NEUSTAETER: Let’s talk about porn
RECENTLY A FRIEND IN THE MEDICAL FIELD was telling me about how common it has become for women — and particularly very young women — to have surgeries and cosmetic procedures in order to live up to the terribly unrealistic expectations that porn has created. I have to admit that it broke my heart more than a little.
Beautiful, intelligent, young women who are still developing their senses of security and confidence have come to believe that the very most private and sacred parts of themselves are not worthy because of what an industry, based on anything but love or reality, is telling them is not only normal, but expected. They think they need to be “flawless” carbon copies of what this warped world tells them is attractive in order to be loved or valued.
Impressionable, inexperienced, young men who are still developing their senses of security and confidence have come to believe that the one-dimensional images they see on the internet are the measuring stick by which their own worth, performance, partners and sexual experiences should be judged. They think that it is normal for a relationship to be devoid of foundational love and are confused about why they feel like reality never quite measures up.
I was a teenager living in the mid ’90s the first time I heard a friend talk openly about a porn addiction and how it had come to consume his life. He had reached a point of absolute desperation as he found himself obsessed with the thoughts, images and unrealistic standards that he had developed around his own sexuality, as well as the expectation that he had come to have for a sexual relationship with a partner because of the impressions that porn had given him.