How To Handle Porn in a Relationship
-I’m a 70-year-old man. My wife wants sex less often than I do, so I watch porn and masturbate. She gets furious and says if I’m getting off to porn stars, it means I don’t love her or respect our intimacy. What’s a guy to do?
– My husband and I are 60 and sexually compatible. I thought our sex life was great until I caught my husband watching porn. The performers did things I wouldn’t do, couldn’t do. He says he’s happy with me, porn is just fantasy, and there’s nothing he wants to change about our relationship. How can I believe him?
These are the types of questions you ask about porn in a relationship. I hear from women dismayed by their male partner’s porn use. I hear from men whose female partners caught them watching porn and tried to forbid it. (Yes, many women enjoy porn, too, but they don’t write to me about porn being a conflict in their relationships.)
Why the conflict about porn?
The men who write me say that porn is a way to indulge their fantasies, enjoy visual stimulation, and get an easy, private orgasm. They tell me it has nothing to do with their partners. Some feel shamed by a partner’s anger and disgust. Others just wish their partner would stop snooping.
Their women partners may feel crushed and outraged. Women have been socialized to equate their desirability with youth. At our age, women are self-conscious about their bodies and sexual attractiveness. They may feel insecure about their sexual “performance” compared to a porn star. They may think it’s shameful that a man they trusted is indulging in a habit that they find demeaning.
What do we do?
We calm down and ask questions. A male reader commented on my 2014 column on this topic, “Why don’t you ask him why he watches porn?” Yes, ask him what he gets out of it, what it means and doesn’t mean to him. And ask her how she feels, what she needs from you. Don’t argue — listen.
Dr. David J. Ley is a clinical psychologist and author of Ethical Porn for Dicks, A Man’s Guide to Responsible Viewing Pleasure, which I highly recommend to women as well. He writes,
When it comes to sexual behaviors, there’s a belief today that there should be absolutely no privacy between the partners in a couple. That any privacy is the equivalent of keeping secrets, and that secrets are unhealthy and destructive. But healthy sexuality and a healthy self involves some privacy. If you choose to exercise your sexual privacy and watch porn, you should be able to.
How does Dr. Ley advise a man to explain this to his partner?
You can tell her that you watch porn sometimes, and that you hope she can deal with that, because you really want to have a healthy, open, mutually accepting relationship with her. But, if you tell her that you don’t watch porn, when you do, then you’re lying, and perpetuating your shame, and her misunderstanding of porn. Lies don’t earn privacy—honesty and integrity do.
… So think strategically about your goal. What do you want her to know? Ultimately, you want her to know and accept that sometimes you watch porn, but the porn doesn’t change your feelings about her. And really, the porn is a part of your private life, which you’d like to be able to share with her and not be shamed or judged.
When is porn a problem?
If the man is watching porn a lot, does it mean the relationship is in trouble? Often not, but sometimes yes. Porn is usually not the cause of the problem, but it may reveal that a problem already exists in the relationship. Is he having sex with his screen and his hand while consistently ignoring a partner who wants sex with him and feels rejected? Does he desire sex with her, but she’s not willing? Is one of them depressed or isolated and won’t talk about it or get help? Is communication lacking?
If any of these problems exist, you’ll need a sex-positive couple’s counselor or sex therapist to help you communicate, locate the real problem, and work through it. Blaming it on porn won’t help you back to a compassionate and loving relationship.
“When porn gets raised as a problem in the marriage,” writes Dr. Ley, “It’s always a symptom of something else going on with one of the people in the marriage, or in the marriage itself.”
How did you do it?
If you and your partner experienced a similar conflict and successfully resolved it, please share in the comments. How did you open communication? What did you come to understand about your partner’s feelings and motivation? How did you find common ground? Please comment!
During this holiday season and into the New Year, give your partner the gift of understanding and communication. This is worth more than anything you could purchase.
Read these previous columns about porn conflicts:
- “I Caught My Husband Watching Porn. Do We Have a Problem?”
- “Ask Joan: Frustrated and Not Winding Down”
Do you have a question for Joan?
- Check https://cms.seniorplanet.org/author/joan-price/in case Joan has already addressed your topic.
- Joan can only answer questions from people age 60 and above.
- Selected questions will be answered in this public column, not privately. If you want a private answer, you can book Joan for a personal consultation.
- If your question is under consideration for Joan’s column, she will email you directly and will only select your question if you respond to her email. If you submit your question, please check your spam/junk folder in case your overzealous spam filter captures her email.
- Ready to submit your question? Email sexpert@seniorplanet.org.
Joan Price has been Senior Planet’s “Sex at Our Age” columnist since 2014. She is the author of four self-help books about senior sex, including her award winners: “Naked at Our Age: Talking Out Loud about Senior Sex” and “Sex after Grief: Navigating Your Sexuality after Losing Your Beloved.” Visit Joan’s website and blog for senior sex news, views, tips, and sex toy reviews from a senior perspective. Subscribe to Joan’s free, monthly newsletter.
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Comments
If caught my my partner on Instragram not just “liking” the big boob women and porn stars he follows and has had adversion to for decades (2 ex-wives before me)but responding with comments that I found were hurtful and disrespectful to me. I get the visual effects these women portray but drool all you want, when you are sending comments, its personally offensive, disrespectufl. He is ashamed–embarrassed but its left me “distrustful”. I felt he was deceiving. How do I get passed this.
It’s just so hurtful knowing that men fantasize about these beautiful women and girls. Especially as aI am an aging woman. My husband says it’s just fantasy. Why does he feel the need to fantasize about screwing younger women?
I used to enjoy watching porn to get excited before having sex with my wife, It’s not the age or shape of the woman, it’s the willingness, it’s the various acts. I’d even ask her what “thing” she wanted to watch (oral, Group, whatever). She’d choose some “fetish” to watch with me but constantly criticized the actors, or laughed at what they did. Which was a turnoff. We no longer watch porn together. We seldom have sex.
My situation is related but different….my partner uses gay chat rooms, sends graphic photos of himself and engages with strangers online. I believe this is infidelity; he doesn’t.
There is such a wide variety of sex films that can be labeled as porn.
My husband and I watch some more current sex videos. Sometimes we watch some old VHS films he has from the ’60s and 70s. None of these movies involve violence or choking. Useful for setting a sexual mood for us. I find some of the older porn funny. We are not concerned with looking like the actors. We are monogamous. I don’t worry he is going to break our agreement over a fantasy.
Isn’t watching porn or sexy movies like Black Sails just a way for a guy to do a body check…his penis can still fire.
I heard Dan Pink on tv. He said Women regret some of the men they slept with. Men regret not sleeping with some women they could have.
I heard Charles Kuralt interview a 93 esteemed man and ask him about his regrets. Number one was just what Dan Pink said.