Thanks for the link to an interesting article excerpt, Nina! [I guess you gotta buy the mag for the full article]
The author throws in a coupla qualifiers like "...
moderate viewing of....
mainstream, non-violent pornography..." I'd be curious to see how the studies surveyed in the article define those terms.
I was also rather interested to read the portion of the article that refers to a 2009 survey of whether viewers of pornography of considered their viewing problematic, which says:
"Repression seems to figure prominently into the puzzle of pornography...What mattered most, Twohig found, was whether the subjects tried to control their sexual thoughts and desires. The more they tried to clamp down on their urge for sex or porn, the more likely they were to consider their own pornography use a problem. The findings suggest that suppressing the desire to view pornography, for example, for moral or religious reasons, might actually strengthen the urge for it and exacerbate sexual problems."
Further support for two old adages, perhaps...
1.
Obsession with sex is a direct result of lack of
occupation with sex.
2. We become that which we despise.