to you, now seems more normal and common.

Pamela Anderson pens op-ed urging people to not watch pornography

Your brain is rewarding you for watching porn by pumping the chemical dopamine, making you feel terrific — but only temporarily.

What may have started out as being a “connoisseur” of soft porn can eventually turn more hardcore in order to get the same sexual response.

Porn destroys love

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Research has shown men exposed to pornography are often more critical of their partner’s appearance, sexual performance and displays of affection. Women are portrayed as sex objects needing to be dominated. Frequent users of porn may find that they have lost interest in finding love, making them more cynical of loving relationships, unable to trust others and have a view of marriage as being confining.

Porn harms our sex life

When watching porn, everything seems surreal as the viewer falls into a fantasy world of perfect sex, more sex and better sex than what is happening in their real life.

Exposure to soft-core porn displaying women with perfect bodies can create feelings of dissatisfaction with our partner’s looks, with less willingness to try new sex acts, which caan lead to feelings of falling out of love with our significant other.

A dramatic downfall for men who view porn frequently is the inability to achieve an erection. Viewing porn hijacks the reward center in our brain by flooding the brain with an overload of chemicals.

This results in the user’s brain responding by reducing the amount of pleasure chemicals it produces so that it stops responding to the chemicals being produced. This leads to a man experiencing erectile dysfunction when with a real person in that they are unable to get an erection without viewing porn.

Porn destroys relationships

Some people may view porn as just another type of sexual experience, but in reality it deceives our sense of judgement.

Porn teaches just the opposite of what real loving relationships are all about — equality, trust, honesty, respect and love.

Instead, porn demonstrates that relationships are based on domination, disrespect, abuse, violence and detachment. The more a person views porn, the harder it will be for them to have a real loving relationship or sex life.

At this time there is no medical consensus on whether pornography is addictive or not, but the short-term pleasure it may provide can easily turn into long-term pain, proving to be a problem for many couples.

Dr. Samadi is a board-certified urologic oncologist trained in open and traditional and laparoscopic surgery and is an expert in robotic prostate surgery. He is chairman of urology, chief of robotic surgery at Lenox Hill Hospital and professor of urology at Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine. He is a medical correspondent for the Fox News Channel’s Medical A-Team Learn more at roboticoncology.com. Visit Dr. Samadi’s blog at SamadiMD.com. Follow Dr. Samadi on Twitter, Instagram, Pintrest and Facebook.

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