Purity

Beyond Pornography by Dallas Willard

Dr. Dallas Willard recently posted a very compelling article on his website about pornography and spiritual formation. True to form, his words do not merely impart information, but impel action and give practical application.

He uses his “VIM” model as a framework to understand the nature of pornography use and how to stop through devotion to Christ.

VIM stands for Vision, Intention and Means. Use of pornography represents a wrong vision of God and His creation (ourselves and the objects of pornography), which drives our intention to use pornography and gratify ourselves sexually, which leads to pursuing the means to act out those intentions. Replacing each element of VIM with a new vision, intention and means is laid out as a way to achieve freedom.

It really is an interesting read. Check it out here…

Feeding our Appetites

One thing that I have heard before that wasn’t encouraging to me at the time, but looking back I understand…

Once we act out, we find it easy to redouble our efforts. Like any appetite, once we feed it, it is quelled for a time. This is true of our sexual appetite. When we indulge ourselves, the sexual hunger is satiated and doesn’t bother us for a time. It could be a few days or even a few weeks or months. Our efforts to avoid temptations and maybe avert our attention from objects of temptation come easy for a time after acting out.

It isn’t easy when the siren’s call to dash ourselves on the rocks grows from a whisper to a shout. The hardest part of recovery is growing to the point where we are able to withstand temptation when the hunger hasn’t been fulfilled.

We have to remember that the thing we actually hunger isn’t sex, but intimacy, connection and pleasure. The false intimacy and connection of pornography, and the fleeting pleasure of masturbation always leave us flat. And like any appetite, it only grows as we indulge it.

Like I said, that is tough and may not sound encouraging right now, but I felt that it would be helpful to you in the long run. Stay strong and use the time when the temptation is low to build real intimacy, connection and healthy sources of pleasure into your life. That is the best way to combat the temptation to come.

If you don’t have face-to-face friendships with others who can encourage you, start out by joining our forums for strugglers at The Purity Report. It is a safe environment to begin talking about your temptations in a structured way and receive prayer and encouragement.

John’s Story – Part 2

Here is the balance of John’s story. He shares his story of drug and pornography addiction, and God’s saving grace. He is also open and honest about continued struggles with pornography after coming to Christ. The journey of faith is not perfect, but it continues to blossom as we follow God’s lead and rest in His grace!

You can watch Part 1 of John’s Story here…

John’s Story – Part 1

John Glisson, founder of Pure Community Ministries and The Purity Report, shares his story of drug and pornography addiction, and God’s saving grace.

He is also open and honest about continued struggles with pornography after coming to Christ. The journey of faith is not perfect, but it continues to blossom as we follow God’s lead and rest in His grace!

If you are struggling, you don’t have to languish in the dark. There is hope! Sign up on The Purity Report and start letting God into those dark places in your heart where He can forgive and heal you!

Pure and Angry

It is normal to start feeling anger and irritation once you set your acting out behaviors aside. Now that you aren’t medicating your feelings, they will come to the surface. The first, and easiest emotion to identify with, especially for men, is anger. We easily recognize this one.

In counseling, I learned that anger is always a secondary emotion. It is a surface-level emotional response to a deeper feeling. The same counselor gave me an acrostic that helps me dig underneath my anger. It is GIFT, which stands for Guilt, Inferiority, Fear or Trauma. These are big buckets that help me categorize what I am feeling and share it with my accountability team and when possible with my wife.

For me, the first three are the usual suspects (guilt, inferiority, fear). Once I began digging into those more deeply and regularly, I learned some of the nuances of my emotions (I have been so ignorant of this part of my soul for most of my life). For instance, inferiority is more accurately feeling invalidated as a man for some reason. That is an enormous trigger for me – it makes me angry and can quickly put me on the dreaded “autopilot” to acting out with masturbation or pornography.

How Can You Hate What You Love?

This video clip is from a friend of mine, Aaron Dailey. He was actually my RA in Bible school, so it is cool and funny at the same time to see  him in ministry. It is even more ironic that we are in a similar vein of ministry.

In the clip. Aaron talks about the silliness of dating relationships sometimes, the bad advice we get, and how we give the same advice to each other as Christians regarding sin rather than preaching the Gospel – loving Jesus. The bottom line is we love sin. Telling each other to hate something we love is ridiculous. Rather, we need to fall in love with Jesus and let him do the work of changing our heart toward sin.

Take a look…

One Real Wrinkled Wife or a Harem of Airbrushed Goddesses?

By Mark Chamberlain, Ph.D.

The amazing thing about pornography is how it can keep arousal fresh when it would otherwise stagnate, excitement electric when it would neutralize, keep us awake when we’d otherwise sleep. And awake, and awake, and awake.

Marnia Robinson and Gary Wilson probe porn’s secret recipe for keeping the high going. Key ingredient: the convincing illusion of so many participants eager sex with little old moi, the viewer. (This is where that little gullible part of the brain screams, “Illusion? Illusion?! Noooo!!”)

What could be better than that dreamy vision, that fantastic mirage?

May I humbly suggest: How about a real life one-and-only?

With last Monday being Valentine’s day, I was quite attuned to my wife of twenty-two years. Jenny and I went to grab lunch together, which consisted mostly of me waiting in the Suburban with our two little chatterbugs while she ran into Target to grab heart-shaped treats for our fourth grader’s class.

Why did my heart skip a beat when I saw that it really was her in the blue sweats walking out the door of the store? Why did we have so much fun shoveling down twenty bucks worth of Thai food in under ten minutes? Why did I feel just a little giddy when I asked her to be my valentine and she smiled?

I wanted her to have a good day, so I splurged at Amazon and got her an old audio version of a poetry collection, Grow Old Along With Me, the Best Is Yet to Be. The excerpt I heard long ago on the radio had Ed Asner reading the title poem by Robert Browning. On that program they also read another poem about the comfortable familiarity of the folds of one’s beloved’s wrinkly skin.

Those poems affected me. I’ve talked with Jenny about them several times since.

That’s right: Mary Tyler Moore’s Lou Grant, that suave romantic. And wrinkly skin, that old reliable turn-on.

The books are still fifteen bucks online, so who would have guessed that a still shrink-wrapped audio cassette version would be so affordable (wink)? I splurged and dropped a dollar (plus four for shipping and handling) to let my one-and-only know she still is.

I didn’t go to bed that night thinking that it was an amazing day. I have come to enjoy those little charged-up moments and connected comforts as a part of life. Sure, they’re a great part of life, but their also familiar and reliable. Expected.

But when I woke up in the middle of the night my mind flashed my day’s easy enjoyments against the backdrop of the harsh arid landscape that I see every day in the lives of the porn junkies I love and try to help.

The effect of a poem about a wrinkled old one-and-only lingers for a decade and counting. The effect of the best porn we’ve ever seen lingers for a few minutes, and then we need something else, something more.

In our culture, which so prizes beauty and youth, it may seem downright odd that an aging couple could be more and more pleased by each other as the years pass. Nonetheless, it’s a phenomenon that doesn’t peter out in middle age. If you know a handful of elderly couples, think about those among them who are still intensely drawn to one another. Watching them is evidence enough that attraction is not primarily based on attractiveness.

While this phenomenon remains fertile ground for poets, the inner workings of this magic have also been scrutinized by scientists. We know that the brain’s dopamine pleasure system can be desensitized over time if it is subjected to addictive levels of sexual stimulation. Which hints that the converse is true: it can remain highly sensitized among monogamous individuals who reserve their lust for their one and only.

Not only that, but another potent chemical is at work here as well. Oxytocin is like relationship super-glue. To compare: a dump of dopamine is the reward our brains give us for finding something new and exciting, but it can quickly dissipate and leave us hankering. Oxytocin, on the other hand, is the gift our brain gives us that keeps on giving. Unlike dopamine, we get more oxytocin when we’re with someone familiar and beloved. (Oxytocin is released in breastfeeding mothers and their infants, and you won’t see either of them looking around for a new and more exciting partner.)

While we become desensitized and less affected by dopamine over time, our sensitivity to oxytocin is heightened over time. Seeing, touching, and hearing a devoted partner gains more and more power over time to trigger the release of this chemical. A ninety-year-old woman walks into the room and her husband can’t hold back a sigh. “You can see why I love her!” The rest of us think, “Well, actually…no.” But there’s no doubting his sincerity.

This generation of young adults have been dubbed “Generation XXX” by Jason Carroll, who has surveyed students at six colleges about their levels of exposure, acceptance, and consumption of pornography. 87 percent of the males in their survey acknowledged seeking out and viewing pornography in the past year, with 20 percent viewing it daily or nearly every day. Surely some of them would not be such eager consumers if they realized that they’re impeding their capacity to fully attach to and enjoy their relationship with a one-and-only.

In her article The Porn Myth, Naomi Wolf wrote, “The onslaught of porn is responsible for deadening male libido in relation to real women…greater supply of the stimulant equals diminished capacity.” One reader responded to Wolf’s claim this way: “I hate porn. Why? Because I’m one of the younger guys who have grown up with the easy accessibility of the internet. It’s easy to see whatever you want with just a quick Google search. I hate it because I allowed myself to be immersed into it and it’s become a part of me. I got married, had two kids, and now I’m divorced and my wife has remarried. I have been through so much pain in my life, and I attribute it to precisely what Ms. Wolf has explained in this article. Even now, my mind has been desensitized, and I work my way through it. It’s a constant battle. I know that I’ve been desensitized–I see it and feel it. Emotionally, I’ve scarred myself. I wouldn’t wish this on anyone who wishes to have a family and a wife to cherish.”

Neurosurgeon Donald Hilton compares a porn-ravenous young adult to a confused insect on the verge of extermination. Here’s why: In place of chemical insecticides, sex attractants are now commonly used by farmers to control insect populations. Air currents carry the mist of condensed female pheromones out over crops and orchards. Science journalist Anna Salleh describes what happens next: “The male either becomes confused and doesn’t know which direction to turn for the female, or he becomes desensitized to the lower levels of pheromones naturally given out by the female and has no incentive to mate with her… The insects follow the pheromone trail into the trap.”

Just as pheromones would not occur in the natural world at that condensed level, pornography opens our brains’ floodgates of dopamine in concentrations that otherwise never occur. Dr. Hilton’s right: we’re as vulnerable to the effects of porn as these insects are to their exterminators’ bait. Just like the bugs, we get confused, desensitized, and lose our capacity and incentive for enjoying a real-life partner.

Fortunately, we do have something on those confused little critters. We can choose. We need not keep swimming in super-concentrate. We can give up porn’s fleeting pleasures, restore our sensitivity, and cultivate a lifestyle that’s more conducive to lasting love. In the process, we’ll discover what we might have never suspected: one real wrinkled wife really is better than an endless harem of airbrushed goddesses.

Purity Bytes – Episode 7 – Overcoming Temptation

The Purity Report

The Purity Bytes Podcast (on iTunes)

Byte-sized chunks of wisdom about sexual purity…

Episode 7: Overcoming Temptation
So what do we do about temptation?

In this episode, we talk about temptation – where it really comes from and how to overcome it.

Here are the notes for this episode.

Purity Bytes – Episode 5 – Accountability

The Purity Report

The Purity Bytes Podcast (on iTunes)

Byte-sized chunks of wisdom about sexual purity…

Episode 5: Accountability
What is it and how does it work?

In this episode, we define accountability and talk about two different models of accountability.

Here are the notes for this episode.

Purity Bytes Podcast – Episode 4 – God’s Vision for Sex

The Purity Report

The Purity Bytes Podcast (on iTunes)

Byte-sized chunks of wisdom about sexual purity…

Episode 4: God’s Vision for Sex
and Why Purity is So Important

In this episode, we talk about what God’s ultimate vision is for sex and why purity is so important.

Here are the notes for this episode.