iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Robert Weiss

GET UPDATES FROM Robert Weiss
 

Women and Pornography: Fifty Shades of the Same Old Color

Posted: 09/12/2012 5:08 pm

Last week I was in the Nashville airport after providing a week of human sexuality staff training at The Ranch, a rehab center that provides gender-separate residential treatment for adult sexual and romantic addictions, among other challenging emotional disorders. Much of that clinical training focused on the under-discussed and dramatically under-researched world of female sexual fantasy, desire and behavior.

So what was there to greet me at the airport bookstore on my way home? You couldn't miss it if you tried. A front-facing, all female-oriented soft-core porn rack consisting primarily of various versions of hard and soft (covers) of Fifty Shades books, along with a stack of very similar writing which, colloquially -- and no insult intended to anyone -- I tend to refer to as "mommy porn." And this rack wasn't tucked into a back corner of this very public store, either. There it was, right up front, facing out into the terminal, in the primo spot airport bookstores reserved for top-selling tomes.

Not only was this the most prominently displayed rack of books at an airport in the heart of the Bible Belt, but right behind it was a remarkably similar, but seemingly more worn, rack of Twilight, True Blood, virgin-meets-vampire books, which I also tend to refer to as "teen porn," as it is written and marketed to a much younger female demographic.

British writer E.L. James' Fifty Shades trilogy has been camping atop the New York Times bestseller list for near half a year. In fact, the top three books on last week's "Combined Print and e-Book" fiction list were, in order: Fifty Shades of Grey, Fifty Shades Darker, and Fifty Shades Freed. Number five on the list was Sylvia Day's Bared to You, the story of two troubled people developing an intense, obsessive relationship. And just n case you've been living under a rock, that's also the plotline of the Fifty Shades series.

Soft-Core Repackaged for a New Generation

In many ways, the Fifty Shades books and the recent plethora of knock-offs (our society is nothing if not unoriginal) fall squarely into the, dare I say, Harlequin Romance tradition. Back in the day, these books sold story after similar story with consistently central themes of naïve virgins and/or suffering widows being seduced by otherworldly bad boys (much like the vampires and werewolves in Twilight and/or the BDSM "hero" of Fifty Shades fame).

One big difference today is that in traditional or old school romance novels, the sex scenes nearly always faded to black well before the proverbial (read: male) money shot. Whereas Fifty Shades tracks the action taking place in Christian's infamous Red Room of Pain all the way to its, well... orgasmic conclusion.

In many ways, the fictional sexual interplay between Anastasia and Christian mirrors a very traditional, generic model for how women and men fantasize about -- and experience -- sex. For example, when viewing pornography, men are primarily aroused by a rapid succession of visually objectified body parts and sexual acts (as men tend to objectify images) whereas women tend to be much more engaged in romantic and overtly sexual material that suggests an intimate connection (as women tend to objectify romance and relationships). Not surprisingly, both reader reviews and anecdotal evidence suggest that the vast majority of the mostly female following of Fifty Shades reports being entranced not so much by the book's graphic depictions of bondage and sexual domination as they are fascinated by the relationship between the book's leading characters, Anastasia and Christian.

Of particular focus for most women appears to be Christian's eventual transition from cold, unemotional male "master" to caring lover and concerned husband. And who wouldn't want to live out that fantasy in a suburban marriage or the like?

Women and Online Porn

Sexual disorder/addiction specialists as well as pornographers have long-known that men and women view porn differently, but in recent years, owing to a vastly reduced male audience (as amateur online sex can today be accessed at no cost to the viewer), professional pornographers are now making up for their declining revenues with a wide array of relationship and intimacy-driven erotica catered to women.

As such, the numbers of women viewing online pornography is on the rise. And not surprisingly, increasing numbers of women also are beginning to show up in therapists offices with problems related to online porn use, online dating and smart phone "friend-finder" app situations gone sour -- as well as compulsive use of online relationship and social media sites.

Unfortunately, there is not yet formalized mental health criteria for identifying, diagnosing and treating women (or men for that matter) who struggle with these types of sexual addictions and compulsive behaviors -- mainly because many mental health and addiction professionals are not taught to recognize the subtleties of addictive, compulsive and impulsive sexual behavior --especially in women.

It is also true that when men are addictive or compulsive in their relationship to sex, the resulting problems most often show up in readily recognizable, overt sexual forms such as anonymous hookups, arrests, hardcore pornography abuse, prostitutes, multiple affairs, "sensual" massage and the like. In this way it is far easier to view the leading edge of that mans' problem as being "sexual" in nature. But when women struggle with patterns of problematic romantic and sexual behavior (including repetitive and compulsive reading/viewing of romance-driven erotica), they tend to mostly self-report having relationship and intimacy problems, rather than sexual ones.

Five Signs of Addictive Sexual and Romantic Behaviors in Women:

1. Consistently using dating, seduction, sexual experiences and romance as a primary means of feeling loved and valuable.
2. A painful history of short, unsatisfying failed relationships where having sex or only feeling loved during sex is the primary bond
3. An inability to remain sober from drugs or alcohol addictions related to romantic intrigue, fear of being alone and related sexual behavior patterns fused with alcohol/drug abuse.
4. Acting out BDSM or other fetish behaviors in secret with casual or anonymous partners, while in a separate primary relationship
5. Using porn, masturbation and online sexual/romantic connections in lieu of a meaningful social and recreational life.

Sadly, sex, porn and relationship addiction in women is often only recognized after a woman seeks help for a co-occurring (simultaneous) disorder like alcoholism or depression. Or only when a drug addicted or alcoholic woman is unable to remain sober, despite multiple efforts on her part, that a savvy clinician might explore her adult relationship or sexual issues.

Many women who end up in sexual disorders treatment arrive for help only after they have been asked to leave other treatment settings (for chemical dependency, eating disorders, anxiety, etc.), because they were having sexual and romantic involvement while already in those treatment settings. Approximately one-third of the women being treated at The Ranch fall into this category.

Fun, Fantasy or Fire?

Reading about, viewing and fantasizing about sex clearly appeals to a lot of women -- especially when they see those behaviors in the context of an ongoing romantic relationship. And most would never consider themselves to be fascinated by any kind of "porn" -- even if they simultaneously continue to consume vast quantities of Twilight, Fifty Shades and the like.

But most women who date via online methods, read soft or hard-core porn or use online sites to meet/greet sexual partners are emotionally healthy women. And their use of pornography or casual sex does not evolve into emotional and relationship crisis or addiction.

Only a small percentage of sexually active adults have a truly addictive relationship with porn, dating or casual sex. For most, relationship-oriented "mommy porn" and even heavily objectified hardcore porn (which does most definitely appeal to some women) are nothing more than an enjoyable source of pleasure, escape and possibly inspiration.

Ultimately, the Fifty Shades phenomenon is opening up a very healthy dialogue about female sexuality, not just in the therapeutic community and among BFFs on their coffee breaks, but between women who've read the books and their intimate partners.

After all, healthy women are profoundly sexual creatures -- as much as men, albeit in different ways -- and a woman being able to read about and express her sexual thoughts and desires to her partner is a great way to not only spice things up in the bedroom, but to build and enhance relationship trust and emotional intimacy.

Single women, too, may find distraction and comfort in soft-core reading, as they always have done, with no harm done. It is only when sexual and relationship fantasy becomes a primary source of emotional comfort, connection and pseudo-intimacy or when the behavior is surrounded with secrecy and shame that getting help is recommended.

Robert Weiss LCSW, CSAT-S is the author of three books on sexual addiction and an expert on the juxtaposition of human sexuality, intimacy, and technology. He is Founding Director of The Sexual Recovery Institute and Director of Intimacy and Sexual Disorders Services at The Ranch and Promises Treatment Centers. Mr. Weiss is a clinical psychotherapist and educator. He has provided sexual addiction treatment training internationally for psychology professionals, addiction treatment centers, and the US military. A media expert for Time, Newsweek, and the New York Times, Mr. Weiss has been featured on CNN, The Today Show, Oprah, and ESPN among many others. Rob can also be found on Twitter at @RobWeissMSW.

 
FOLLOW WOMEN
 
 
  • Comments
  • 32
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
01:59 AM on 09/27/2012
WOW! think I just found my favorite Huff writer. You are so AMAZING!
11:29 AM on 09/21/2012
You don't do a very good job of defining what you mean by 'porn'.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realitytrumpsbull
Two 'alves of coconut!
10:31 AM on 09/14/2012
The Digital Age that was supposed to unite and connect us, has also served to divide us. When we're bored, we turn to the entertainment/communications industry. When we're lonely, we turn to the entertainment/communications industry. How far are we from Fahrenheit 451, a bottle of sleeping pills, and seashells? Only as far as a TV remote. Turn it all off, and go meet Real People(R), and reclaim your life. There's a whole world, out there. Virtual life gives us some distance, some safety from what we want, or think we want, leaving us with an after-image, of what might have been, or what we dreamed into being for as long as it was beneficial/convenient/appealing for us.
GuiltyUndertaker
no se mata la justicia!
10:30 AM on 09/14/2012
Why is the central male character always rich? I would think THAT would be insulting to women. You will only allow yourself to be tied up and tortured if the guy has bucks?

Trust me, middle-class and/or ordinary people engage in bondage and low-level torture in the bedroom often enough.
photo
MikeDu
Both salubrious and lugubrious concurrently.
01:00 AM on 09/14/2012
I picked up the book out of curiosity and thumbed through a few pages. OMG, the prose reads like someone wrote it *on a dare*. Here's the dare - purposefully do the lousiest job of writing you can possibly manage then lets see how much it'll sell. Here's Gilbert Gottfried readin 50 shades in a books-on-tape. http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=c82_1337349279
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realitytrumpsbull
Two 'alves of coconut!
06:15 PM on 09/13/2012
What if you've been lookin' for love, in what turns out to have been all the wrong places, and not findin' the one you're dreamin' of? Turn to the world of modern adult fantasy, where most of sex and love probably takes place anyway, truth be known, other than our romantic ideations, it's a lot like a Mutual of Omaha segment. The brain, being the largest sex organ IN the body, plays a pivotal role in our affections and attractions. Various forms of porn are just a rather involved, commercialized way of fooling your brain into thinking you have something that you don't, namely a meaningful and satisfying relationship with someone else, and let's be blunt, those are getting harder and harder to come by, even for those who've been hard up for a while, maybe even moreso. Sex on the brain/in the brain, whatever. What's healthy, what's a legal issue in the making?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bradlinsky
Concept Other Than Self
02:19 PM on 09/13/2012
Good article. I like that you ended with:

"It is only when sexual and relationship fantasy becomes a primary source of emotional comfort, connection and pseudo-intimacy or when the behavior is surrounded with secrecy and shame that getting help is recommended. "

Balance, moderation ... not much different than other facets of life, eh? :)
11:01 PM on 09/13/2012
good point
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shaun Hensley
The American Experiment has failed
12:30 PM on 09/13/2012
So all this hype about 50 shades and it's just about a bad boy being tamed? LMAO!!
photo
zmfts
Whatever doesn't kill you makes you walk funny.
10:43 PM on 09/13/2012
"Fifty Shades of Grey" was just Twilight fan fiction that somebody reworked. Give the characters new names, remove the vampire references, and bang! Best-selling trash.
11:30 AM on 09/13/2012
I think there's no harm in women reading or viewing erotica. It helps expand & further open the mind to sexuality (& of course it may depend on a person's mental health & or morals). I think porn is more for men because we are more visually aroused than women are & after all, for men the point of watching porn is of course... all about the ladies performing. Ultimately sex isn't sex without women! But I say, hey why should it be so taboo still to so many women & people in general, we live in a new more open minded era, Ladies read those novels & watch more porn, & use what you learn & be comfortable with it & yourselves. It will only spice things up & your man will have no reason whatsoever to look for anything elsewhere, in fact it's a turn on & he will only want to munch on you even more & more.... & then some ;)
01:09 AM on 09/14/2012
Chauvinist Pig!!! Too bad you can't write grammatically correct without one run on sentence.
08:22 AM on 09/14/2012
Lol oh man, you again?! Hey it's not my fault you don't get any action skirt! Go away crazy lady! Lol
08:37 AM on 09/14/2012
Oh & what's wrong with being so enthusiastic about something thing like sex? It's a great thing, especially if you're getting some regularly. But I guess we can't sat the same about you... I can picture cobwebs down there lol!! Am I still being gramatically incorrect? Are my sentences still too "run on" for you? Mwah!
05:38 AM on 09/13/2012
Would be curious to know- you didn't mention? whether childhood sexual abuse ever gets linked to adult sexual addictions. It seems linked to so many other destructive things. Childhood abuse victims may need addictive crutches to escape- and as far as I can tell -often also have difficulties with relationships.
They say to me at least that they find the story empowering & very helpful for them. But not damaging. So is it? for them? . ...your whole argument seems to be that reading these books is destrucive because sex addicts get destructively hooked? like they do to alcohol etc. Your argument -that these books feed/ encourage these addicitons . But if your life is in crisis you will look for something surely.??
Is it more a validation abuse victims get from this story. A feeling that someone understands their problem, that it romanticises their life experiene -one that has previously left them feeling dirty ? That the hero ends up lovable?
Could it possibly be that it's the underlying reasons for sexually addictive behaviour that is the real problem here- not the books themsleves? Lots of people drink responsibly, read erotica responsibly, lots of couples regularly view porn for their relationship. Should we demonise the books themselves. Is it more the underlying addictive personality disorder that should be treated? Or the particular life crisis- that demands escape? Likely I don't understand the complexities
Majority of women have said - it's fantasy escape- they enjoy - they move on.
03:24 PM on 09/13/2012
There probably is some overlap between the group of people who are prone to addiction, and the group of people who have been abused. If someone does create a formula for filtering out the abuse victims from the addiction group, I would definitely be interested in learning more about it.
10:59 PM on 09/13/2012
The fifty character was a sex addict too maybe?- his escape- but would he really be called an addict? because though it did interfere with his normal functioning as he had the crazy sub. and he kept it all secret (and he fits the listed criteria- at point 2)- It also helped him. It was also providing a measure of intimacy for him- the only type of intiimacy that he could manage. Better than nothing- hook up sex?
So it makes me think about use of such "addictions' as crutches in life. Was it better than his alternative- alcohol or narcotic abuse? Was it stress relief- therapy. It didn' t kill him- it was safe consensual .
Women read it as a fantasy escape from daily life stresses - does that make it bad- as is suggested here ? When does it cross the fine line? How bad does it have to be before seeking escape is bad? Does the book make the point that it was a helpful- if dysfunctional crutch he used- and he moved on- after all the psychotherapy had failed- because he found help with the love of a good strong partner- where most people find their best help . It's interesting- likely I miss the subtleties- just makes me see there might be 'shades of grey' in 'addictions' .
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DonBlv
Equality, climate change & justice.
03:05 AM on 09/13/2012
Women as functional, sexual beings, is still a poo-poo morality. It's a shame since we're the Terran majority. Should women claim and own their sexuality, as an asset, akin to the paternalistic-sword men have wielded for the past 2 thousand years, oh what a different human reality.

To claim the feminist power women inherently possess.

Maybe in a couple Milena women will recognize their value, particularly their sexual prows, but don't count on it...for as long they devalue themselves, they'll always be 2ND class, thus repressed and issues / problems inconsequential.
01:03 AM on 09/14/2012
I have seen and experienced the new sexual women, mainly the ones who have no inclination to get married and have their individual desires and they go after it, they agressively pursue male targets, then move on to new expiriences. That Paternal sword no longer has power over them, see Meagan McCain, she speaks openly of enjoying sex and having fun, no suppression, smokes pot occasionally. These yougers one now are going full steam ahead in the sexual arena. Of course business will increase for Doc weiss as more folks find out the sex act cannot fill all of what a healthy soul needs to stay that way.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DonBlv
Equality, climate change & justice.
02:12 PM on 09/14/2012
As long as there is a "double standard" by society of women's sexuality: interest, behavior, expression as dubious compared to a man's exploits or their professional/personal value is deemed second class as reflected in pay, women are subjected to society's paternalistic sword...they don't have to succumb to it but women's lives are affected by paternalism.

Recognition of female desire and acting on it can be a good thing, that's what I take away from the article. Casual sexual participation can be healthy but like any other human activity done to excess or exclusion can lead to misery, that we both may agree...as Weiss mentions in the last two paragraphs of his article.
10:07 PM on 09/12/2012
Badly overstaying my welcome- I do apologise, But the other factor- I have just been reminded-is that although sex is everywhere: when discussing their sexual relationships with their partners -it is still very much a taboo subject for women. Women clamp up – won’t speak to their girlfriends about these issues. One woman said to me this morning that she had had no orgasm for 17 years In her first marriage. She felt used- a receptacle. There was no one she could speak to about this. This book has at least encouraged some dialogue at last
I'm sure there are lots of other very valid alternative views- such as yours, since so many very qualified people have spoken about the damage this book has done.

I also wondered if it's the extreme emotional unavailability of this otherwise very attractive character ‘50 ‘- that ups the erotic tension for those readers to whom the book appeals. They want to help him- they can't.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shaun Hensley
The American Experiment has failed
12:32 PM on 09/13/2012
Women talk about sex with their friends far more often than do men, AND they are far more explicit. Men don't discuss their sexual lives with their girlfriends or wives with their friends. Your girlfriend/wife's friends know how big you are and if you know how to use it.
photo
jf12
Esta vez saldré como las otras y me escaparé.
09:48 PM on 09/12/2012
"great way to spice things up"? Or great way to use up what little libido she has?
07:59 PM on 09/12/2012
With regard to the erotic appeal- one wild possible alternative thought might be that sexuality in women is complex. Women might not respond to pornographic images but they might be particularly attracted when the erotica is combined simultaneously with a very strong emotional investment in a story’s character - with appeals made to their own nurturing , caring instincts (Oxytocin) (lost abused boy) and also paradoxically danger /aggression. I think there might even be some research basis for a view like this? It would explain a strong appeal in the Bible Belt
As well, there are all the traditional sexy turn ons –consideration for ones partner, caring courteous behavior, good looks , money, power, aptitude in bed.
07:38 PM on 09/12/2012
Hey, give us women a break! We just went through (and for many, continue to experience) a 5 year societal and economic shift that has left us over-worried, over-worked, exhausted, struggling to keep our jobs, and keep families above water while we're in constant care-taking mode -- well, you get the picture. I, for one, was a little hesitant about reading Fifty only because I kept hearing that the writing was so poor. Maybe so, but guess what -- for the short time that I was engrossed in the Trilogy (short, because I couldn't put them down!!) I was taken on a mental vacation that I desperately needed -- and I'm only one of millions. In the midst of shootings, recession, nonsensical politics, and terror threats, I was happy to escape to Seattle for a while and enjoy the luxury, the gorgeous guy who turns out to be a fantasy HUSBAND for crying out loud (how main-stream can you get??), the romance, and fabulous (if totally unrealistic) fantasy love story. I'm a grown woman and sex doesn't shock me. There was a lot of it, but that was what made it almost amusing and fun -- not to mention "extreme vanilla" -- not BDSM. So, all in all, I could give a hoot what all the experts say! I love my Fifty and after the last few years of a pretty brutal reality, a fantasy escape was just what the doctored ordered. Stop over-analyzing it!
09:11 AM on 09/13/2012
While men have gone through a 50 year period of blatant misandry and reverse discrimination.

For those of us born within the past few decades this is all we've ever known.

And you want us to give YOU a break?
06:33 PM on 09/13/2012
yes. Since I've worked as a nurse for the past 30 years, it's all I've ever known as well.
03:49 PM on 09/13/2012
I don't think he over-analyzed it at all; he's basically had to deal with it because it's his job. At the end he says that use of hardcore porn and mommy porn are perfectly healthy, can spice up your relationship, and that the only danger is when women (in this case) try to use it the the place of a real, healthy relationship and he gives 5 examples to look out for should you be at risk. Pretty straight-forward article.