What to Do When Your Partner Is Addicted to Porn
When someone becomes addicted to pornography, it affects real-life relationships and can be very painful and difficult to deal with.
Aug 18, 2017
Mar 30, 2022
Your HealthDirector of the Women's Midlife Services at Holland Hospital
Holland, MI
Dr. Barb DePree, a gynecologist in practice for over 30 years, specializes in midlife women's health. She is certified through the North American Menopause Society as a provider, and was named the 2013 NAMS Certified Menopause Provider of the year. Dr. DePree currently serves as the director of the Women’s Midlife Services at Holland Hospital, Holland, Michigan. In 2018, she completed a certification in Genetic Cancer Risk Assessment.
A member of NAMS, ACOG and ISSWSH, Dr. DePree has been a presenter for the ACOG CME audio program. She has served as a key opinion leader for Shionogi, AMAG, Duchesnay, Valeant, Wyeth and Astellas leading physician education, and participating in research projects and advisory panels.
Finding that products helpful to her patients’ sexual health were not readily available, Dr. DePree founded MiddlesexMD.com that shares practice-tested, clinically sound information and products, including guidance for working with partners and caregivers. Dr. DePree publishes regularly on her own blog, providing updates on research in women’s sexual health, as well as observations and advice based on her work with women in her practice. Sharecare named her as a Top 10 Social Healthmaker for Menopause in September of 2013. In 2017, she was named among the “Top 10 Best Menopause Blogs” by Medical News Today. Dr. DePree also publishes podcast interviews on women in midlife, exploring the ways they have made the transition in their lives and careers.
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Not much is known about addiction to pornography—not the numbers of people affected or even the precise definition. There just isn't a body of research surrounding the issue.
"There is a real dearth of good, evidence-based therapeutic literature," says Dr. Valerie Voon, a neuropsychiatrist at the University of Cambridge in this article.
The relatively recent advent of the Internet has revolutionized the world of porn, serving up raw, unfiltered, hard-core and nonstop stimulation. The result is a cohort of (mostly) men who have become addicted and desensitized to the dopamine rush of a constant barrage of online porn.
Occasional porn consumption is common, but therapists and doctors are seeing more relationship and sexual performance difficulties among heavy porn users—behavior that looks a lot like addiction.
Discovering that your partner uses porn addictively is a crushing, confusing experience. Women compare it to the betrayal of discovering an affair, except that the "other woman" is a computer screen that is available 24/7 and that doesn't look or act like a normal woman.
A partner's initial response is often denial: Is it really so bad? Doesn't everyone view porn sometimes? Is this normal?
The morality or "normalcy" of porn use is a different conversation, but when a partner becomes secretive and withdrawn, when he can't stop the behavior even at work or, as one woman discovered, during a weekend visit to her parents, when porn use creates difficulty in real-life sexual performance, when it causes pain and conflict, then it's an addiction and it isn't normal.
Porn addiction is socially anathema—people don't talk about it or easily admit to having a problem with it. Support groups for partners of porn addicts are rare. And research-driven treatment for porn users themselves is also rare. The most common treatment is called a "reboot," in which porn users are counseled to stop masturbating to online porn until their brain chemistry and ability to engage in real-life sex is regained, which may take months.
The behavior of porn addicts is similar to that of other addicts. They minimize their porn consumption or outright lie about it. They may accuse the partner of causing the problem. They withdraw and hide what they're doing. They may gaslight—a newly vogue term that refers to undermining the partner's grasp on reality by lying, evading, bullying and blaming.
This dynamic is devastating and toxic. Partners of porn addicts are often recognized as having symptoms of trauma, much like post-traumatic stress disorder.
The non-porn–using partner may try to control the "addict's access to porn through anger, snooping, crying, guilt tactics, threatening, shaming and blaming the addict. This destructive behavior was once considered co-dependent, but those of us who work with partners of porn addicts now view these actions as symptoms of trauma," writes Mari A Lee, sex addiction therapist and coauthor of Facing Heartbreak: Steps to Recovery for Partners of Sex Addicts.
As with any addiction, the path to recovery is difficult and riddled with relapse. The harrowing challenge to a partner of a porn addict is to maintain her own integrity and emotional health while offering her partner forgiveness and the space and support to manage his recovery, if he so chooses.
Women who've been there say:
A partner's addiction may be one of the most painful and difficult knuckle sandwiches that life can smack you with. It attacks the very foundation of trust, security and intimacy that a relationship is built on.
However, there is hope, both for your own healing and the recovery of your partner. "When each person makes the choice to end the destructive dance of addiction, blame, shame and hurt, and instead chooses to move toward healing and recovery—miracles can happen and relationships can heal," writes Lee.
Barb DePree, MD, has been a gynecologist for 30 years, specializing in menopause care for the past 10. Dr. DePree was named the Certified Menopause Practitioner of the Year in 2013 by the North American Menopause Society. The award particularly recognized the outreach, communication and education she does through MiddlesexMD, a website she founded and where this blog first appeared. She also is director of the Women's Midlife Services at Holland Hospital, Holland, Michigan.