Pornographic Video Games and Sexuality
Last Monday I got screenshots of a game my client played, but it wasn’t what I expected. He indulged in the ever-expanding genre of pornographic video games.
Last Monday I got screenshots of a game my client played, but it wasn’t what I expected. He indulged in the ever-expanding genre of pornographic video games.
One of the go to suggestions to stop watching pornography is an abstinence period. Does a new study prove the existing wisdom?
We all have known a villain or two. Even the sex addiction treatment community has villains. Why are these people villains?
For me, the concept of sex dolls is fascinating and when my web guy told me that some people were searching for more information about it, I jumped at the chance to write about them again.
Those of us who treat problematic or compulsive sexual behavior still hear from colleagues that they do not believe that sex addiction is real.
I came across this book about Autism and Sexuality when I was searching for more information on Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and sex crimes.
The horrific mass shooting in Georgia is the media’s insistence that sex addiction isn’t real; in reality, what’s needed is more sex addiction research.
Splashed across the media last night were stories of a sex addiction fueled massage parlor shooting. How realistic are these claims?
How do we, as therapists, determine whether a pornography problem is erotic conflict or an addiction? A discussion on the nuances.