The Easy Peasy Way To Quit 𝖯𝗈𝗋𝗇

Summarization 15:

Reading Time: 1 minute

Introduction

  • This chapter highlights the insidious effects of using platforms like YouTube, Twitch, and Instagram as a substitute for pornography.
  • It explores the psychological and behavioral patterns associated with this type of usage.

Case Study

  • An anecdote illustrates how a user rationalizes their behavior, starting with attempts to quit pornography and transitioning to using YouTube as a substitute.
  • The user’s deceptive behavior and loss of self-respect are described, highlighting the detrimental impact on relationships.

The Illusion of Safety

  • Users convince themselves that platforms like YouTube are safe alternatives to pornography, but they still experience the same addictive patterns.
  • Novelty-seeking dopamine urges drive users to seek relief from withdrawal pangs through various online feeds.

The Reality of Online Content

  • Users are drawn to attractive models and content creators, but the pleasure derived from these images and videos is fleeting and ultimately unsatisfying.
  • The brain becomes hooked on novelty, regardless of the source, perpetuating the cycle of addiction.

Parallels with Columbo

  • The chapter draws a parallel between the tension experienced by users and the interrogation scenes in the TV series Columbo.
  • Users feel the constant pressure of not crossing the “red line” and the eventual return to pornography consumption despite attempts to control it.

Conclusion

  • The chapter concludes with a sarcastic reflection on the “joys” of being a pornography user, highlighting the cycle of shame, humiliation, and addiction.
  • It serves as a warning about the dangers of substituting pornography with other online content and emphasizes the need for awareness and intervention.
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Chapter 16

A social habit?

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Health of the mind and body are the primary reasons for we should want to stop — but then, they always have been. We don’t actually need scientific research and knowledge in neuroscience to tell us 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 is addictive and can potentially shatter our lives. These bodies of ours are the most sophisticated objects on the planet, and any user knows from the first session that the stimulus can go to excess and turn poisonous.

The only reason why we ever get involved with 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 is the cycle’s overlap with our evolutionary programming. Internet 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 is highly available, free and streaming twenty-four hours a day. P𝗈𝗋𝗇 was once considered harmless, but that was when the images were static and the videos involved a trip to the local store for a VHS tape.

Today, it’s generally considered — even by users themselves — that 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 is a supernormal stimulus and addiction-forming. In the old days, the strong man didn’t admit that he masturbated, with jerk being a derogatory term. In every pub, club or bar, the majority of men would be proudly wanting to take a woman home and have real sex. Today, the position is completely reversed for the internet 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 addict. Today’s man realises that he’s beginning to feel he doesn’t need a woman. Banding together online, he discusses experiences, devises strategies and explores options. Today’s strong man doesn’t want to depend on drugs. Through social revolution, all users are giving serious thought to stopping internet 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 and masturbation. Today’s users consider 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 a useless and harmful activity.

The most significant trend noticed on forums is the increasing emphasis on the anti-social aspects of 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇, the days when a man boasted of having sex and orgasms every day is slowly being replaced with realisation of slavery to the 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 monster.

The only reason why people continue after being educated is because they’ve failed to stop or are too frightened to try. There’s a wide spectrum of interest in the subject, some abstaining from 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇, masturbation and orgasm — with or without partners. Practices that separate the tantric and propagative parts of sex such as semen retention and Karezza are discussed and adopted in droves. Many aforementioned failures are in reality fall-forwards, thus somewhat benefiting people practising them. Once you start the no-PMO route you’ll find the best fit that applies to your life; it’s encouraged to devise your own plan on orgasms after understanding and practising sexual separation. Whatever your route, you’ll see value in limiting the number of times you flush your brain with chemicals through orgasm, and never again seeing 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 , sex and orgasm as a pleasure or crutch for your emotional self.

Various popular online communities founded by non-users are dedicated to quitting not only 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 but also masturbation. These sites are ultimately beneficial to those escaping, but most notes point them to try willpower. The consequence of obsession with abstinence streaks and other measures is self-pity and lack of elation. Much of the brainwashing remains alive and well. Eventually, someone breaks down and a domino effect takes place, other users finding out they aren’t the only ones. However, their efforts aren’t in vain, they’re falling forward, albeit with lots of self-torturing as they shut down their browsers but not the desire and need. EasyPeasy works in the reverse, shutting down the need and desire first, before shutting down the browser. Every day more and more users leave the sinking ship and those left on it become terrified they’ll be the last.

DON’T LET IT BE YOU!

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Summarization 16:

Reading Time: 1.5 minutes

Introduction

  • This chapter explores the societal shift in attitudes towards pornography, highlighting the evolution from its perceived harmlessness to its recognition as a supernormal stimulus and addiction-forming behavior.
  • It emphasizes the role of social revolution in changing perceptions and behaviors related to pornography use.

Historical Context

  • The chapter reflects on historical attitudes towards masturbation and pornography, noting the societal stigma associated with these behaviors in the past.
  • It contrasts the past perception of masculinity with the modern reality of men discussing their struggles with pornography addiction online.

Social Revolution

  • The increasing emphasis on the anti-social aspects of pornography use is discussed, with forums becoming spaces for users to acknowledge their addiction and seek support.
  • Users are beginning to realize the harmful effects of pornography on their relationships and overall well-being, leading to a shift in attitudes and behaviors.

Exploring Alternatives

  • The chapter explores alternative practices such as semen retention and Karezza, which aim to separate orgasm from sexual gratification.
  • It encourages individuals to devise their own plans for sexual separation and find what works best for them on their journey to recovery.

Online Communities

  • Various online communities dedicated to quitting pornography and masturbation are highlighted, with a focus on the benefits and limitations of these platforms.
  • The chapter acknowledges the role of willpower in overcoming addiction but also warns against excessive focus on abstinence streaks and self-pity.

Conclusion

  • The chapter concludes with a call to action, urging individuals to break free from pornography addiction before it’s too late.
  • It emphasizes the importance of taking control of one’s own life and urges readers not to be the last ones left on the “sinking ship” of addiction.
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Chapter 17

Timing

Reading Time: 8 minutes

Apart from the obvious point that it’s doing you no good and that now is the right time to stop, timing is important. Society treats internet 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 flippantly as a slightly distasteful habit that doesn’t injure your health. This is untrue. It’s drug addiction, a disease and destroyer of relationships in society. The worst thing that happens in most users’ lives is getting hooked on this awful addiction. If they stay hooked, horrendous things happen. Timing is therefore important to give yourself the right to a proper cure.

Firstly, identify the times or occasions when 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 appears to be important to you. If you’re a businessperson who uses it for the illusion of stress relief — pick a relatively slack period or a holiday. If you use 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 mainly during boring or relaxing periods, the opposite applies. Regardless, take the attempt seriously and make it the most important thing in your life.

Look ahead for a period of three weeks and try to anticipate any event that might lead to failure. Occasions like conference trips, your partner being out of town, etc., need not deter you, provided you anticipate them in advance and don’t feel that you’ll be deprived. Don’t attempt to cut down in the meantime, as this will only create the illusion that being denied is enjoyable. In fact, it helps to force yourself to watch and have as many 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 sessions as possible. While you’re having the last session and your last time, be mindful of the disappointment due to satiation, unfulfilled expectations, any bodily pain, withdrawal effects, peevishness and melancholy. Think of how marvellous it’ll be when you allow yourself to stop doing it.

WHATEVER YOU DO, DON’T FALL INTO THE TRAP OF JUST SAYING, “NOT NOW, LATER” AND PUTTING IT OUT OF YOUR MIND. WORK OUT YOUR TIMETABLE NOW AND LOOK FORWARD TO IT.

Remember, you aren’t giving anything up. On the contrary, you’re about to receive marvellous positive gains.

For years, the medical profession has viewed 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 as harmless without knowing the difference between the tame static 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 of yesteryear and the latest virtual reality streaming experience. The problem is that although every user consumes internet 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 purely to relieve the dopamine craving caused by it, it’s not the addiction to the chemical that hooks the user, but self-brainwashing resulting from addiction. An intelligent person will fall for a confidence trick, but only a fool would continue falling for it upon realising the trick. Fortunately, most users aren’t fools, they only think they are. Each individual user has their own private brainwashing. That’s why there appears to be such a diverse range of types of addicts, only serving to further compound the mysteries.

While the benefit of the original book was to quit nicotine (one of the quickest and most addictive drugs known to man), it was agreeably surprising to realise that the philosophy propounded in the original book is still sound when adapted. The accumulated knowledge and challenge that Carr and myself undertake is how to communicate that knowledge to each individual user. The fact I know every user can not only find it easy to stop, but can actually enjoy the process, is not only pointless but exceedingly frustrating unless the user can be made to realise it. In his original book, Allen Carr explains his controversial advice:

“Many people have said to me: ‘You say, “Continue to smoke until you finish the book.” This tends to make the smoker take ages to read the book or just not finish it. Period. Therefore, you should change the instruction.’ This sounds logical, but I know if the instruction were: ‘Stop immediately’, some smokers wouldn’t even start reading the book. I had a smoker consult me in the early days. He said, ‘I really resent having to seek your help, I know I’m strong-willed. In every other area of my life I’m in control. Why is it that all these other smokers quit by using their own willpower, yet I have to come to you?’ He continued, ‘I think I could do it on my own, if I could smoke while I was doing it.’"

Societal belief dictates that stopping smoking is incredibly difficult, so what does a smoker need when something is difficult? Our little friend, our crutch. Escaping smoking appears to be a double-blow: not only is there a difficult task to perform — which is hard enough — but the crutch we normally rely on for such occasions isn’t available. Perhaps the real beauty of this method is that you don’t need to ‘give up’ while going through the process. Instead, we get rid of all fears and doubts initially, so upon finishing the final session you’re already enjoying freedom.

Therefore, this hackbook will keep the same advice intact. No matter how much it’s said that it’ll be easy and enjoyable, there’ll be a vast majority who won’t be able to accept it due to personal brainwashing on how difficult quitting is.

Timing is the only chapter that causes me to question Allen’s original advice seriously. Above all, if triggers include office stress, then picking a holiday to make an attempt, and vice versa. This isn’t the easiest way, instead picking what you consider to the most difficult time. Whether that’s stress, social obligations, concentration or boredom, once you’ve proven you cope with and enjoy life in the worst situations, every other one is enjoyable. But if that were the advice, would you even make the attempt?

Here’s an analogy. My sister and I intend to swim together. We arrive at the pool at the same time, but rarely end up swimming together. The reason being that she immerses one toe and half an hour later is actually swimming. That’s slow torture. I know in advance that at some stage, no matter how cold the water is, I’ll have to brave it at some point. So I’ve learned to do it the easy way: diving straight in. Now, imagine if I were in a position to insist that if she didn’t dive straight in, she couldn’t swim. If that were the case, she wouldn’t swim at all. Do you see the problem?

From feedback, many users have used the original timing advice to delay what they think will be the ‘evil day’. My next thoughts were using a similar technique to the ‘advantages of 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇’ chapter, something like — “Timing is very important and in the next chapter you’ll be advised on the best time to make the attempt.” and on the next page there’s just a massive “NOW!” That is in fact, the best advice, but would you take it? Perhaps the most subtle aspect of the trap is that when we have genuine stress in our lives, it’s not the right time to stop, but at times without stress, we have no desire to end the torture. Ask yourself the following questions:

  1. When you got onto 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 for the first time, did you really decide that you’d continue to depend on it for the rest of your life without ever being able to stop? Of course you didn’t!
  2. Are you going to continue the rest of your life without ever being able to stop? Of course you aren’t!

So when will you stop? Tomorrow? Next year? The year after? Isn’t that what you’ve been asking yourself since you first realised you were hooked? Are you hoping that one morning you’ll wake up and just not want to watch anymore? Stop kidding yourself, with any addiction you get progressively more hooked, not less. Are you going to wait until you’ve actually started to feel that getting out of bed is harder than just masturbating? That would be a bit pointless.

The real trap is the belief that now isn’t the right time — it’ll always be easier tomorrow. We believe that we live stressful lives, but in actuality we don’t. Most genuine stress has been removed from our lives. When leaving home you don’t live in fear of being attacked by wild animals, most don’t wonder where their next meal will come from, or if a roof will be over their heads tonight. Think of the life of a wild animal, every time a rabbit comes out of its burrow, it’s facing Vietnam for its entire life. But the rabbit handles it, it’s got adrenaline and other hormones, and so do we. The truth is, the most stressful periods for any creature’s life are early childhood and adolescence. But three billion years of natural selection has equipped us to cope with stress, and many who grow up with hard childhoods lead normal lives.

It’s cliché to say, “If you haven’t got your health, you’ve got nothing” but it’s absolutely true. When you feel physically and mentally strong you can enjoy the highs and handle the lows. Many confuse responsibility with stress; responsibility only becomes stressful when we don’t feel strong enough to handle it. What destroys most isn’t stress, jobs or old age, but the illusory, lying crutches they turn to.

Look at it this way — you’ve already decided you aren’t staying in the trap for the rest of your life. Therefore at some point — whether you find it easy or difficult — you’ll have to go through the process of getting free. P𝗈𝗋𝗇 isn’t a habit or pleasure, it’s drug addiction and a disease. We’ve established that far from being easier tomorrow, it’ll get progressively worse. The time to get rid of it is now — or as near to now as you can manage. Just think of how quickly each week of our lives passes. That’s all it takes. Think of how nice it’ll be to enjoy the rest of your life without ever-increasing shadows hanging over you. Provided you follow all the instructions, you won’t even have to wait five days or three weeks. You’ll not only find it easy to quit, You’ll enjoy it!

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Summarization 17:

Reading Time: 1.5 minutes

Understanding the Importance of Timing

  • This chapter underscores the significance of timing when it comes to quitting pornography addiction. It challenges the societal perception of pornography as a harmless habit and emphasizes the need for a proper cure.

Identifying Optimal Timing

  • The chapter advises individuals to identify the times or occasions when pornography seems most important to them. Whether it’s during stressful periods or moments of boredom, understanding these triggers is crucial for planning an effective quitting strategy.

Planning for Success

  • Planning for a period of three weeks without attempting to cut down on pornography consumption beforehand is recommended. This approach helps individuals avoid the illusion that being denied pornography is enjoyable and prepares them for the journey ahead.

Breaking Free from Addiction

  • The chapter encourages individuals not to fall into the trap of procrastination by saying, “Not now, later.” It urges readers to work out their timetable for quitting pornography addiction and look forward to it with determination.

Drawing Parallels with Smoking Cessation

  • Drawing from Allen Carr’s method for quitting smoking, the chapter highlights the similarity in the approach to overcoming addiction. It challenges the belief that quitting pornography addiction is difficult and suggests reframing one’s mindset to embrace the process.

The Trap of Procrastination

  • Procrastination is identified as a major obstacle to quitting pornography addiction. The chapter urges readers not to delay taking action and emphasizes the need to confront the addiction head-on.

The Time is Now

  • The chapter concludes with a powerful message: the time to quit pornography addiction is now. It dispels the notion that quitting will be easier tomorrow and stresses the importance of seizing the opportunity to live a life free from the shadows of addiction.

Final Thoughts

  • By addressing the psychological barriers to quitting pornography addiction and providing practical advice on timing, this chapter empowers individuals to take control of their lives and embark on the journey to recovery with confidence and determination.
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This has been one of the best anti-■■■■ materials for me

Quitting ■■■■ is easy once you remember the cold hard fact: it doesnt do anything for you, no matter how much you’ve been brainwashed to think so.

There literally is 0% benefit and 100% risk of losing. Everything else is secondary.

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Chapter 18

Will I miss the fun?

Reading Time: 3 minutes

No! Once the little 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 monster is dead, after your body stops craving dopamine, and the 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 water slides in your brain rapidly begin to fade due to lack of ‘greasing’, any remaining brainwashing will vanish. Not only will you find yourself both physically and mentally better equipped to handle the stresses and strains of life, but you’ll enjoy the good times to the fullest.

There’s only one danger, that being the influence of those who still use sex as their crutch and pleasure. ‘The other man’s grass is always greener’ is commonplace in many aspects of our lives and easily understandable. Why in the case of 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 — with disadvantages so enormous when compared to the illusionary ‘advantages’ — does the ex-user tend to envy those demanding sex and pornography as a crutch?

With all of the brainwashing from childhood, it’s quite understandable that we’ve fallen into the trap. Why is it then — after realising what a mug’s game 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 is, and managing to kick the habit — that we walk straight back into the same trap? It’s the influence of the societal brainwashing conflating 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 with sex, presented as normal. The ex-user has a pang! The insecure void feelings of them being single (which isn’t a crime anyway) causes feelings of anxiety, and drives them to ride the water slide. This is indeed a curious anomaly, particularly if this observation is considered: not only is every non-user in the world happy to be so, but every user in the world even with their warped, addicted, brainwashed mind suffering the delusion of enjoyment or relaxation, wishes they’d never become hooked in the first place. So, why do some ex-users envy?

  1. ‘Just one peek.’ Remember, it doesn’t exist. Stop seeing the isolated occasion and start looking at it from the point of view of the 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 user. You might be envying them, but they don’t approve of themselves, and they envy you. If only you could somehow clinically watch another user, as they can be the most powerful boost of all to help you out of it. Notice how quickly they open many tabs and browser windows? Fast forwarding to the important sections, quickly getting bored of clips and running through the gamut of genres producing novelty, shock, anxiety, etc. Notice particularly that the act appears to be automatic. Remember — they aren’t enjoying it, it’s that they can’t enjoy themselves without it. The next morning, waking up with a weakened will, lost energy and bleary eyes, they’ll have to continue choking themselves at the first appearance of stress and strain. They’re facing a lifetime of filth, poor mental health and stained confidence — a lifetime of destroying themselves with black shadows at the back of their mind. To achieve what purpose? The illusion you’re getting what you ‘deserve’ and damned pleasure?
  2. The second reason some ex-users have pangs is because the 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 user is doing something - such as self-pleasuring - and the non-user isn’t, so they tend to feel deprived. Get it clear in your mind, it’s not the non-user who is being deprived, but the poor addict who is being deprived of:
  • Health
  • Energy
  • Confidence
  • Peace of mind
  • Courage
  • Tranquillity
  • Freedom
  • Self-respect

Get out of the habit of envying 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 users and start seeing them as the miserable, pathetic creatures they really are. I know, I was once one of the worst. That’s why you’re reading this book and not the ones who can’t face up to it and continue to kid themselves.

You wouldn’t envy a heroin addict, and like all drug addiction, yours won’t get any better. Each year it’ll get exponentially worse — if you don’t enjoy being a user today, you’ll enjoy it even less tomorrow. Don’t envy other users, pity them. Believe me: They need your pity!

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Summarization 18:

Reading Time: 1 minute

Overcoming the Illusion of Missing Out

  • This chapter reassures readers that they will not miss out on anything enjoyable once they quit pornography addiction. It highlights the benefits of breaking free from the addiction, both physically and mentally, and emphasizes the enjoyment of life without the burdens of addiction.

Understanding the Temptation to Return

  • The chapter acknowledges the temptation to return to pornography addiction, especially when faced with societal pressures and insecurities. It explains how societal brainwashing contributes to feelings of envy towards those still using pornography as a crutch.

Debunking the Illusion

  • By examining the reality of pornography use, the chapter dispels the illusion of enjoyment associated with it. It urges readers to see pornography users for what they truly are: miserable and trapped in a cycle of addiction.

Pity, Not Envy

  • Rather than envying pornography users, the chapter encourages readers to pity them for their lack of freedom, self-respect, and mental well-being. It compares pornography addiction to other forms of drug addiction, emphasizing the downward spiral it leads to over time.

Final Thoughts

  • Through a candid exploration of the reasons behind feelings of envy and the reality of pornography addiction, this chapter empowers readers to break free from the cycle of addiction and embrace a life of health, confidence, and freedom.
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Chapter 19

Can I Compartmentalise?

Reading Time: 3 minutes

This myth is primarily spread by users attempting to stop on the willpower method, who perform mental gymnastics and begin a Jekyll-and-Hyde routine: “Po𝗋𝗇 is for my alter ego and real-life romance is for my relationship side.” Nothing is further from the truth — the 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 water slides, DeltaFosB and neurological changes are going to overrun the real-life romance, making it less desirable. Mr Hyde is definitely going to overrule Dr Jekyll’s instructions.

If you use internet 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇, you’re training yourself for the role of voyeur, or requiring the option of clicking to something more arousing at the slightest drop in dopamine levels. Or, the continual search for just the right scene for maximum effect. Additionally, you might be masturbating in a hunched-over position or watching your smartphone in bed on the nightly, eventually desiring those cues more than real-life stimuli. Sex goes against nearly every aspect of the online harem, so it stands no chance when compared. The memories created when you’re young are powerful and long-lasting, so breaking down those pornographic water slides and rewiring or creating new ones takes longer. However, that’s not to say it’s any more difficult.

Every time you ride on the ‘𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 water slide’ you’re greasing it, keeping the nerves fresh and ready to fire. When parking next to a fast-food restaurant, the smell of the fryer floats into your nostrils and the sale is already made. Likewise, the 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 water slides in your brain are ready for you to get sucked in and are open twenty-four hours a day. Each cue or trigger lights up your reward circuit with the promise of sex — only it isn’t sex. Nevertheless, nerve cells solidify these associations with sexual arousal by sprouting new branches to strengthen the connections. The more you use 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇, the stronger the nerve connections become. The end result is that you might ultimately need to be a voyeur, needing to click to ever-escalating and novel material, needing 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 to get to sleep, or needing to search for the perfect ending to get the job done.

As with any substance or behavioral drug, the body builds tolerance and the drug ceases to relieve the withdrawal pangs completely. As soon as the 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 user closes a session, they want another one, and quickly, the permanent hunger remaining unsatisfied. The natural inclination is escalation, to get the dopamine rush. However, most users are prevented from doing this for either or both of the following reasons.

Money: They can’t afford to subscribe to paid 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 sites.

Health: There’s only so much the body can take, either the dopamine surges or orgasms. Plus, orgasms actually trigger chemicals in order to cut down the dopamine flush. It has to, that’s just the way the body works.

Once the little monster leaves your body, the awful feeling of insecurity ends. Your confidence returns, along with a marvellous feeling of self-respect, obtaining the assurance to take control of your life and using it as a springboard to tackle other problems. This is one of the many great advantages of breaking free from any addiction.

The compartmentalisation myth is one of many tricks that the little monster plays with your mind. These tricks make it harder to stop — due to the impossible satisfaction of the permanent hunger — causing many users to turn to cigarettes, heavy drinking, or even harder drugs to satisfy the void.

Humans are rating animals, both to ourselves and others. Watching 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 with your partner is unsatisfying, as you both rate each other’s performance against the narrative. Do you want Brad Pitt in your bedroom, even if he’s on a poster? No one person can match a harem where each ‘experience’ is acted, scripted, directed by professionals and immediately available twenty-four hours a day.

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Summarization 19:

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Exposing the Compartmentalisation Myth

  • This chapter dismantles the myth that users can compartmentalise their use of pornography, separating it from real-life romance. It addresses the misconception that one can maintain a dual identity—one for 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 consumption and one for real-life relationships.

Jekyll-and-Hyde Routine

  • The chapter criticizes the Jekyll-and-Hyde routine adopted by users who believe they can separate 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 use from their romantic relationships. It argues that the neurological changes caused by pornography consumption will inevitably affect real-life romance, making it less desirable over time.

Training for Voyeurism

  • The chapter highlights how internet pornography trains users for voyeurism, conditioning them to seek arousal through clicking to more arousing content at the slightest drop in dopamine levels. It emphasizes the detrimental impact on real-life stimuli and sexual experiences, making them less appealing in comparison.

Building Tolerance and Escalation

  • It discusses the concept of tolerance, explaining that the body builds tolerance to pornography, and users may seek escalation to achieve the same dopamine rush. The chapter outlines the limitations imposed by financial constraints and health concerns, preventing users from endless escalation.

Breaking Free and Regaining Confidence

  • The chapter stresses the positive outcomes of breaking free from pornography addiction, including the restoration of confidence, self-respect, and the ability to take control of one’s life. It emphasizes that leaving the addiction behind allows individuals to tackle other problems and challenges.

The Deceptive Compartmentalisation Myth

  • By exposing the compartmentalisation myth, the chapter aims to counteract the tricks played by the addiction on the user’s mind. It asserts that overcoming this myth is crucial for breaking free from the cycle of addiction and embracing a healthier, more fulfilling life.

Final Thoughts

  • Through a critical examination of the compartmentalisation myth, this chapter empowers readers to recognize the interconnectedness of their actions and the impact of pornography on real-life experiences. It encourages a holistic approach to breaking free from addiction and regaining control over one’s life.
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Chapter 20

Avoid False Incentives

Reading Time: 5 minutes

Many users on the willpower method attempt to increase their motivation through construction of false incentives. There are many examples of this, a typical one being to reward themselves with gifts after not watching 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 for a month. This appears to be a logical and sensible approach but is in fact false, because any self-respecting user would rather continue watching 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 every day than reward themselves with a self-given gift. This generates doubt in the user’s mind, because not only will they have to abstain for thirty days, they’re not sure they’ll even enjoy the days without 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇. Their only pleasure or crutch has been taken away! All this does is increase the size of the sacrifice the user feels they’re making, now ever more precious in their mind.

Other examples include:

  • I’ll stop so that it’ll force me to get a social life and more real sex.
  • I’ll stop so that some magical energy will help me to leap above the competitors and get the partner I pursue.
  • I’ll stop so that I can commit myself to not wasting my energy and enthusiasm with 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 in order to grow hunger in myself.

These are true, can be effective, and you might end up getting what you want — but think on it for a second. If you do get what you wanted, once the novelty has gone you’ll feel deprived; if you didn’t, you’ll feel miserable. Either way, sooner or later you will fall for the same trap again.

Linking quitting to a false incentive only increases doubt, because if you don’t get your incentive (and even if you do) you’ll begin thinking doubtful thoughts like “Will quitting actually make my life better? If I quit and don’t get what I want, did I use the method correctly?” Thoughts like these increase feelings of sacrifice and therefore create pangs.

Another typical example is online or forum pacts. These have the advantage of eliminating temptation for certain periods. However, they generally fail for the following reasons:

  1. The incentive is false. Why would you want to stop just because other people are doing so? All this achieves is generating additional pressure and increases the feeling of sacrifice. It’s fine if all users genuinely want to stop at one particular time — but you can’t force them to stop, although all secretly want to. Until they’re ready to do so, a pact creates additional pressure, which only increases their desire to watch. This turns them into secret viewers, further increasing the feeling of dependency.
  2. Dependency on each other using the willpower method breeds feelings of undergoing a period of penance, during which they wait for the urge to disappear. If they give in, there’s a sense of failure. When using the willpower method at least one of the participants is bound to give up, providing the other participants with the excuse they’ve been waiting for. It’s not their fault, they would have held out but ‘Fred’ let them down. The truth is that most of them have already been cheating.
  3. Sharing the credit is the reverse of dependency. There’s a marvellous sense of achievement in stopping 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 and when doing it alone, the acclaim you receive from your friends and online buddies can be a tremendous boost over the first few days. However, when everybody is doing it at the same time, the credit has to be shared and the boost is consequently reduced.
  4. Another classic example is the guru promise. Stopping will give you happiness because you’re no longer engaged in the tug-of-war, your brain beginning rewiring and regaining impulse control. However, you must keep in mind this will neither make you a sex god nor win you the lottery. Nobody except you cares in the slightest if you stop 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇. You aren’t a weak person if you’re using 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 three times a day and have PIED, or a strong person if you’re an addict and don’t.

Stop kidding yourself. If the job offer of ten months’ work for twelve months’ salary a year, or the risks of cutting down your brain’s ability to cope with day-to-day stress and strains, or putting yourself at odds with having a reliable erection, or the lifetime of mental and physical torture and slavery didn’t stop them, the above few phoney incentives won’t make the slightest bit of difference, and will only succeed in making the sacrifice appear worse. Instead, concentrate on the other side:

“What am I getting out of it? Why do I need to watch 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇?”

Keep looking at the other side of the tug of war and ask yourself what 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 is doing for you. ABSOLUTELY NOTHING. Why do I need to do it? YOU DON’T! YOU’RE ONLY PUNISHING YOURSELF. It’s Pascal’s Wager: you have almost nothing to lose (fading arousal), chances of big profits (full and reliable arousal, mental well being and happiness) and no chance of losing big.

Why not then declare your quitting to friends and family? Well, it’ll make you a proud ex-addict or ex-user, not an elated and happy non-user. It might scare your partner a bit since they may see this as an scheme to have more sex, in a sort of New Age way. They may also fear you turning into a sex machine. It’s hard to explain unless they’re open-minded.

Any attempt to get others to help you in quitting gives more power to the little monster. Pushing it from your mind and totally ignoring it has the effect of trying not to think of it. Be mindful instead, as soon as you spot the thoughts, cues (home alone) or absent-minded thoughts, just say to yourself “Great, I’m no longer a slave to 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇. I’m free and happy to know differences in sex!” This will cut the oxygen to the thought and stop it from burning towards urges and cravings. In this aspect, practising mindfulness meditation can be helpful to assist in the depersonalisation of thoughts.

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Summarization 20:

Reading Time: 1.5 minutes

Dispelling Illusions of False Incentives

This chapter delves into the fallacy of relying on false incentives as a means to quit pornography addiction. It scrutinizes common strategies such as rewarding oneself with gifts after abstaining for a certain period, linking quitting to unrealistic aspirations, or making pacts with others to stop simultaneously.

The Pitfalls of False Incentives:

  1. Increased Doubt and Sacrifice: False incentives exacerbate doubt by magnifying the sacrifice users perceive they are making. They raise questions about whether quitting will genuinely improve their lives, especially if the promised rewards fail to materialize.

  2. Online Pact Failures: Collaborative efforts to quit through online pacts often falter due to inherent flaws. These pacts generate pressure, foster feelings of dependency, dilute individual achievements, and provide excuses for relapse when one participant falters.

  3. Illusions of Guru Promises: Users may fall for the illusion that quitting will lead to extraordinary outcomes, such as becoming a “sex god” or achieving unparalleled happiness. However, such promises are unfounded and fail to acknowledge the true nature of addiction.

Emphasizing Personal Motivation:

Rather than relying on external incentives, the chapter advocates for introspection and focusing on the negative consequences of pornography addiction. It encourages users to question what pornography truly offers them and emphasizes the benefits of breaking free from addiction, such as mental well-being and genuine happiness.

Rejecting Phoney Incentives:

Users are urged to reject false incentives and instead concentrate on the tangible benefits of quitting pornography. Pascal’s Wager is invoked to illustrate that the potential gains from quitting far outweigh the fading arousal associated with continued addiction.

Mindful Awareness and Depersonalisation:

The chapter concludes by advocating for mindful awareness and depersonalisation techniques to combat urges and cravings. By acknowledging intrusive thoughts without giving them power, individuals can undermine the grip of addiction and reaffirm their commitment to a 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇-free life.

Final Reflections:

By debunking the allure of false incentives, this chapter empowers individuals to confront their addiction with clarity and determination. It underscores the importance of personal motivation and mindfulness in the journey toward recovery, paving the way for lasting transformation and freedom from pornography addiction.

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Chapter 21

The Easy Way To Stop

Reading Time: 10 minutes

This chapter contains instructions regarding the easy way to stop 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇. Providing you follow the instructions, you’ll find that stopping ranges from relatively easy to enjoyable! Provided you follow the instructions below it’s ridiculously easy to stop 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇. All you have to do is two things:

  1. Make the decision that you are never going to watch 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 again.
  2. Don’t mope about it. Rejoice.

You’re probably asking, “Why the need for the rest of the book? Why couldn’t you have said that in the first place?” Well, the answer is that you’d have eventually moped about it and consequently eventually changed your decision. You’ve probably already done that many times before.

As already said, 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 is a subtle, sinister trap. The main problem of stopping isn’t the dopamine addiction — which is certainly a problem, but not the primary one — it’s the brainwashing. Therefore, it’s necessary to destroy all of the myths and delusions first. Understand your enemy, know their tactics, and you’ll easily defeat them. Having spent large chunks of my life suffering black depression while attempting to quit, upon finally escaping, I went straight to zero without a bad moment. It was enjoyable even through the withdrawal period and I’ve never had the slightest pang since. On the contrary, it was one of the most wonderful things that’s happened in my life.

My final attempt was different. Like all users nowadays, the problem had been given serious thought in my mind. Up to then, after failing, it was routine to console myself with the thought that it would be easier next time. It had never occurred to me that I’d have to go on this way for the rest of my life. That thought filled me with horror and I began thinking very deeply about the subject.

Rather than firing up the browser subconsciously, I instead analysed my feelings and confirmed what I already knew. I wasn’t enjoying 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 and found it filthy and disgusting. I started looking at non-users living in other parts of the world, or older people who never got to know the tube sites. Up until then, I’d always regarded non-users as wishy-washy, unsociable, finicky people. However, examining them when they appeared, they appeared to be — if anything — stronger and more relaxed. They appeared to be able to cope with the stresses and strains of life and seemed to enjoy social functions more than 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 users. They certainly had more sparkle and zest than them.

I started talking to ex-users. Up to that point, I’d always regarded them as being forced to give up for health or religious reasons and were always secretly longing for a harem visit. A few did say, “You get the odd pangs, but they’re so few and far between they aren’t worth bothering about.” Most instead said, “Miss it? You must be joking! Life’s never felt better!” Even failures were fall-forwards for them — they didn’t condemn themselves and unconditionally accepted instead. Like a coach who’ll accept a mistake by a genuinely golden player. Talking to ex-users destroyed another myth I’d always had in my mind, that there was an inherent weakness within me, until it dawned on me that all go through this private nightmare.

Basically, I said to myself, “Scores of people are stopping now and leading perfectly happy lives, I didn’t need to do it before I started and I can remember having to work hard to get used to this filth. So why do I need to do it now?” In any event, I didn’t enjoy 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇, hating the entire filthy ritual and didn’t want to spend the rest of my life in slavery to this disgusting addiction. I then said this to myself:

“Whether you like it or not, you’ve completed your last session.”

I knew, right from that point that I’d never have another session again. I wasn’t expecting it to be easy, just the reverse. I fully believed that I’d signed up for months of black depression and spending the rest of my life having the occasional pang. Instead, it has been absolute bliss right from the start.

It took me a long time to work out why it had been so easy and why I hadn’t suffered those terrifying withdrawal pangs. The reason is that they don’t exist, it’s the doubt and uncertainty that creates pangs. The beautiful truth is that it’s easy to stop 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇. It’s only indecision and moping that makes it difficult. Even while addicted, users can go for relatively long periods at certain times without it. It’s only when you want it, but can’t have it, that you suffer.

Therefore, the key to making it easy is to make stopping certain and final. Not hoping, but knowing you’ve kicked it, having made the decision. Never doubt or question it, in fact, just the reverse — always rejoicing! If you can be certain from the start, it’ll be easy. But how can you be certain from the start? That’s why the rest of the book is necessary. There are certain essential points necessary to get clear in your mind before you start:

  1. Realise you can achieve it. There’s nothing different about you and the only person who can make you watch is yourself. Not that star, never in their wildest dreams having thought about themselves being used for reducing virility.
  2. There’s absolutely nothing to give up. On the contrary, there’s enormous positive gains to be made. Not only that you’ll be healthier and richer, but you’ll enjoy the good times more and be less miserable during the bad.
  3. There’s no such thing as a peek or a single visit. Pornography is drug addiction and a chain reaction, by moaning about the odd visit you’ll only be needlessly punishing yourself.
  4. See 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 not as a ‘boys-will-be-boys’ habit that might injure you, but as drug addiction. Face up to the fact that whether you like it or not, you’ve got the disease. It won’t go away because you bury your head in the sand. Remember that like all crippling diseases, it not only lasts for life but gets exponentially worse. The easiest time to cure it is now.
  5. Separate the disease — the neurological addiction — from the mindset of being a user or not. All users, if given the opportunity to go back to the time before they became hooked, would jump at the opportunity. You have that opportunity today! Don’t even think about it as ‘giving up’.

Upon making the final decision that you’ve had your last visit, you’ll already be a non-user. A user is one of those poor wretches going through life destroying themselves with 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇. A non-user is someone who doesn’t. Once you’ve made that final decision, you’ve already achieved your objective. Rejoice in the fact, don’t sit around moping and waiting for the chemical addiction to go. Get out and enjoy life immediately. Life is marvellous even when you’re addicted and each day will get so much better when you aren’t.

The key to making it easy to quit is to be certain that you’ll succeed in abstaining completely during the withdrawal period, a maximum of three weeks. If you’re in the correct frame of mind, you’ll find this ridiculously easy.

By this stage, if you’ve opened your mind as requested at the beginning, you’ll have already decided you’re going to escape. You should now have feelings of excitement, like a dog straining at the leash, unable to wait to break down the DeltaFosB 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 water slides. If you have a feeling of doom and gloom, it’ll be for one of the following reasons:

  1. Something hasn’t gelled in your mind. Re-read the above five points and ask yourself if you believe them to be true. If you doubt any point, re-read the appropriate sections of the book.
  2. You fear failure itself. Don’t worry, just read on and you’ll succeed. The whole business of internet 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 is a confidence trick of a gigantic scale. Intelligent people fall for confidence tricks, but only a fool, once having found out about the trick, goes on kidding themselves.
  3. You agree with everything but are still miserable. Don’t be! Open your eyes, something marvellous is happening. You’re about to escape from the prison, it’s essential to start with the correct frame of mind: “It’s marvellous that I’m a non-user!”

All that needs to be done now is keeping you in that frame of mind during the withdrawal period, and the next few chapters deal with specific points to enable you to do so. After the withdrawal period you won’t have to think that way, you’ll think it automatically. The only mystery in your life will be why you didn’t see it before. However, two important warnings.

  • Delay your plan to make your last visit until you’ve finished the book.
  • A withdrawal period of up to three weeks has been mentioned many times, which can cause misunderstanding. First, you may subconsciously feel you have to suffer for three weeks. You don’t. Secondly, avoid the trap of thinking “Somehow I’ve got to abstain for three weeks and then I’ll be fine.” Nothing magical will actually happen after three weeks, you won’t suddenly feel like a non-user, as they don’t actually feel any different from users. If you’re moping about stopping during the three weeks, in all probability you’ll still be moping about it after the three weeks. Summarised, if you can start right now by saying “I’m never going to use again, isn’t it marvellous?”, after three weeks all temptation will go. Whereas if you say, “If only I can survive these three weeks without 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 …”, you’ll be dying for a harem visit after the three weeks are up.

Think of it this way — your brain wants to maintain the status quo, so if you’re under the belief that you’re losing something good when quitting, you’ll obviously feel horrible. It’s impossible to force yourself to feel a certain way if your brain doesn’t believe it. This is why it’s important to go through the trouble of removing the illusion that pornography gives you anything at all. That’s how you know you’re sacrificing nothing.

Sexual dysfunction has a lot to do with your brain and mind frame. Internet 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 rewires your brain’s reward circuit and gives your mind a ‘doubting’ mindset. This self-doubt will undoubtedly cause sexual dysfunction. Having all the desire in your upper part, but putting up with no arousal in your lower is the worst thing to happen to your mindset. Libido going hand in hand with romance is the elixir of youth that you can have until you die. You’ll keep the probabilities high by quitting, but that isn’t the only or major gain. It’s your freedom from slavery!

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Summarization 21:

Reading Time: 2 minutes

A Paradigm Shift in Quitting Pornography

In this chapter, the author presents a refreshingly straightforward approach to quitting pornography addiction. By following two simple steps—making the decision to quit and rejoicing in that decision—stopping 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 is portrayed as not only feasible but potentially enjoyable.

The Power of Certainty:

The crux of the method lies in unwavering certainty. The author asserts that by firmly deciding to quit pornography for good, individuals can bypass the anticipated difficulties of withdrawal. This certainty stems from a clear understanding of the detrimental effects of pornography and the recognition that life without it holds infinitely more value.

Dispelling Myths and Delusions:

To bolster this certainty, the chapter dispels common myths and delusions surrounding pornography addiction. By challenging ingrained beliefs and misconceptions, individuals can liberate themselves from the mental traps that perpetuate addiction.

Embracing a New Perspective:

The author encourages readers to shift their perspective on pornography, viewing it not as a harmless habit but as a debilitating addiction. By recognizing pornography for what it truly is—an enslaving force that erodes mental well-being and distorts perceptions of sex—individuals can approach quitting with renewed resolve.

The Role of Mindset:

Central to the method is the cultivation of a positive mindset. Rather than dwelling on feelings of sacrifice or deprivation, individuals are urged to celebrate their decision to quit and embrace the freedom it brings. This shift in mindset, from viewing quitting as a loss to seeing it as a gain, is pivotal in overcoming addiction.

Facing Withdrawal with Confidence:

While acknowledging the withdrawal period, the chapter emphasizes that it need not be a grueling ordeal. By maintaining a steadfast commitment to quitting and focusing on the benefits of a 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇-free life, individuals can navigate the withdrawal process with confidence and resilience.

Looking Ahead:

The chapter concludes with practical advice for sustaining a positive mindset throughout the quitting process. It emphasizes the importance of ongoing reinforcement and highlights the transformative power of self-affirmation and mindfulness.

Final Thoughts:

By presenting quitting pornography as a straightforward and empowering choice, this chapter offers hope and inspiration to those struggling with addiction. It underscores the importance of decisive action and a positive mindset in breaking free from the grip of pornography and reclaiming control over one’s life and well-being.

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Once again, something just clicks inside me when I read this.
No moping around, the time to decide to make your life better is TODAY.
Remember that you’re not even giving anything up, because there is NOTHING to gain by continuing PMO. If you’re not losing anything, why even would you feel like you want to try it again?

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Chapter 22

The Withdrawal Period

Reading Time: 8 minutes

For up to three weeks after your last session you may be subjected to withdrawal pangs. These consist of two quite separate but distinct factors:

  1. Dopamine withdrawal pangs. An empty, insecure feeling similar to hunger, identified as cravings or a ‘something-I-must-do’ feeling.
  2. Psychological triggers of certain external stimuli such as commercials, online browsing, telephone conversations, etc.

Failure to understand and differentiate between these two distinct factors makes it difficult to achieve success using the willpower method, and is the reason why many who do end up falling into the trap again. Although the withdrawal pangs of dopamine don’t cause physical pain, don’t underestimate their power. We talk of ‘hunger pains’ if going without food for a day; there might be stomach rumbles, but there isn’t any physical pain. Even so, hunger is a powerful force and we’re likely to become very irritable when deprived of food. It’s similar to when our body is craving a dopamine rush, the difference being that our body needs food, not poison. With the right frame of mind, withdrawal pangs are easily overcome and disappear very quickly.

After abstaining for a few days on the willpower method, the craving for dopamine flushes soon disappears. It’s the second factor — brainwashing — that causes difficulty. The user has gotten into the habit of relieving their withdrawal pangs at certain times and certain occasions, which causes an association of ideas (“I’ve got a hard on, so I must watch 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇.” or “I’m in bed with my laptop and I must have a session to feel happy”). The effect is best illustrated with an example: you have a car and the indicator is on the left, but on your next, it’s on the right. You know it’s on the left, but for a couple of weeks you turn the windscreen wipers on when you want to indicate.

Stopping is similar: during the early days the trigger mechanism will operate at certain times. You’ll think about wanting a session, so therefore countering the brainwashing is essential right from square one and will cause these cues and triggers to quickly disappear. Under the willpower method, because the user believes they’re making a sacrifice, they’re moping about it and waiting for urges to leave, the opposite of removing these trigger mechanisms, and actually ends up increasing them. Similarly, under guru thinking, the user starts to wonder when they’re going to become a god and even demands that they shouldn’t have those thoughts, paving the way for self-loathing and failure.

A common trigger is alone time, particularly at social events with friends. The ex-user using other methods to quit is already miserable due to feeling deprived of their usual crutch or pleasure. Their friends are with their partners and acting intimate. The user is either single or not ‘getting any’ from their partner, and now no longer enjoys what should be a pleasant social occasion. Their existing brain water slides lead them to 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇, which is easier than trying to woo their partner.

Because of the association of entitlement to sex with their well-being, they’re now suffering a triple blow and the brainwashing is actually increased. If they’re resolute and can hold out long enough, they eventually accept their lot and get on with their life. However, part of the brainwashing still remains, the second most pathetic aspect being the user having quit but even after several years still craves ‘just one last visit to the harem’ on certain occasions. They’re pining for an illusion that exists only in their mind, and they needlessly torture themselves.

Even under EasyPeasy, responding to triggers is the most common failing. The ex-user tends to regard internet 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 as a sort of placebo or sugar pill, thinking, “I know 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 does nothing for me, but if I think it does then on certain occasions it will be helpful.” A sugar pill, although giving no actual physical help, can be a powerful psychological aid to relieve genuine symptoms and is therefore beneficial. Internet 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 and habitual masturbation, however, aren’t sugar pills. Why? 𝖯𝗈𝗋𝗇 creates the symptoms it relieves and ceases to relieve them completely.

You may find it easier to understand the effect when related to a non-user or a successful user who has quit for several years. Take the case of a user who loses their partner. It’s quite common at such times, with the best of intentions, to say, “Have one harem visit, it’ll help calm you down.” If the offer is accepted, it won’t have a calming effect as there’s no dopamine addiction and therefore no withdrawal pangs. At best, all it’ll do is give them a momentary psychological boost.

Even after the session is over, the original tragedy is there. In fact, it’ll be increased because the person now suffers withdrawal pangs and thus has to make a choice: endure them, or seek relief by repeating the water slide ride to start the chain of misery all over again. All the 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 provided was a fleeting psychological boost, the same that could’ve been achieved by a book or feel-good movie, even a bad one. Many non-users and ex-users have become re-addicted as a result of such occasions. Get it quite clear in your mind: you don’t need the dopamine rush and are only torturing yourself further by continuing to regard it as some sort of prop or boost. There’s no need to be miserable.

Orgasms don’t make good relations, most times they ruin them. Remember too that it’s not entirely true that those who show public displays of affection enjoy every occasion; intimacy is best enjoyed in private where partners can respond without embarrassment. You don’t have to be an orgasm-induced dopamine addict. If it happens as a natural result of a series of life events, that’s fine, but enjoy the occasion and life without it.

After abandoning the concept of 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 as pleasurable in itself, many users think “If only there were clean internet 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇.” There is clean soft 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇, and any who try it soon find out that it’s a waste of time. Get it clear in your mind that the only reason you’ve been using 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 is getting the dopamine flush. Once rid of the dopamine craving for 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 you’ll have no need to visit your online harem.

Whether the pangs are due to actual dopamine-withdrawal symptoms or trigger/cue mechanisms, accept it. The physical pain is non-existent and with the right frame of mind it won’t be a problem. Don’t worry about withdrawal — the feeling itself isn’t bad. It’s the association with wanting and then feeling denied that’s the problem. Instead of moping about it, acknowledge it: “I know what this is, it’s the withdrawal pang from 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇. That’s what users suffer their entire lives and keeps them addicts. Non-users don’t suffer these pangs, it’s another of the many evils of this lying addiction. Isn’t it marvellous that I’m purging this evil from my brain!“

In other words, for the next three weeks you’ll have a slight trauma inside your body, but during those weeks and for the rest of your life something marvellous will be happening. You’ll be ridding yourself of an awful disease, with the bonuses far outweighing the slight, temporary trauma, and actually enjoying withdrawal pangs. They’ll become moments of pleasure, like an exciting game to starve the pornographic tapeworm living inside your stomach. You’ve got to starve it for three weeks while it’s trying to trick you into getting into bed to keep it alive.

At times, it’ll try to make you miserable. At times, you’ll be caught off-guard. You’ll receive a 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 URL or stumble upon something online and forget that you’ve stopped, giving a slight feeling of deprivation when remembered. Be prepared for these tricks in advance, and whatever the temptation, get it into your mind that it’s only there because of the monster inside your body and every time you resist the temptation you’ve dealt another mortal blow in the battle.

Whatever you do, don’t try to forget about 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇. This is one of the things that causes PMOers using the willpower method hours of depression. They try and get through each day hoping that eventually they’ll just forget about it. It’s like not being able to sleep — the more you worry about it, the harder it becomes. In any event, you won’t be able to forget about it, for the first few days the ‘little monster’ will keep reminding you and you won’t be able to avoid it. While there are still laptops, smartphones, and magazines around you’ll have constant reminders.

The point being that you have no need to forget, since nothing bad is happening. In fact, something marvellous and wonderful is happening and even if you’re thinking about it a thousand times a day, savor each moment, remind yourself of how marvellous it is to be free again. Remind yourself of the sheer joy of not having to torture yourself anymore. As said previously, you’ll find that pangs become moments of pleasure, being surprised how quickly you’ll then forget about 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇.

Whatever you do, don’t doubt your decision. Once you start to doubt, you’ll start to mope, and it’ll get worse. Instead, use that moment of moping and convert it into a boost. If the cause is depression, then remind yourself that the 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 was causing it. If you’re forwarded a URL by a friend, take pride in saying, “I’m happy to say I don’t need that anymore.” This will hurt them, but when they see it isn’t bothering you they’ll be halfway to joining you.

Remember: you have incredibly powerful reasons for stopping in the first place. Remind yourself of the costs and ask yourself if you really want to risk the malfunction of your body, mind, and the simple fact you’ll be living under a spell for the rest of your life. Be mindful of the little monster’s efforts to minimise the hazards and above all, remember the feeling is only temporary, and every moment is a moment closer to your goal.

Some users fear they’ll have to spend the rest of their lives reversing ‘automatic triggers’. In other words, they believe they’ll have to go through their lives kidding themselves that they don’t need 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇, through use of psychology. This isn’t so; remember that the optimist sees the bottle as half-full and the pessimist sees it as half-empty. In the case of pornography, the bottle is empty and the user sees it as full. There are no advantages to using internet 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇. It’s the user who’s been brainwashed to think there are. Once you start telling yourself that you don’t need or want 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇, in a very short time you won’t even need to say it, seeing the beautiful truth yourself. It’s the last thing you need to do — make sure it isn’t the last thing you do.

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Summarization 22

Reading Time: 1.5 minutes

  • Withdrawal Pangs Overview: After quitting 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇, you might experience withdrawal pangs for up to three weeks, comprising dopamine withdrawal and psychological triggers.

  • Dopamine Withdrawal Pangs: These feelings are akin to hunger, manifesting as cravings or a “must-do” sensation. Though not physically painful, they can be intense and lead to irritability. With the right mindset, they can be overcome quickly.

  • Psychological Triggers: Users often associate certain activities or situations with 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 use, creating a habit loop. These triggers can persist even after dopamine cravings subside, making quitting challenging.

  • Brainwashing Effects: Users may believe they’re making sacrifices or expect immediate results, leading to increased trigger responses and potential relapse.

  • Common Triggers: Alone time, social events, or feelings of deprivation can trigger urges. These triggers may reinforce brainwashing and prolong withdrawal symptoms.

  • Understanding Triggers: Recognizing that 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 isn’t a solution but a source of addiction is crucial for overcoming triggers and cravings.

  • Clean P𝗈𝗋𝗇 Myth: Users may wish for “clean” 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 but realize it offers no real benefits once dopamine cravings are addressed.

  • Coping with Withdrawal: Accepting withdrawal as part of the process and reframing it positively can aid in overcoming urges.

  • Dealing with Temptations: Constant reminders and temptations are normal. Embracing each moment without 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 and reinforcing your decision is essential.

  • Reasons for Quitting: Reminding yourself of the reasons for quitting and the risks of continued use can strengthen resolve.

  • Reversing Automatic Triggers: Users might fear lifelong struggles with triggers but can overcome them through changing their mindset and understanding the truth about 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇’s effects.

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More Easypeasy? Man I feel priveledged today.

PMO = all lose and no gain. Why would you ever want to do it? You were tricked into ‘wanting’ it but now you can clearly see that it does not have your best interests at heart. Let it go already. Choose the better alternative which is literally just NOT doing it. Everything else will come naturally. Be excited for it because you don’t have to put yourself through any hardship abstaining from something you never wanted in the first place!

Choose life. All you have to do is decide to stop.

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Chapter 23

Just One Little Peek

Reading Time: 1.5 minutes

This is the undoing of many using the willpower method. They’ll go through three or four days and then have the odd peek to tide them over. They don’t realise the devastating effect this has on their morale.

For most users, their first peek at the tube site harem was not as good as sex with a real person. The clips that are clean are few and far between, giving their conscious minds a boost, thinking, “Good, that wasn’t entirely all that enjoyable. I’m losing the urge and am not that into the shocking stuff.” In fact, the reverse is the case. Get it clear in your mind, enjoyment of orgasm wasn’t the reason you quit 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇. If users were there for orgasm alone, they’d never watch more than one clip. The only reason why you needed 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 was feeding that little monster. Just think, after being starved for four days how precious that one peek must have been to it. Your conscious mind is unaware, but the fix your body received is communicated to your subconscious, and all your sound preparation will be undermined. There’ll be a little voice at the back of your mind saying that, in spite of all logic, the sessions are precious and you want another one.

That little peek has two damaging effects:

  1. It keeps the little monster alive in your body.
  2. Worse, it keeps the big monster alive in your mind. If you had the ‘last peek’, it’ll be easier to have the next one.

P𝗈𝗋𝗇 is a mouse trap without cheese, only poison. Using willpower you have to convince yourself not to grab the cheese, but EasyPeasy allows you to see it’s poison. You don’t need to avoid it, you just don’t go into it.

Above all, remember:

‘Just one peek’ is how people get into the addiction in the first place.

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Summarization 23

Reading Time: 1.5 minutes

  • The Temptation of “Just One Peek”: Many struggle with the willpower method due to giving in to the temptation of a quick look at 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇, thinking it will satisfy their urges temporarily.

  • Misleading Satisfaction: Users may find the experience of a quick peek less satisfying than they remember, leading them to believe they’re losing interest. However, the subconscious craving for dopamine is still reinforced.

  • Unconscious Impact: Even if the conscious mind downplays the significance of a peek, the subconscious registers the dopamine hit, undermining efforts to quit.

  • Damaging Effects: A single peek keeps the addiction alive both physically and mentally, making it easier to justify further indulgence in the future.

  • The Illusion of Control: Believing that one can have “just one peek” without consequences is a trap that perpetuates addiction.

  • Difference with EasyPeasy: Unlike the willpower method, which requires resisting the urge, EasyPeasy helps users see 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 for what it truly is: poison. There’s no need to resist; instead, users simply choose not to engage with it.

  • Key Reminder: “Just one peek” is the initial step that leads people into addiction, so avoiding it is crucial for breaking free from 𝗉𝗈𝗋𝗇 addiction.

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