Porn affecting your

relationships or sex?

Hi there! If you think porn might be affecting your sex life or relationships – you’re not alone.
Heaps of young people use porn to learn about sex – but it can end up affecting our relationships, and sex lives (ouch 😱) in ways we didn’t imagine! If that’s you, and you’re keen to change things up, well done for making your way here – and here’s some help…

Tips & Tools

Looking for quick tips? Here’s what you need.
Porn and relationships

People can have positive and negative experiences watching porn – it’s important to respect everyone’s experiences.

Even if it’s mostly good times, the experts tell us that for some people, watching lots of porn it can affect their relationships. For e.g. they can become less affectionate in real-life sex, be less likely to try out real-life relationships, or even start to prefer porn over real life sex(19)(20). Some partners of people that watch lots of porn can feel betrayed or insecure about it.

Note: If you’re watching porn and in a relationship, this doesn’t mean you’ll experiences these things – but if you’re watching a lot of porn and/or using porn as a learning tool, over time there’s more risk it may impact your relationships.

“Sex education through porn is dangerous because it gives an unrealistic idea of sex and intimacy.”
Anon youth, TLP Survey 2020

Porn and Sex

There are also lots of studies on the impact of porn on sex, which suggest using porn (particularly a lot of it) doesn’t always positively affect our sex lives. Here are some of the ways it can affect someone’s sex life:

  • less sexual satisfaction (even just with monthly use)(21)
  • wanting riskier sex e.g. no condoms or experimenting with sex earlier(22)
  • struggling to get turned on or needing porn to masturbate (23)
  • pressure or pushing boundaries while hooking up(24)
  • preferring porn to real-life sex or needing porn to get aroused(25)(26)

Here’s some info on the possible effects of porn on sex: Porn and Young People or Can Porn Affect Us?

If you relate to any of these, don’t freak out – the great news is most of these impacts can be helped or reversed. Call the pros at Safe to Talk or head to your local sexual health clinic HERE.

What’s a healthy relationship —no regrets?

You might not know this but learning what makes a great relationship will probably help you more than algebra!

So, before you dive into a relationship, check out these signs of a healthy relationship, so you have NO REGRETS:

Nice: Sounds old fashioned, but it’s a no brainer … you’re nice to each other.

OG: you can be your OG self – and feel good about that when you’re together.

Real: The relationship is honest and real. You can be yourself just as you are.

Easy: It’s easy and un-complex. You enjoy hanging out and don’t fight heaps.

Good fit: Your friends and whānau give the thumbs up and there’s no red flags.

Respect: You respect each other’s sexual boundaries – like no pressure & 100% consent for everything.

Encouraging: You encourage each other to live your best lives.
Trust: You trust each other, and you’ve got each other’s backs.
Safe: It’s safe. You don’t try and control what each other can or can’t do or say.

“Positive – I now know more about how a woman enjoys herself. Negative – it made it look ok to do to anyone at any time.”
MALE, 15, OFLC research

“Many girls don’t want their partners to watch porn because it makes them feel insecure, while others put them down for being controlling. I think it’s important to be able to express their feelings about porn without being labelled as a prude.”
Anon youth, TLP Survey 2020
What’s the difference between porn sex and great sex?

Check out this great resource that compares the sex we see in porn to great real-life sex.

What’s a healthy sexual relationship?
Quick 5 checklist..

Consent – an enthusiastic “hell yeah” kinda yes to the type, place, person and timing of sex
Communication
– both partners say what they’re into/not into and agree on everything sexual that’s goa happen – and it’s respected
Contraception/Condoms
– it’s risk free of STIs and unplanned pregnancy
Comfort
– it’s pleasurable, you’re both into it, and there’s no pressure.

What do NZ young people think about porn and sex?

If you want to learn more about young people’s experiences with porn and how this might affect their relationships, checkout the Classification Office’s latest research with 50 young kiwis: Growing Up with Porn

What’s a healthy sexual relationship?
Quick 5 checklist..

Consent – an enthusiastic “hell yeah” kinda yes to the type, place, person and timing of sex
Communication
– both partners say what they’re into/not into and agree on everything sexual that’s goa happen – and it’s respected
Contraception/Condoms
– it’s risk free of STIs and unplanned pregnancy
Comfort
– it’s pleasurable, you’re both into it, and there’s no pressure.

“Many girls don’t want their partners to watch porn because it makes them feel insecure, while others put them down for being controlling. I think it’s important to be able to express their feelings about porn without being labelled as a prude.”
Anon youth, TLP Survey 2020

Tips & tools

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Partner using porn?

This can feel confusing - here’s some stuff to help…

Porn impacting your relationships or sex life?

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