Watching porn may boost may boost a man's performance in bed!

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Gene Devine

Super Moderator
This is so true for me. If I watch porn and don't orgasm my desire to have out of control sex with my wife is insane. Porn for me does stoke the fire...and in a big way!!!

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It's hard to argue that pornography, especially the hardcore stuff, is healthy viewing for men. It objectifies women and it perpetuates myths about how sex actually goes down in the real world, where not every guy is hung like an argentine duck or has the sexual stamina of an olympic triathlete.


But there's an amazing, epic, and obscene (pun intended) amount of free porn online, so inevitably, people will indulge. The question is, aside from the social stigma of watching these sex films, are there any real physical repercussions?


There has been a lot of speculation that over-exposure to porn can lead to erectile dysfunction (ED). The basic argument is this: men get desensitised, or come to expect way more variety in the sack than most monogamous relationships offer, and therefore, can't get it up.


But a recent study, focussed exclusively on men and published in the online journal Sexual Medicine, says porno viewing is unlikely to hinder someone's ability to have an enduring erection, and suggests that men who regularly watch porn may actually perform better in bed, becuase they enjoy greater desire and arousal with their partners.


The researchers from Concordia University in Canada and UCLA in the US, say their study is the first to actually test the relationship between how much porn men are watching and the likelihood that they'll experience erectile dysfunction.


“The study shows that if there is erectile dysfunction in a relationship, it's probably not the porn that's causing it — it's more likely the quality of the sex,” Neurobiologist Jim Pfaus from Concordia University told Karen Seidman at The Montreal Gazette.


“This shows that all the dire predictions about porn addiction leading to erectile dysfunction aren't necessarily true,” he added.


Pfaus, along with his co-author Nicole Prause from UCLA, analysed data collected from 280 male volunteers during previous studies in Prause's lab. Of the 280 volunteers, 127 had regular sex partners.


The men were questioned about their sexual behaviour, both with partners and flying solo, about their porn viewing habits, and about their erectile functioning. The men, who regularly watched between zero and 25 hours of porn per week, were all shown a vanilla porn film, referred to as visual sexual stimuli (VSS), in the lab and asked to measure their arousal levels.


Men who watch more porno in their daily lives reported feeling more aroused during the lab viewing, as well as feeling higher levels of desire for both partnered sex and masturbation. Furthermore, “self-reported erectile functioning with a partner was not related to the hours of VSS viewed weekly,” the team wrote.


“Viewing more sex films was associated with a stronger sex drive, including the desire to have sex with a partner, so sex films may be able to 'stoke the fire',” Prause told The Huffington Post.


While the researcher acknowledged that some men might simply have higher sex drives, they're adamant that porn doesn't deserve the bad reputation it's received, and list in their conclusion a number of positive effects that regular porn viewing (or VSS) can have on a man's sex drive.


For instance, they say “regular VSS use may prime sexual thoughts and, hence, sexual response… VSS may suggest or normalise sexual behaviors, providing a wider repertoire of stimuli for which men may experience desire. Finally, VSS use has been associated with more positive attitudes about sex. If this is causal from VSS use, VSS use might be reducing some anxieties about sexual interactions that are a common cause of erectile problems."


In other words, porn, rather than limiting your erectile function, could have just the opposite effect. The researchers say "erectile dysfunction is most likely caused by the same issues that have been known for some time, such as performance anxiety, poor cardiovascular health, or side-effects from substance abuse."


The study has already garnered some criticism from an online forum called Reboot Nation, which is essentially a community of anti-porn activists. They say the study doesn't adequately investigate men who have complained of erectile dysfunction or people who have developed serious addictions, and is flawed because it doesn't “assess actual erections”. Meaning, the researchers haven't done a thorough inspection of the men's penises to back-up their self-reported claims of good showing.


Still, the issue of porn addiction is an interesting one. In a previous study, researchers at Cambridge University showed that the activity in the brains of people claiming to be porn addicts resembles some of the activity happening in the brains of drug addicts, which is somewhat alarming.


For a refresher on the science of pornography addiction check out the below ASAP Science video.
 
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Vince

Super Moderator
For the past several decades, a debate has raged as to whether or not pornography yields deleterious effects at the individual and/or societal levels (e.g., increased negative views toward women; increased rate of sexual crimes against women). In many instances, those who have sought to link pornography to countless ills have been ideologically motivated, as the aggregate scientific evidence hardly supports such conclusions. See chapter 6 of my book The Evolutionary Bases of Consumption (link is external) (p. 228-235) for some relevant references on pornography.In today's post, I'd like to briefly report on two recent studies that shed light on the matter. In a paper (link is external) published in 2009 in the International Journal of Law and Psychiatry, Milton Diamond reviewed a very broad number of studies that have explored the supposed ill effects of pornography. Subsequent to his extensive review, Diamond concludes (p. 312):
"Indeed, the data reported and reviewed suggests that the thesis is myth and, if anything, there is an inverse causal relationship between an increase in pornography and sex crimes. Further, considering the findings of studies of community standards and wide spread usage of SEM [sexually explicit material], it is obvious that in local communities as nationally and internationally, porn is available, widely used and felt appropriate for voluntary adult consumption. If there is a consensus against pornography it is in regard to any SEM that involves children or minors in its production or consumption. Lastly we see that objections to erotic materials are often made on the basis of supposed actual, social or moral harm to women. No such cause and effect has been demonstrated with any negative consequence."
This is yet another review of the literature that seems to find no societal ill effects of pornography. What about at the individual level? Are women who view pornography terrorized beyond redemption? Do they descend into a well of despair and self-doubt about their sexuality? Do men become misogynist monsters upon viewing pornographic material? Do they develop debilitating penis insecurities at the sight of well-endowed male porn actors? Let's see what Gert Martin Hald and Neil M. Malamuth found in their 2008 paper titled Self-Perceived Effects of Pornographic Consumption (link is external). I should mention that Neil Malamuth is a highly regarded scholar of pornography who has often argued for its supposed ill effects. Hence, if there exists a possibility of an a priori bias here, it would be in hoping to find that pornography yields negative consequences.

In their survey of 688 young Danish adults (men = 316; women = 372), Hald and Malamuth found that respondents construed the viewing of hardcore pornography as beneficial to their sex lives, their attitudes towards sex, their perceptions and attitudes towards members of the opposite sex, toward life in general, and over all. The obtained beneficial effects were statistically significant for all but one measure across both sexes. Now here is the kicker: A positive correlation was obtained between the amount of hardcore pornography that was viewed and the impact of the benefits reaped. This positive correlation was found for both sexes. In other words, the more that one watched porn, the stronger the benefits (for both sexes)! There you have it.
This post should not be construed as my being in favor of pornography, as my personal opinion is irrelevant to the matter at hand. Rather I am reporting on recent data regarding this debate and in so doing I wish to highlight the fact that ideology should never trump scientific evidence.
Source for Image:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/7/7c/Inside_deep_throat_poster.jpg
 

Gene Devine

Super Moderator
Here's Reboot Nation's take on this study:

http://www.rebootnation.org/forum/index.php?page=Prause_ED_Study_Critique

I personally do not watch porn but I don't have a dog in this fight. I think everyone reacts differently.
I find it contrived and boring. My libido works best when my mind/imagination is simulated, and porn
simply does not do that.

Just goes to show we're all different.

Porn for me has always been a simulator for most of my adult life. It has never interfered with my sex life in anyway and now in my 50's it has made my sex life that much more exciting.
 

Vision

New Member
Im not a big porn viewer, however I gave up viewing at all for Lent. My Libido has been off the charts the last 2 weeks... though it could be also, I gave up my (much needed) 2 glasses of wine per day, so that could be it as well.... Now Im not sleepy when my head hits the pillow...
 

Vince

Super Moderator
Vision, I also normally do not watch porn and since I started TRT my libido is through the roof:) but there's only so much time in the day. Job, family, grandkids, girlfriend, workouts and golfing life keeps you very busy.
 
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