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1.
Arch Sex Behav ; 51(2): 1375-1381, 2022 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34786657

ABSTRACT

Can Internet pornography use (IPU) lead to addiction? "Pornography addiction" is a highly controversial concept within the scientific community. In the absence of consensus, international classifications do not consider that the concept meets the criteria to be recognized as a distinct diagnostic entity. However, the term "pornography addiction" has now become common parlance and is therefore present in the discourse of patients seeking therapy to address what they perceive as problematic pornography consumption. Drawing on a brief case vignette, presenting the case of a man who views himself as a pornography addict, we offer a critical review of this concept. Different diagnostic hypotheses will be considered. Beyond the diagnostic process, we consider the issue of "perceived addiction" and its relationship with "moral incongruence." From a psychotherapeutic view, we suggest that patients who self-identify as "porn addicts" must be supported using a more comprehensive approach that goes beyond their symptomatic behavior or the manner in which they present or perceive themselves. The proposed therapy did not seek or require an end to the behavior. The therapy approach focused on exploring the patient's history in an attempt to understand the construction of his sexuality and morality. In the case analyzed, focusing on the source of moral incongruence led to the disappearance of IPU and all associated suffering.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Addictive , Erotica , Behavior, Addictive/diagnosis , Humans , Internet , Male , Morals , Sexual Behavior , Sexuality
2.
Psychoanal Rev ; 106(3): 207-223, 2019 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31090506

ABSTRACT

This article is an attempt at a psychoanalytic understanding of Diogenes syndrome, or hoarding disorder syndrome, by way of a clinical case. This syndrome is characterized by a failure to attend to proper housing habits, including the hoarding of rubbish that may, in fact, create unsuitable, even dangerous, living conditions. The clinical case used suggests that Diogenes syndrome or hoarding disorder reflects or indicates an extreme form of obsessive neurosis involving libidinal regressions to anal fixations designed, paradoxically, to satisfy both a passion for dirty and for order. However, this pathological hoarding may also function to protect the subject against fears associated with meeting people, thereby avoiding any possible intimacy and promoting self-exclusion in an anti-object aim. Finally, the case under discussion helps us to understand the particular psychological aspects or relevance that the actual items and rubbish accumulated have in this syndrome.


Subject(s)
Hoarding Disorder/therapy , Psychoanalysis/methods , Aged , Female , Hoarding Disorder/diagnosis , Hoarding Disorder/psychology , Humans , Object Attachment , Obsessive Behavior/psychology , Obsessive Behavior/therapy , Psychosexual Development , Syndrome
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