What porn addiction typically looks like for tantra for men
Compulsive porn use that interferes with sex, work, relationships, or self-image. The clinical literature does not formally recognize "porn addiction" but treats it under compulsive sexual behavior disorder (CSBD), which is in ICD-11.
The research
"Porn addiction" is the lay term, and it remains scientifically debated — no diagnostic manual recognises it by that name. The closest recognised clinical entity is Compulsive Sexual Behaviour Disorder (CSBD), classified in ICD-11 (code 6C72) as an impulse-control disorder; compulsive pornography use can fall within it. The framing matters: the WHO deliberately avoided the addiction model, the DSM-5-TR does not recognise the condition at all, and the research field is genuinely divided on whether problematic porn use behaves like an addiction. The neuroscience is suggestive rather than settled — Voon and colleagues' 2014 Cambridge fMRI study found cue-reactivity patterns in compulsive users, while the authors themselves cautioned that this does not prove addiction. Grubbs and colleagues' work on moral incongruence adds an important nuance: some self-identified "porn addicts" show distress driven by moral or religious disapproval rather than measurable loss of control — and ICD-11 explicitly excludes purely moral distress from the diagnosis. On treatment, CBT adapted for compulsive sexual behaviour is the most established direction; acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) has small published trials specifically for problematic pornography use; mindfulness-based components are common and reasonable. Recovery timelines have no validated clinical figures — the "90-day reboot" is a community convention, not science; commonly described ranges run to weeks for the acute urge phase and months where re-sensitisation of sexual response is involved. Tantric and somatic interventions are an adjunct, not first-line care: their plausible role is in the re-sensitisation and re-engagement phase, retraining arousal away from screen-driven intensity through slow, attentive, embodied practice — a mechanism overlapping with mindfulness approaches, though untested in trials for CSBD specifically. Where compulsive use co-occurs with depression, anxiety or trauma, clinician-led care comes first.
How tantra approaches porn addiction
We treat porn-driven compulsion as a dopamine-and-shame cycle, not a moral failure. The protocol pairs structured behavioral cessation (the detox) with tantric body-work that gives the nervous system something to do other than reach for the screen — slow touch, breath, body-mapping, presence with self or partner.
Practices we use
- Trigger mapping (beginner, 30 min) — Identifies the actual triggers (boredom, anxiety, loneliness, transition moments) under each compulsion.
- Replacement protocol (beginner, 5 min) — A 5-minute breath or movement practice to interrupt the urge loop.
- Structured solo touch (intermediate, 20 min) — Re-introduces pleasure as practice, not compulsion.
Is this you?
- You watch porn daily, often more than once
- You've tried to stop and couldn't
- It interferes with partnered sex
- You watch content you would not want anyone to see
- You feel shame after every session
When to see a doctor instead
Seek mental-health support if porn use co-occurs with depression, suicidal ideation, or other compulsive behaviors. CSBD is best treated in coordination with a clinician.