How to balance sex addict and sex worker rights?

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Struggling
How to balance sex addict and sex worker rights?

Considering that there is increasing anecdotal and research-based evidence that sex addiction is a real phenomenon, how do we reconcile the desire among sex workers to maximally deregulate the industry for higher profits and the desire among sex addicts (including recovered sex addicts) to regulate it, or at least the advertizing of it, especially when we consider that there is more regulation of cigarette advertizing?

For example, if I go to backpage.com's adult section for any major Canadian city even today under the new laws, I can access daily ads for sexual services. I will notice that there is no stopping me from lying about my age to access it. It also presents no educational advertizing pertaining to sex education or STI education on that page. Granted if I'm a sex addict, I might know about that already yet it's still not stopping me, but a gentle reminder might help some in the mild stages of sex addiction.

There is also no educational advertizing of what sex addiction is (which, ironically enough, can also manifest itself in the form of compulsive sexual avoidance, not to be confused with abstinence by simple choice) or any theories on how it is developed. After all, wearing a condom cannot protect against sex addiction.

Nor is there any advertizing of crisis help lines nor therapeutic services either, whether sex therapy or any other related psychological services (especially considering that the anecdotal evidence compiled so far has concluded that a high percentage of sex addicts have suffered physical, sexual, or especially emotional abuse as children and it is believed that many of them also suffer varying degrees of depression, PTSD, OCD, or bipolar disorder). I might be a sex addict who is aware that there is a problem but am unaware of the existence of such services or such research.

There is no advertizing of 12-step programmes, whether SAA, SA or any other such programme the existence of which a sex addict might be unaware.

There is also no advertizing of chastity devices or educational websites pertaining to them and how some sex addicts have used them effectively in the initial stages of their recovery, nor is there any other advertizing.

Also, contrary to popular belief and unlike imprisonment, fines for the purchase of sexual services is actually not a punishment but can rather be helpful to a sex addict in the same way as cigarette taxes and alcohol taxes can be beneficial to smokers and alcoholics respectively by serving as a gentle discouragement.

It actually surprises me that Canada does not include the regulation of the online advertizing of sexual services as a requirment among state parties as a standard policy in all new free trade negotiations.

Though I can appreciate that compulsory educational advertizing concerning the mental health risks of  unhealthy sexual relations and remedies towards learning to control the sex addiction that can develop from such relations could hurt the sex industry by potentially removing sex addicts from the client pool and so reduce the demand side of the industry, is the solution really to allow the advertizing of such services to remain as unregulated as it is so as to promote further demand for the sake of profit?

Should the advertizing of sexual services be better regulated to ensure that it provide educational advertizing at least equal in quality to that found on cigarette packages? Any thoughts on this?

Mr. Magoo

Quote:
Should the advertizing of sexual services be better regulated to ensure that it provide educational advertizing at least equal in quality to that found on cigarette packages? Any thoughts on this?

There's pretty robust evidence that smoking cigarettes regularly is likely to create a dependence on nicotine.

Is there similarly robust evidence that having sex regularly is likely to make us into sex addicts?  Remember, the vast majority of people who have sex aren't doing so through the back pages of NOW Magazine.  If having sex turns people into sex addicts then we're going to need a whole lot more than some kind of new regulation of escort ads to stop that.  Warning labels on everyone's genitals, maybe?

 

Unionist

I think advertising of sexual services should include mandatory nutritional information.

Mr. Magoo

Including a clear warning about Genetically Modified Orgasms.

Struggling

Mr. Magoo wrote:

Quote:
Should the advertizing of sexual services be better regulated to ensure that it provide educational advertizing at least equal in quality to that found on cigarette packages? Any thoughts on this?

There's pretty robust evidence that smoking cigarettes regularly is likely to create a dependence on nicotine.

Is there similarly robust evidence that having sex regularly is likely to make us into sex addicts?  Remember, the vast majority of people who have sex aren't doing so through the back pages of NOW Magazine.  If having sex turns people into sex addicts then we're going to need a whole lot more than some kind of new regulation of escort ads to stop that.  Warning labels on everyone's genitals, maybe?

 

 

No, sex is not addictive in itself, silly twit. However, those that have difficulty with emotional bonding will sometimes find it difficult to have sex with someone to whom they are emotionally attached. While this can lead to compulsive sexual avoidance, when combined with depression, PTSD, OCD, or bipolar disorder, it can lead to a person turning to sex with strangers to medicate the pain, which can temporarily work through the release of dopamine which becomes associated with the behaviour over time which can then lead to sexually compulsive behaviour over time. Sex addiction usually goes hand in hand with compulsive sexual avoidance, and there is increased evidence of this. Some anecdotal evidence has found that some men who would pay for sex would find themselves incapable of having sex with the same woman for free once a relationship developed due to his fear of emotional intimacy with her, the money being a psychological way to make the transaction as psychologically commercial and emotionally distant as possible. Sex adicts.avoid will often be emotionally distant from lived ones too. Increased sexual behaviour separate from emotional intimacy only further separates sex from emotion in the brain. It also tends to escalate over time just like a drug addiction.

I don't know if you have ever heard of gambling addiction, Internet addiction, or porn addiction, but process addictions are real even if no chemical is consumed. Don't forget the brain can produce it's own chemicals in association with certain behaviours. Also, if you know how to use Google, you could search sex addiction to see what it is.

Struggling

Unionist wrote:

I think advertising of sexual services should include mandatory nutritional information.

 

Why?

Struggling

Mr. Magoo wrote:

Including a clear warning about Genetically Modified Orgasms.

 

What are those?

Struggling

Mr. Magoo wrote:

Quote:
Should the advertizing of sexual services be better regulated to ensure that it provide educational advertizing at least equal in quality to that found on cigarette packages? Any thoughts on this?

There's pretty robust evidence that smoking cigarettes regularly is likely to create a dependence on nicotine.

Is there similarly robust evidence that having sex regularly is likely to make us into sex addicts?  Remember, the vast majority of people who have sex aren't doing so through the back pages of NOW Magazine.  If having sex turns people into sex addicts then we're going to need a whole lot more than some kind of new regulation of escort ads to stop that.  Warning labels on everyone's genitals, maybe?

 

 

No, sex is not addictive in itself, silly twit. However, those that have difficulty with emotional bonding will sometimes find it difficult to have sex with someone to whom they are emotionally attached. While this can lead to compulsive sexual avoidance, when combined with depression, PTSD, OCD, or bipolar disorder, it can lead to a person turning to sex with strangers to medicate the pain, which can temporarily work through the release of dopamine which becomes associated with the behaviour over time which can then lead to sexually compulsive behaviour over time. Sex addiction usually goes hand in hand with compulsive sexual avoidance, and there is increased evidence of this. Some anecdotal evidence has found that some men who would pay for sex would find themselves incapable of having sex with the same woman for free once a relationship developed due to his fear of emotional intimacy with her, the money being a psychological way to make the transaction as psychologically commercial and emotionally distant as possible. Sex adicts will often be emotionally distant from loved ones too. Increased sexual behaviour separate from emotional intimacy only further separates sex from emotion in the brain. It also tends to escalate over time just like a drug addiction.

I don't know if you have ever heard of gambling addiction, Internet addiction, or porn addiction, but process addictions are real even if no chemical is consumed. Don't forget the brain can produce it's own chemicals in association with certain behaviours. Also, if you know how to use Google, you could search sex addiction to see what it is.

Timebandit Timebandit's picture

I don't think it's feasible to curtail advertising because people have addictions except in the case of public health concerns (cigarettes being a good example). There really isn't a balance to strike.

Struggling

There is a public health concern. It can contribute to the spread of STI's, break families apart wich in turn affects the mental health of all dependents, and can also harm the mental and phusical health of sex workers and the mental, physical, and financial health of clients, among many other factors to consider In fact, it poses a greater public health threat than smoking in relative terms. Generally speaking, cigarettes won't break families apart nor potentially put workers in the industry in harm's way.

I have been diagnosed with PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder), OCD (obsessive-compulsive disorder), and bipolar disorder. My own sexually compulsive behaviour began about a year after my divorce and a couple of suicide attempts, followed by a few bad choices that led me along this path for years, though I had suffered at least depression and maybe some PTSD, OCD, and bipolar disorder since my childhood. Little had I realized until I'd started therapy that my compulsive sexual avoidance during the latter stages of my marriage had themselves been warning signs even though I had never cheated on my wife.

I have been officially diagnosed with neither sex addiction nor Internet addiction, not because my therapist had not acknowledged them, but rather since he had concluded that they were not the primary problems, but rather outward manifestations of the others for which he had officially diagnosed me, though he did recognize them both as problematic in themselves none the less. He recommended that I download a Screentime app to help me to control my obsessive Internet use, which I have done so as to limit myself to a maximum of 30 minutes of Internet use a day on my cell phone aside from one of my e-mail apps, a chat app, and a translation app. I had never even considered that such an app existed previously.
He had also recommended that I attend SAA meetings, where I'd learnt how others had used various forms of meditation and mind exercises, and some even chastity devices, to control their sexually compulsive behaviours. I'd applied some of these remedies to effect, and regret only that I had not known of all of this much earlier. I'd learnt of sex therapy only about 4 months ago quite by accident but had not previously been able to imagine that any of this kind of support existed. I'd first learnt of the chastity cage online as I'd started reading up on BDSM as my behaviour had begun to escalate into the early stages of masochism (paying a woman to give me to drink directly from her urine; and contemplating seeing an escort with a large sum of money in my wallet and a barber's razor blade, paying for a standard asexual massage, lending her the blade, and informing her of the money in the wallet, as a variation on Russian roulette), and that is when I'd begun to see the cage as a potential preventative device for my sexually compulsive behaviour. I'd learnt of sex therapy as I was searching for a regular therapist online. One reason I had not seen a therapist in the early stages of my addiction was due to feelings of shame and guilt along with the fact that I could not imagine that as bad as the problem was, that it might be a symptom of something else, and that only will power alone could teach me to control it.
Strangely enough, never had I expected to walk into his office to discuss my sexually compulsive behaviour to find him eventually diagnose me with PTSD, OCD, and mild symptoms of bipolar disorder instead and questioning me about other behavioural or chemical addictions I might be suffering.
Though I recognize that some here have probably never heard of PTSD, OCD, and process or behavioural addictions (e.g. gambling, internet, porn, sex, etc), and can mock in your ignorance, the fact that you know nothing about them does not negate their existence in any way.
Additionally, just because most men (and sometimes women) who hook up whether at the bar or online might never develop an obsession with the behaviour, it does not mean that no one does. To oppose the requirement that pages advertizing sexual services also advertize remedies for sex addiction (even if it is only a symptom of something else) because most clients are in no way addicted to them would be equal to opposing regulation of access to online porn or educational billboards pertaining to gambling addiction just because most users never become addicted to them either.Additionally, even if one couldn't care less about clients, helping them out of the industry can help sex workers too. Though it's true that a masochistic client presents a greater risk of physical harm to himself than to the worker, he still presents a significantly high risk of mental harm to the worker. There is already evidence that PTSD is contagious. Since you can't understand the concept of behavioural addictions as distinct from chemical addictions, I'm sure you also can't understand social contagion as distinct from viral contagion. There is evidence that parents will often infect their children with PTSD by acting out their trauma, sometimes unwittingly, in their interactions with their children. This is common among not only parents who'd suffered the experiences of the residential school system, but also soldiers, police officers, firefighters, paramedics, and other emergency responders. A sufferer can also infect another adult through his acting out of his trauma too. For instance, some mental health specialists hired by the military and who had never seen combat had developed PTSD just by being surrounded by other sufferers and interacting with them on a regular basis.
When we consider how abnormal it is to pay for sexual services, we can imagine a high percentage of clients suffering mental health problems, including PTSD. One statistic showed that a high percentage of high-end sex workers also suffer PTSD, some also suffering other mental health problems too. We can therefore imagine a sex worker being exposed to PTSD and other mental health problems on a regular basis too.
Add to that that a sufferer whose mental health problem manifests itself differently might present a physical danger to the sex worker too.
As an ironic twist of fate, I am now in a relationship (now a long-distance relationship) with a former sex worker who has also been diagnosed with moderate PTSD even though she worked from indoor 'safety' (though she was diagnosed prior to doing that work for a short time due to financial desperation). She'd described one client suddenly trying to strangle her until she'd slapped him and he came to realize what he was doing and left. Another client got into a tugging match with her. Since she is not a Canadian citizen and speaks neither English nor French (we communicate in her language), she did not want to call the police out of fear that it could prevent her from returning to Canada later.
In fact, the way the relationship started was when I'd learnt that she was not a local resident and so offered to pay her a few hundred dollars just to go back home and hold the keys to my chastity device for over a year with the intent that I would never need to see her again, so sick was I of my compulsive behaviour. I'd learnt of the existence of such a device not long before that. This was not long before I'd finally seen a therapist and was still unaware that I suffered PTSD, OCD, and bipolar disorder.
She accepted the keys but refused payment. I felt guilty so started buying her dinner to thank her, she then wanted to continue to see me, and it progressed from there.
Had I been aware of sex therapy, SAA, etc. long ago, I could have begun the recovery process long ago too. This would have gotten me out of the industry long ago, which in turn would likely have protected sex workers from the potential mental harm, however subtle it may have been, to which I (along with probably many other clients in need of mental health help I'm sure) had been exposing them.

I don't see how this is not at the very least a public mental health problem? And since an escort website would likely receive highly concentrated traffict precicely from people with mental health problems, you would think this is something the government would sant to target.

onlinediscountanvils

Struggling wrote:

Unionist wrote:

I think advertising of sexual services should include mandatory nutritional information.

Why?

 

Struggling wrote:

Mr. Magoo wrote:

Including a clear warning about Genetically Modified Orgasms.

What are those?

 

They're winding you up, mate.

Struggling

onlinediscountanvils wrote:

Struggling wrote:

Unionist wrote:

I think advertising of sexual services should include mandatory nutritional information.

Why?

 

Struggling wrote:

Mr. Magoo wrote:

Including a clear warning about Genetically Modified Orgasms.

What are those?

 

They're winding you up, mate.

 

I was being sarcastic in my response. I figure there's no point taking them seriously in a disability issues forum if they know nothing of mental health.

onlinediscountanvils

Struggling wrote:

I figure there's no point taking them seriously in a disability issues forum if they know nothing of mental health.

 

I hear ya. That's why I've largely stopped posting about the two subjects I know best... poverty and disability. It's just not worth the time and emotional investment.

Pondering

Struggling wrote:
I don't see how this is not at the very least a public mental health problem? And since an escort website would likely receive highly concentrated traffict precicely from people with mental health problems, you would think this is something the government would sant to target.

The government doesn't care about mental health. They have starved the system. Gambling places would be an excellent outreach opportunity too and the government even runs them.

Sex workers have have their own struggles, including mental health issues of many of them for multiple reasons including the illegality of prostitution which is a stressor. While many are willing workers many others are not even if they are not being physically forced. The community as a whole is overwhelmed by the needs of its own members. On an individual basis some sex workers might be concerned for individual people with sex addiction but in the grand scheme of things prostitutes have no more reason to be concerned over sex addiction than beer companies are over alcoholism.

In an ideal world, your idea is great, but we are far from an ideal world. Sex workers are dealing with new legislation which makes it illegal for publications to advertise sexual services. If advertising were legal sex workers might be sympathetic to your idea but right now it makes no sense. Advertising is currently illegal therefore your ideas can't be implemented. Philosophical discussions about war etc. can be fun but not for people embroiled in one in real life.

Right now sex workers are going through a multitude of negative emotions over the new laws. Even though they knew it was coming it is still a huge disappointment for them. It looks like they might not be able to mount a legal challenge without collecting new evidence of harm because the new laws are so different from the old ones even if some of the outcomes are identical. Sex workers just don't have room for other people's problems at this time. That sex workers have contact with mentally ill people, especially sex addicts, doesn't make it an issue central to sex worker's lives. Other problems loom far larger: poverty, violence, their own mental health issues. Lack of legitimacy causes financial problems when trying to get credit or a morgage and stigma makes life particularly difficult for parents. The issues of sex addicts really don't rate, particularly when the solution proposed can't happen until or unless prostitution is legalized, or at least the advertising of it.

Sineed

Quote:
No, sex is not addictive in itself, silly twit. However, those that have difficulty with emotional bonding will sometimes find it difficult to have sex with someone to whom they are emotionally attached. While this can lead to compulsive sexual avoidance, when combined with depression, PTSD, OCD, or bipolar disorder, it can lead to a person turning to sex with strangers to medicate the pain, which can temporarily work through the release of dopamine which becomes associated with the behaviour over time which can then lead to sexually compulsive behaviour over time.

As someone who works in addictions, I have always been bothered by the labels "sex addiction" or "food addiction," because it doesn't make any sense that natural physiological processes can be inherently addictive. Your explanation is the best plain-language summary I've seen of what is really probably going on, and thank you for sharing.

I have used the example of people with psychotic disorders who will sometimes compulsively drink water to a dangerous degree. Everybody understands that the behaviour is a manifestation of their psychiatric disorder and not an addiction to water.

I'm not sure what you are saying about a conflict with sex worker rights, which seems to be a separate issue. Are you saying that people have a "right" to sex? From a feminist perspective, that's a problematic stance. (IF that is what you are saying.)

Slumberjack

Does it make sense for anyone to be suggesting that another person's physical sovereignty is up for debate because someone else might be addicted to sex?  Why is the discussion being led down that path?  To have a stop put to it presumably.  Here we get to denigrate addictions, question if they even exist.  Hello?  Food and sex addictions don't exist?

Unionist

I don't think babble is a forum made for discussing an individual's disabilities - especially when it is suggested that the treatment involves infringing on the rights of others.

 

Slumberjack

Sineed wrote:
As someone who works in addictions, I have always been bothered by the labels "sex addiction" or "food addiction," because it doesn't make any sense that natural physiological processes can be inherently addictive.

This makes absolutely no sense whatsoever.  They're not labels per se, but laypersons (non-professional) terms for mental disorders associated with eating and sex.  People get hooked on steriods, the production of which are natural physiological processes in many cases.  For many, addiction to steriods consitutes too much of a good thing that is already going on in the body.  Nothing is inherently addictive until the mind and/or the body starts to form a dependancy, at which point one becomes physicially or mentally addicted.

Slumberjack

Unionist wrote:
I don't think babble is a forum made for discussing an individual's disabilities - especially when it is suggested that the treatment involves infringing on the rights of others. 

Where, precisely has this discussion of infringement been introduced to the thread?  And hello, all kinds of people have made reference to their disabilities on this forum going back many years.  Does the name CMOT Dibbler ring any bells?

Slumberjack

Apparently the babble topic police are on the scene to tear gas another thread into oblivion.  I'm outta here before they bring in the big guns.

Sineed

Slumberjack wrote:

Sineed wrote:
As someone who works in addictions, I have always been bothered by the labels "sex addiction" or "food addiction," because it doesn't make any sense that natural physiological processes can be inherently addictive.

This makes absolutely no sense whatsoever.  They're not labels per se, but laypersons (non-professional) terms for mental disorders associated with eating and sex.

I suggest you scroll upwards and re-read Struggling's explanation of "sex addiction," in which he discusses how the addictive behaviour for a sex addict is a symptom of underlying psychological problems and not a disease in and of itself. These labels are important not only in helping people name their problems and address them appropriately, but also it helps debunk popular misconceptions.

True, in the popular culture, people refer to "food" and "sex" addictions. But food and sex are not inherently addictive the way cocaine, heroin, alcohol, nicotine, cannabis (for some people), and many psychoactive prescription drugs are able to induce a physical tolerance and an addiction simply by using these to excess. The food or sex "addiction" is a symptom rather than the cause. It's important to make this distinction in order to treat people properly.

Unionist, I agree that if Struggling is saying that sex addicts have a "right" to sex, that's not compatible with Rabble values. But I'm not sure that's what Struggling is saying.

Struggling

Pondering wrote:

Struggling wrote:
I don't see how this is not at the very least a public mental health problem? And since an escort website would likely receive highly concentrated traffict precicely from people with mental health problems, you would think this is something the government would sant to target.

The government doesn't care about mental health. They have starved the system. Gambling places would be an excellent outreach opportunity too and the government even runs them.

Sex workers have have their own struggles, including mental health issues of many of them for multiple reasons including the illegality of prostitution which is a stressor. While many are willing workers many others are not even if they are not being physically forced. The community as a whole is overwhelmed by the needs of its own members. On an individual basis some sex workers might be concerned for individual people with sex addiction but in the grand scheme of things prostitutes have no more reason to be concerned over sex addiction than beer companies are over alcoholism.

In an ideal world, your idea is great, but we are far from an ideal world. Sex workers are dealing with new legislation which makes it illegal for publications to advertise sexual services. If advertising were legal sex workers might be sympathetic to your idea but right now it makes no sense. Advertising is currently illegal therefore your ideas can't be implemented. Philosophical discussions about war etc. can be fun but not for people embroiled in one in real life.

Right now sex workers are going through a multitude of negative emotions over the new laws. Even though they knew it was coming it is still a huge disappointment for them. It looks like they might not be able to mount a legal challenge without collecting new evidence of harm because the new laws are so different from the old ones even if some of the outcomes are identical. Sex workers just don't have room for other people's problems at this time. That sex workers have contact with mentally ill people, especially sex addicts, doesn't make it an issue central to sex worker's lives. Other problems loom far larger: poverty, violence, their own mental health issues. Lack of legitimacy causes financial problems when trying to get credit or a morgage and stigma makes life particularly difficult for parents. The issues of sex addicts really don't rate, particularly when the solution proposed can't happen until or unless prostitution is legalized, or at least the advertising of it.

 

Thanks for the response, Pondering, though this leads us to some questions:

 

1. Plese correct me if I'm wrong, but it's not prostitution per se that is illegal, but the purchase thereof. That would make it only half illegal.

2. If I understand the law correctly, a prostitute is allowed to advertize her own services, just not someone else's. I seem to remember one newspaper challenging the law on that front and so continues to publish such ads. The following seems to confirm it too, bearing in mind in this case it might also be an international jurisdictional matter (trigger warning for some):

http://montreal.backpage.com/FemaleEscorts/

Today's ads, long after legislation has passed.

Also, if they are concerned for their safety (and I assume that by safety is meant safety not only from physical but also mental harm), then would we not want to get anyone suffering mental health problems out of the industry, regardless of whether it's a seller or a buyer?

I do agree with much of what you say otherwise though.

Struggling

Sineed wrote:

Quote:
No, sex is not addictive in itself, silly twit. However, those that have difficulty with emotional bonding will sometimes find it difficult to have sex with someone to whom they are emotionally attached. While this can lead to compulsive sexual avoidance, when combined with depression, PTSD, OCD, or bipolar disorder, it can lead to a person turning to sex with strangers to medicate the pain, which can temporarily work through the release of dopamine which becomes associated with the behaviour over time which can then lead to sexually compulsive behaviour over time.

As someone who works in addictions, I have always been bothered by the labels "sex addiction" or "food addiction," because it doesn't make any sense that natural physiological processes can be inherently addictive. Your explanation is the best plain-language summary I've seen of what is really probably going on, and thank you for sharing.

I have used the example of people with psychotic disorders who will sometimes compulsively drink water to a dangerous degree. Everybody understands that the behaviour is a manifestation of their psychiatric disorder and not an addiction to water.

I'm not sure what you are saying about a conflict with sex worker rights, which seems to be a separate issue. Are you saying that people have a "right" to sex? From a feminist perspective, that's a problematic stance. (IF that is what you are saying.)

 

As for conflict with sex worker rights, I was referring to the idea that the sex industry should have a right to complete deregulation. When we consider that cigarette advertizing is regulated, that restaurants serving alcohol have to stick pregnancy warnings on the wall, and the government spends money to advertize gambling addiction help lines and also regulates the gambling industry, isn't it resonable to regulate the advertizing of sexual services, not necessarily to prohibit it (since that might clearly conflict with the rights of sex workers), but to at least make it mandatory for websites that advertize such services to also have to provide educational adverts concerning help to get sex workers out of the industry as well as remedies for client sex addicts? Another way of looking at it, if paying for sex is illegal, would it also not be fair to require the advertizing of a service that is legal to advertize and sell but not buy to also advertize ways out of the industry for those who might be tempted to buy?

Struggling

Slumberjack wrote:

Does it make sense for anyone to be suggesting that another person's physical sovereignty is up for debate because someone else might be addicted to sex?  Why is the discussion being led down that path?  To have a stop put to it presumably.  Here we get to denigrate addictions, question if they even exist.  Hello?  Food and sex addictions don't exist?

 

http://www.bbc.com/news/health-28252612

 

Science trumps opinion, Slumberjack.

Struggling

Unionist wrote:

I don't think babble is a forum made for discussing an individual's disabilities - especially when it is suggested that the treatment involves infringing on the rights of others.

 

 

How would regulating the advertizing of sexual services infringe on the rights of a sex worker? She could still advertize all she wants; it's just that the site on which she is advertizing would also have to advertize remedies for those who want out of the industry. To sugest that a client who wants out of the industry should be restrained from accessing information that could help him out of it infringes on the right of a sex worker is ludicrous to say the least.

I'm out of the industry now, but only due to a lucky series of coincidences that led me to find a remedy on my own. That said, had therse remedies been advertized where I was looking, I would have been out of the industry much sooner too. So according to your logic, we must keep 'em coming? You sound like the cigarette industry.

Struggling

Sineed wrote:

Slumberjack wrote:

Sineed wrote:
As someone who works in addictions, I have always been bothered by the labels "sex addiction" or "food addiction," because it doesn't make any sense that natural physiological processes can be inherently addictive.

This makes absolutely no sense whatsoever.  They're not labels per se, but laypersons (non-professional) terms for mental disorders associated with eating and sex.

I suggest you scroll upwards and re-read Struggling's explanation of "sex addiction," in which he discusses how the addictive behaviour for a sex addict is a symptom of underlying psychological problems and not a disease in and of itself. These labels are important not only in helping people name their problems and address them appropriately, but also it helps debunk popular misconceptions.

True, in the popular culture, people refer to "food" and "sex" addictions. But food and sex are not inherently addictive the way cocaine, heroin, alcohol, nicotine, cannabis (for some people), and many psychoactive prescription drugs are able to induce a physical tolerance and an addiction simply by using these to excess. The food or sex "addiction" is a symptom rather than the cause. It's important to make this distinction in order to treat people properly.

Unionist, I agree that if Struggling is saying that sex addicts have a "right" to sex, that's not compatible with Rabble values. But I'm not sure that's what Struggling is saying.

 

Probably a better term than sex addiction would be compulsive sexual disorder, which can ironically include compulsive sexual avoidance. So yes, sex addiction is just a short short layman's two-word four-syllable way to express these varying problems.

Also, just to clarify, the point was not to say that sex addicts should have a right to sex, but rather on the contrary they should have a right to better access educational resources concerning remedies for sex addiction. A sex addict who is aware that he has a problem but has never even heard of the term, let alone been made aware of remedies to help him learn to control his behaviour, and who has for whatever reason never considered that remedies even exist beyond simple will power might never even consider seeking help since he already believes a priori that it does not exist. Advertizing available remedies where he is looking (i.e. on escort websites and massage parlours for example) would make him aware of such remedies and so help him leave the industry. Certainly the sex worker does not have a right to the body of the sex addict if we want to look at it that way.

Struggling

Pondering wrote:

The government doesn't care about mental health. They have starved the system. Gambling places would be an excellent outreach opportunity too and the government even runs them.

 

Another irony struck me here too. It's not even financial help that I would have asked for, but rather access to information. ONce I finally did learn of the existence of remedies, I unhesitatingly paid for them out of my own pocket, and they have worked so far for at least the last four months now (around the time I'd learnt of them). All the government would need to do is to educate people on the existence of such remedies. And by simply legislating that escort websites would have to advertize them, the government would not even need to spend one cent there either except in regulation, which could be paid for in some cases.

 

A conservative's dream come true or so you would think.

Mr. Magoo

Quote:
There is also no advertizing of chastity devices or educational websites pertaining to them and how some sex addicts have used them effectively in the initial stages of their recovery, nor is there any other advertizing.

Do you have any links to support this suggestion that male chastity devices (Wikipedia link NSFW) -- basically a penis cage, with a cute little padlock -- are a component of any legitimate sexual therapy?

Because I notice that you keep mentioning them, enough to get me curious.

I'll say upfront that I find it very, very difficult to believe that any legitimate psychotherapist, psychologist or doctor would recommend to a man to put his penis in a little metal or plastic cage with a padlock and then give the key to someone else so that they can take responsibility for his gratification (or lack thereof).  First off, it seems about as plausible as a doctor recommending a ball gag to help with quitting smoking.  Second, the therapeutic process generally isn't about handing off responsibility for your own actions to someone else.  Similarly, I can't imagine a legitimate therapist trying to treat a client's alcoholism by suggesting to him that he put his booze in a locked box and give the key to his neighbour (who can then take responsibility for whether the alcoholic should or shouldn't be allowed some vodka).  This just sort of lacks what's sometimes called in the legal system "an air of reality".

So then, at the risk of getting some pretty odd Google ads for the next little while, I did a bit of searching around to see whether perhaps a penis cage IS a generally regarded as a legitimate therapy aid for the treatment of sex addiction.  If so, you'd expect that it would be mentioned in a journal, or on the webpage of a therapist, or some such.

But all I could find was plenty of ads for them (from the same places you'd get ball gags, restraints, leather masks, etc.) and discussion of their use from a BDSM/"power play" perspective.  Evidently, if you're a "sub" and you'd like to explore your submissive nature further, imprisoning your penis and giving the key to a "keyholder", who then has complete control of your sexual gratification and orgasm, can be fun.  Different strokes, I guess -- no weirder than a vacuum bed -- but apparently more a part of "having sex" than of not having sex.

Since you seem to think that newspapers that run escort ads are remiss if they don't also "educate" us all about penis cages, can you point us to any kind of reputable psychotherapist, therapy journal or any other plausible source that can vouch for the idea that these penis-prisons aren't just fairly expensive sex toys for the enjoyment of consenting adults who like to play Mistress and Slave?

Unionist

Struggling wrote:

I'm out of the industry now, but only due to a lucky series of coincidences that led me to find a remedy on my own. That said, had therse remedies been advertized where I was looking, I would have been out of the industry much sooner too. So according to your logic, we must keep 'em coming? You sound like the cigarette industry.

That's me. Smokey the bear.

More seriously, I don't find what you're saying very credible - about information being the solution, I mean. But when you want to force people to tell customers stuff, I draw the line. I don't support what you're saying. I don't support blaming sex workers for not telling people how to abolish sex work. I don't support the criminalization of the purchase of sex, because it's just a phoney little facade for attacking sex workers.

I do sympathize with whatever problem you have, but sincerely doubt whether you'll get a lot of good therapeutic tips on babble. Not from me, anyway.

 

Struggling

Mr. Magoo wrote:

Quote:
There is also no advertizing of chastity devices or educational websites pertaining to them and how some sex addicts have used them effectively in the initial stages of their recovery, nor is there any other advertizing.

Do you have any links to support this suggestion that male chastity devices (Wikipedia link NSFW) -- basically a penis cage, with a cute little padlock -- are a component of any legitimate sexual therapy?

Because I notice that you keep mentioning them, enough to get me curious.

I'll say upfront that I find it very, very difficult to believe that any legitimate psychotherapist, psychologist or doctor would recommend to a man to put his penis in a little metal or plastic cage with a padlock and then give the key to someone else so that they can take responsibility for his gratification (or lack thereof).  First off, it seems about as plausible as a doctor recommending a ball gag to help with quitting smoking.  Second, the therapeutic process generally isn't about handing off responsibility for your own actions to someone else.  Similarly, I can't imagine a legitimate therapist trying to treat a client's alcoholism by suggesting to him that he put his booze in a locked box and give the key to his neighbour (who can then take responsibility for whether the alcoholic should or shouldn't be allowed some vodka).  This just sort of lacks what's sometimes called in the legal system "an air of reality".

So then, at the risk of getting some pretty odd Google ads for the next little while, I did a bit of searching around to see whether perhaps a penis cage IS a generally regarded as a legitimate therapy aid for the treatment of sex addiction.  If so, you'd expect that it would be mentioned in a journal, or on the webpage of a therapist, or some such.

But all I could find was plenty of ads for them (from the same places you'd get ball gags, restraints, leather masks, etc.) and discussion of their use from a BDSM/"power play" perspective.  Evidently, if you're a "sub" and you'd like to explore your submissive nature further, imprisoning your penis and giving the key to a "keyholder", who then has complete control of your sexual gratification and orgasm, can be fun.  Different strokes, I guess -- no weirder than a vacuum bed -- but apparently more a part of "having sex" than of not having sex.

Since you seem to think that newspapers that run escort ads are remiss if they don't also "educate" us all about penis cages, can you point us to any kind of reputable psychotherapist, therapy journal or any other plausible source that can vouch for the idea that these penis-prisons aren't just fairly expensive sex toys for the enjoyment of consenting adults who like to play Mistress and Slave?

 

I'd turned to it before starting therapy. In fact, Ironically enough, it's what led me to read more on therapy and SAA because I was not convinced that just talking could help me to control my behaviour. Once the behaviour was under control, then I'don't seen a therapist. To be honest, had it not been for the cage, he would have been useless since rather that focus on the practical question of how to control the behaviour, he was more interested in determining whether I suffered PTSD, OCD, or bipolar disorder. It turns out his hunch was right on all three fronts, but that is not what I'd seen him for. I wanted hard advice on how to stop the behaviour.

I then tried SAA, and it turned out that some therapists unlike mine had not wasted their time and told them flat out that SAA could help them more than I could. That's where I'don't learnt that a couple local members relied on the cage too, others on screen blocking apps, others on libido suppressant medication, etc. The reality of the matter is that even sex therapists have minimal education on ex addiction, maybe a credit course and that's it if your lucky. It's still a relatively new field of study but when you want a solution, you'l find one yourself and not wait for psychobabble.

But it helps if you believe a solution might exist.