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Tantra for Men

Tantra for Porn Addiction — Tantra for Men

Tantra for Men — and specifically tantra for porn addiction — sits at the intersection where most generic content fails. Most tantra content for men is either ascetic semen-retention discipline or vague spiritual promise. Tantra Clinic meets you where you actually are: in your body, in your bedroom, in a real relationship or trying to want one. For the fathers, executives, ex-athletes, men 35–65 we typically work with, porn addiction shows up in specific patterns. The practice we use here is the same body-based foundation, applied in language and structure that is calibrated to who you actually are.

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

Is this you?

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.

Frequently asked questions

Is porn use addiction or just habit?+

On a spectrum. ICD-11 CSBD applies when use is compulsive, distressing, and persistent despite attempts to stop. Most heavy users do not meet that threshold but still benefit from a reset.

Should I go to a 12-step program?+

For severe cases with co-occurring sex addiction, yes — SAA can help. For most porn-only patterns, structured behavioral protocols + body-work work well.

Is religion-based recovery (NoFap, etc.) effective?+

For some. The structure helps. The shame framing often does not. Tantric protocols offer the structure without the shame.

How do I find a porn addiction therapist?+

Search for a licensed mental-health professional with explicit experience in compulsive sexual behaviour (CSBD) — the AASECT directory in the US and COSRT in the UK are the cleanest starting points, or look for psychologists who list 'out of control sexual behaviour' among their specialisations. Be wary of uncredentialed 'porn addiction coaches': the title is unregulated. In a first session, ask whether they work from the ICD-11 CSBD framing or a pure addiction model, and choose the framing you can actually live inside.

What does porn addiction counselling involve?+

Typically: an assessment of the pattern and what drives it, CBT- or ACT-informed work on triggers and the urge cycle, building replacement behaviours, addressing co-occurring issues such as anxiety, depression or relationship strain, and relapse-response planning. It is conversational and structured, usually weekly, and a good clinician treats the loss of control — not the morality of porn itself.

How long does it take to recover from porn addiction?+

There is no clinically validated timeline, so distrust precise figures. Commonly described ranges: the acute phase of strong urges and irritability settles over weeks; the habit layer responds to roughly three months of consistent structured change (the '90-day reboot' is a community convention, not science); and where sexual function has been affected, re-sensitisation is usually described in months. Underlying emotional drivers take as long as that work takes.

Is there a test for porn addiction?+

No online quiz can diagnose you. Researchers do use published screening instruments — the Problematic Pornography Consumption Scale and the Brief Pornography Screen are the best known — and clinicians assess against the ICD-11 CSBD criteria: loss of control, escalation, continued use despite consequences, persistence, and distress about the pattern itself. Honest self-reflection across those themes can tell you whether a professional assessment is worth seeking; only a clinician can tell you more.

How do I stop watching porn on my own?+

The pattern that works across approaches: make access harder (blockers, device out of the bedroom), map your real triggers — usually boredom, anxiety or transition moments rather than arousal — install a short replacement protocol for the urge window (a five-minute breath or movement practice), add one form of outside accountability, and re-train arousal with slow, screen-free practice. Pure willpower with an unchanged environment has the worst track record. If you have seriously tried to stop more than twice and failed, that is the signal to add professional support.

Can porn addiction cause erectile dysfunction?+

Compulsive, high-novelty porn use can condition arousal to depend on intense visual input, leaving partnered sex under-stimulating by comparison — the pattern commonly called porn-induced ED. The honest caveats: the research is debated, and erectile difficulty also has medical causes (vascular, hormonal, medication-related). If erections are fine with porn but unreliable with a partner, the conditioning account is plausible and a structured reset is reasonable; if difficulty is new, sudden, or present in all contexts, see a GP first.

Talk to us about porn addiction

Tell us what you're experiencing. We'll reply personally, in confidence.

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