The Porn Trap
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Product Description
Since the explosion of the Internet and additional forms of digital equipment, the number of people addicted to pornography has skyrocketed. But there has been a distinct lack of resources to help them until now. The Porn Trap is the first book to take a comprehensive look at porn addiction and additional devastating consequences of porn use, addressing the full range of problems that impact everyone from recreational “dabblers” to compulsive addicts, and the people who care about them.
In this groundbreaking book, sex and relationship therapists Wendy and Larry Maltz take on this vital theme with wisdom, power, and compassion. They shed new light on the power of pornography—revealing why it’s so simple to renovate a serious problem with porn and regularly hard to break free from its clutches. Lacking judgment or blame, the Maltzes outline the destructive effects of porn use, and offer a commonsense, practical approach for healing supported by innovative exercises, checklists, and suggestions.
The Porn Trap will help you to:
- Identify and evaluate the impact of porn
- Choose whether it’s time to quit using porn
- Learn how to stop using porn and deal with cravings
- Rebuild self-esteem and restore personal integrity
- Heal a relationship harmed by porn use, and
- Renovate a thriving and satisfying sexual life lacking porn
Throughout the book are powerful real-life tales from everyday people from all walks of life who have struggled with porn and gotten out from under its influence. Their experiences show that no matter how terrible things may seem, it is possible to change and eventually triumph over this increasingly common problem.
With The Porn Trap, Wendy and Larry Maltz provide a unique blend of help, hope, and healing for all who want to go away from porn, improve their lives, and make genuine intimacy with a partner.
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This book is filled with falsehoods, misstatements, inaccuracies, lies, disinformation, and outright stupidity. Overall, it represents the worst sort of scientifically baseless, politically motivated, intentionally harmful, self-serving, claptrap. Never before has such a mean-spirited, hypocritical and fiercely puritanical polemic been open in such an insidiously “helpful” guise. This book is an brilliant example of the ancient adage about the highway to Hell being lined with “excellent” intentions, except in this case, it is highly dubious if any of the authors’ intentions were really “excellent.”
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5
I read this book with an open mind. I respect additional points of views especially around porn or as I call it erotica. As a clinician, I thought the book would be of help to me but I have establish this book to be a danger. The authors pathologize any type of porn/erotica and basically say that if you or any of your loved ones like reading a tale or looking at a picture they are going to be doomed to addiction.
I reflect this book is a danger and sets a terrible tone and uses scare tactics to frigthen people away from something that they might delight in.
Porn/erotica is excellent. It provides men and women with sexual information, it allows people to not be shameful of sex and it could really be a form of therapy for some people. The logic the authors use is really based on dread and is obviously biased. READ AT YOUR OWN RISK!!
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5
There isn’t a single book on this topic that doesn’t cite Jesus as the solution. Perhaps this addiction is only considered a problem amongst Christians.
If your choice is Jesus and Porn, I reflect many will perish with their addictions. Hopefully a name will write a helpful book for normal people. I admit Christians suffer more than most, but that does not mean that everyone else should be neglected by the psychological community.
I suggest reading “Zen and the Art of Pornography” to get a balanced look at the issue.
Reader’s Rating: 3 / 5
The main audience for this book was clearly composed of heterosexual white married men who practice a bring shame on-based form of Christianity.
Fantastic heaping details of the struggles these men went through as boys encountering their father’s Playboys, up to and including relapsing due to glancing at women’s lingerie ads in their Sunday newspaper, fill the pages. Some testimonials from women are agreed, but they are infrequent and sound two-dimensional. The one clear narrative from a gay man (the excellent doctor can only refer to them as “homosexuals” not gay) sounds like something her editor made her place in at the last minute to make the book appear to be balanced – it’s not. The relief is nearly palpable as she leaves this narrative and moves back to the redundant straight guy narratives.
If you are struggling with obsessive behavior related to porn, and you’re not the target audience, you won’t hear your voice in this book, especially not when the doctor talks about healthy sexual relations – there is nothing about healthy gay or lesbian couples. Nowhere does the book deal with the reality that young gays and lesbians regularly have no healthy outlet for their sexuality or source of honest information. While there are some common sense thoughts for sinking and avoiding dependence on porn (mainly just 12-step programs), it is unlikely persons who are not white, male, married, and committed to the concept of Christian rigidity will have the stamina to wade through all the non-applicable examples and repeated cries of “bring shame on” to pull out anything of use; and that’s too terrible because this problem is not limited to any one sexual group.
The one compliment I can give is she offers lots of examples of straight men drawn into underage porn – it was nice not to see gays treated as predators.
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5
“The Porn Trap” is a very helpful book for persons who find pornography to be destructive in their lives.
Ralph H Earle, PhD
Leader of “Lonely All the Time”
Reader’s Rating: 5 / 5