This Past Weekend - #663 - Porn Recovery Coach Steven Wolt
Episode Date: June 19, 2026Steven Wolt is the founder of Valor Recovery, a program aimed at helping men treat porn addiction and intimacy challenges. Steven joins Theo to talk about why he felt a personal connection to this ...cause, the psychological side effects of watching adult content, and what recovery really looks like. Valor Recovery: https://findyourvalor.com/ Sex and Love Addicts Anonymous: https://slaafws.org Alcoholics Anonymous: https://www.aa.org/ Adult Children of Alcoholics and Dysfunctional Families: https://adultchildren.org/ ------------------------------------------------- Tour Dates! https://theovon.com/tour New Merch: https://www.theovonstore.com ------------------------------------------------- Sponsored By: Celsius: Go to the Celsius Amazon store to check out all of their flavors. #CELSIUSBrandPartner #CELSIUSLiveFit https://amzn.to/3HbAtPJ Perplexity AI: Ask anything at https://pplx.ai/theo Acorns: Go to http://acorns.com/theo to get your $20 bonus investment today! Liquid IV: Go to http://liquidiv.com and get 20% off your first purchase with code THEO at checkout Manscaped: Thanks to MANSCAPED for sponsoring! Get The Beard Hedger Plus for 15% OFF + Free Shipping with code THEO at http://www.Manscaped.com Shopify: Take control of your income. Start selling for $1/month at http://shopify.com/theo Watch on Spotify. Spotify subscribers get fewer ads on our episodes. ------------------------------------------------- Music: “Shine” by Bishop Gunn Bishop Gunn - Shine ------------------------------------------------ Submit your funny videos, TikToks, questions and topics you'd like to hear on the podcast to: tpwproducer@gmail.com Hit the Hotline: 985-664-9503 Video Hotline for Theo Upload here: https://www.theovon.com/fan-upload Mail stuff to: PO BOX 40137, Nashville TN 37204 ------------------------------------------------ Find Theo: Website: https://theovon.com Instagram: https://instagram.com/theovon Facebook: https://facebook.com/theovon Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/thispastweekend X: https://twitter.com/theovon YouTube: https://youtube.com/theovon Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/TheoVonClips Shorts Channel: https://bit.ly/3ClUj8z ------------------------------------------------ Producer: Zach https://www.instagram.com/zachdpowers Producer: Trevyn https://www.instagram.com/trevyn.s/ Producer: Nick https://www.instagram.com/realnickdavis/ Producer: Andrew https://www.instagram.com/bleachmediaofficial/ Producer: Halston https://www.instagram.com/halstonrays/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Spotify, it's Jay Shetty.
Are you one of those media strategy people?
Scrolling through spreadsheets,
searching for an audience that pays twice as much attention to your ads
than they do on social?
Let me introduce you to fans.
And they're here with me on Spotify.
Trust me, I know fans.
They don't skip, they stay for hours.
They don't move on, they manifest.
They're not a demographic group, they're fans.
Spotify Advertising.
You're among fans.
Today's guest is a certified coach and a founder of Valor Recovery.
It's a recovery program that focuses on porn addiction, pornography addiction, intimacy disorders,
commitment disorders, a whole gamut of stuff in there.
There's a lot of things when it comes to emotional connection.
He and I have known each other for years.
He's a dear friend of mine.
He's been a mentor.
He's been a guide.
And at times he's been a human.
hero. I'll say that. This episode didn't really for children. If you have children maybe in the
backseat or something, you know, it might, I mean, it's not graphic, but it's just, I don't know.
Just, you know, I hope this episode reaches who it reaches. I would like to say that. I had a great
chat today with my guest and friend, Mr. Steve Walt.
Thank you, brother. I think you're coming. I love it. Yeah, I love you too, bro. It's been a long
time on you. I know. It has been a long time, man. For some of you guys who don't know,
today's guest is my friend Steve, uh, Walt, who is, who started a program called Valor Recovery.
And it's a recovery, uh, program for men who have suffered with pornography addiction.
Is that pretty much a safe way to say it, Steve?
That's a good way to say it.
Okay, cool.
And thank you so much, dude.
I love the work that you do.
Thank you for like, you know, uh, you've been a guy in light in my life and just a partner
in crime and, you know, in positive crime.
And, uh, and yeah, I just want to like, we start, we met in recovery rooms, right?
Yeah.
a long time ago.
Yeah, we met above the bank over there.
We're going to recovery rooms in the palisades.
Yeah.
I didn't suffer from porn addiction, but I did.
I have dealt with that, like, parts of that, and I have, like, you know, had, like,
intimacy disorder, like commitment issues, that sort of thing, you know, which those meetings
cover all of that.
Your recovery started with drugs and alcohols?
It did.
I mean, I was one of those kind of men that kind of struggled with a lot of stuff.
but as you look back,
I definitely think pornography was the culprit.
Really?
Yeah, I do.
You know,
I think pornography was this kind of gateway drug
that led me to a lot of dark places.
Yeah,
I'd love to hear your experience, strength, and hope today.
Just take us kind of on your journey.
This is what people do in meetings a lot.
They'll share their experience, strength, and hope.
And your journey with, like, intimacy, sex addiction,
pornography, addiction, etc.
Is that okay?
Yeah, it's great.
And so, you know, I think it started for me in the late 90s.
You know, I was living in New York City, working in financial services from all outward
appearances, like doing great in life.
You know, I remember moving kind of my first nice apartment and 32nd floor of a building.
I'd work so hard for this, right?
Like, my goodness.
A walk up, no.
No.
Well, it wasn't a walk up.
32 floors is the long way to walk.
Oh, yeah.
But what I do remember within a few weeks is getting the internet in my apartment.
apartment for the first time.
Pretty cool, right?
People could do research.
I could do a lot of things with the internet.
Like, not this guy.
I mean, I use the internet for porn.
And so really, for the first time in my life, I had, like, unlimited access to pornography.
And I'll tell you what, when I watch porn, it lit me up like a Christmas tree.
When I watch porn, that fog of depression, that kind of hovered over me much of my life lifted.
Really?
Yeah, 100%.
I can kind of relate a little bit what you're talking about.
Like there's something else with it that feels very addictive.
You know, there's a euphoria to it.
That's what I'm saying.
I mean, it works just like a drug for me, right?
That anxiety I felt, that kind of loneliness that was so profound vanished when I watch porn.
Oh, yeah.
So, you know, I watched porn to really numb difficult emotions.
And it worked.
It worked really, really well.
And were you using it like, I mean, were you just kind of like using it once a day?
Or was like, I mean, was there an actual like heavy use of it?
Or you were, it was just like this outlet that was that you knew that was there?
You know, it started off as an outlet.
But then things started to change.
You know, this was long before we had cell phones that had pornography.
So this was on a laptop in my home.
And what I noticed was this progression.
I started watching porn for longer lengths of time with more.
frequency. I kind of needed porn. You know, there were nights I'd be watching porn
throughout most of the evening. What? A hundred minutes? I'd go for hours. Wow. And, you know,
I'd wake up or like come two in the morning, like disgusted with myself. Oh, yeah. Disgusted.
I'm never doing this again. I would actually have multiple times, I would get the laptop,
and I would throw it down the garbage shoot on the 32nd floor, an absolute disgust. But it, you know,
A few days later, I'd be back in the computer store telling this poor guy, yeah, we have a growing
business and we need more technology.
Literally, I know I just throwing my computer away because I couldn't stop watching porn on it.
The guy's like, dude, too bad they don't have an Olympic event for guys who are sick of watching
porn on their laptops.
That would be so much further than discus, I think, you know?
100%.
But, dude, that's crazy.
Imagine, like, some guy is just like some little R2D2 human.
And there is like, what, another one?
Another one.
Steve's got a very successful business.
He's hiring.
He needs computers.
Oh, dude, that's so crazy, dude.
I do remember, like, when I was a kid,
is if I interjected?
Yeah, please.
Yeah.
And just to share, man, like, I remember, like,
when I was a kid, they had one,
some fella had pornoes at his house, he had magazine.
And we'd had somebody had, like,
chiseled some tits into a tree near our home and stuff like that.
And we had that when I was young.
And people would show up to that,
Like it was some like kind of like a, you know, some mahogany chest mecca or something.
You know, people would make the pilgrimists to see that in the woods.
That's hot.
Yeah, yeah, it's hot.
But at one point I had a, I found out, I had a buddy and his dad had some porno magazines.
And, dude, I remember once I'd seen those, I would bike across town on the weekends to go and to go to their home.
And I would kind of loiter around the house until there was an opportunity to go see them.
and one week
and I even broke into their
like broke into a window
I didn't break the glass
that's crazy
but I did that would have been too much
yeah
you would have crossed the line
but I snuck in to
and I didn't realize it at the time
it was just like
I didn't even realize that I was doing it
but when I later looked back at it was like
oh it just like there was something
there was a comforting thing
or there was like this addiction that started
anyway go on man
so you would take these computers in
yeah and you know it was just a
that I was really struggling with this.
I couldn't stop.
And, you know, there was such a progression to this.
You know, even like taking more risk
on where I'd watch porn, I'd watch it in the office
on my work computer, which is kind of insane
when you think about it.
Yeah.
And, you know, I start watching different types of porn.
You know, categories didn't even know existed, right?
You go down the left-hand side of that porn,
they're category after category after category.
And for me, you know, I started gravitating towards like fetish porn
and then eventually porn outside of my sexual orientation.
And I didn't know what I was doing.
I didn't know why this was so intoxicating
and why I couldn't stop.
And the problem was, I'm wrong with that type of porn,
but for me it brought up so much shame.
And that shame was so debilitating in my life.
And so it was really a painful experience.
You know, this was a long time ago.
So there wasn't information around that.
There wasn't a place to go and talk about this stuff.
So, you know, I just had this kind of really horrible feeling.
I was engaging in a behavior that didn't feel like it was in alignment with my values and I was suffering.
Man, I'm sorry to hear that, man.
I know that we've talked about this kind of a lot and I've heard you share before.
But anytime somebody says that they're, that like they feel a lot of shame, like it just really resonates with me, man.
You know, I felt a lot of that in my life is just shame for different things, you know.
It's so powerful.
And you can't stop.
And you said this sounds like a long time ago, man.
I've had friends that I've talked to this week that it's the same, it's the same story.
Yeah, man, I can relate to like looking at pornography and just the shade, the horror you feel after.
But then you still need something, but then like it kind of wears off or you get out of that shame.
And then you're again or looking for something that'll kind of give you a feeling, something.
It makes me feel good about myself or I'm not having, I'm not dating well, or I'm afraid of
women, anything, whatever's going on.
And then you find yourself back there.
Well, you know, it's interesting.
The ease and accessibility of porn today anyway, make it so easy to regulate your emotions
with it, right?
You just think about how you're able to really avoid discomfort.
Like, what do you mean exactly?
Avoid it.
Because here's a deal, right?
If you're feeling anxious, you watch porn, you feel temporarily calm.
Right?
You're feeling bored.
You watch porn.
You feel some stimulation.
You're feeling lonely.
You watch porn.
You feel artificial connection.
So porn, for me, can actually affect and change my mood.
So why is that a bad thing, right?
And so, because porn can work in the short term.
Okay.
But what happens, especially for me, is I weaken my ability to regulate my own emotions.
So stopping watching porn wasn't just stopping a bad thing.
I had habit. I had to learn how to regulate my own emotions. I had to learn to deal with triggers and urges. And so there was this kind of incredible process that kind of weaning myself off porn was just not easy.
Thanks for sharing, man. Yeah, let's go back into your journey a little bit. Yeah. And so, you know, we're in this place right now where I'm, you know, using porn to deal with the pain of being Steve. You were in this place.
Yeah, so, and, you know, at that time, I was in a relationship as well,
and great girl.
And, you know, throughout that relationship,
the more porn that I consumed, things started to change, you know,
you know, sex wasn't about connection, making love.
It was about intercourse over time.
It was about replicating what I'd seen in the movies.
You know, I often like to say pornography abuse
literally burns off the nerve endings of sensuality in relationships,
less kissing, touching, holding, caressing.
And that certainly was the case for me.
And, you know, over time in that relationship, you know,
I experienced a lot of sexual dysfunction.
I have difficulty getting and maintaining an erection during sex.
Yeah, yeah.
Over time, I actually didn't even want to have sex with her.
I've been so desensitized to sex with all the porn I was watching
and masturbation I was engaging in.
And towards the very,
I couldn't orgasm unless I was thinking about a porn scene
I had seen earlier that day.
Wow.
So pornography robbed me of my manhood.
And you know, that poor girl, I mean, talk about
affecting her self-esteem and self-worth, like, what's wrong with me?
Why doesn't he desire me anymore?
Am I not attractive anymore?
And I had no ability to talk about this at this time.
I had so much shame over, I had this incredible double life.
So, you know, porn helped to destroy that.
that relationship.
And so, and I'm not talking about the guy who's casually consuming porn.
I was abusing pornography and, you know, relying on it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was just, what you notice is that men who abuse pornography, you know, it comes with
some consequences.
And, you know, for me, pornography was this gateway drug, right?
All those lines in the sand, I had a behavior.
that I would never cross over and engage in,
all got washed away.
Really?
Yeah.
Pornography was a gateway drug that led to strip clubs,
erotic massages, escorts, really dark, dark places.
It was so painful, you know, that came a point in time in my life
where I couldn't even make eye contact with the man in the mirror.
Really?
Because I knew the truth.
When I think about this journey, I mean, porn was like the culprit.
So it just didn't work for me.
Did it get to a point where it didn't work and then you kind of evolved onto other stuff?
Or how did like-
You know, in 2008, my life just kind of blew up.
I collapsed emotionally, spiritually, professionally.
Everything kind of came to a head and I absolutely blew up my life, unfortunately.
And but that was the time I also had the courage to kind of ask for and get help.
and not an easy thing to do
to kind of talk about these issues
get help for these issues
and it was hard coming out of the gates
to get better from this stuff, you know?
Yeah, how'd you know?
What was the, was there like kind of a breaking point
if it's okay to ask you?
Yeah, please.
I mean, thank you, bro,
for just being so open
and, like, transparent about some of this, man.
I think I was scared about even, like,
talking about this, not because I'm scared of, like,
I don't know.
I don't know why I was, I don't know.
I know you're such like a,
you know, this is like your world.
You care so much about helping people with this situation, man.
So I don't know why I was.
But, like, did there come a point for you where it was just like, this is like,
this is it, you know?
You know, I think the, I knew I had to get help.
I knew I was in a lot of trouble.
I was getting the best help that was available.
And I was still struggling.
and not because I had a desire to get better.
The one thing I did really, really well is I didn't give up.
I kept coming back.
The one thing I really did well was I had so many good people in my life that saw something
in me I couldn't see in myself.
They refused to give up on me.
I had incredible family, my mom, my brothers, my sister, who loved me unconditionally and
like us pillar of strength when I was so weak.
So I was so lucky to have such good people in my life.
And I had to fight for my recovery.
It wasn't easy.
It was not easy.
I had to fight and fight and fight.
But I'll tell you what, I never gave up.
And I live a pretty incredible life today.
Yeah.
You know, I'm married to a woman.
I absolutely adore my wife, Jennifer.
best thing that's ever happened to me.
She's an incredible, incredible human being.
Amen.
And has made me such a healthier, better man.
I am so blessed for her.
And we had our son, Theo, almost a year ago.
We started a family and all byproducts of recovery.
And so I'm a huge believer in the power of recovery,
the benefits of men.
and getting into recovery, especially as it relates
to sexual compulsivity and porn abuse.
You know, when you think about my recovery journey, right,
I think about it kind of in three stages.
Healthy intimacy, healthy sexuality, and healthy masculinity.
Healthy intimacy.
First person I had to have an intimate relationship with is myself.
I had to get more comfortable with Steve.
I had to stop running and numbing.
I had to learn to this.
sit with discomfort.
I had to learn to really identify
the root causes that were driving
these compulsions. Because porn
was not my problem. Steve was
my problem. Wow.
Yeah, man. Getting to know yourself.
Did you feel like yourself
was like your self
was like hidden kind of?
Or that yourself had never developed?
Does that make any sense? Yeah, I think probably both.
All I know is I was
so uncomfortable in my own skin.
You know, I suffered with
anxiety, I suffered with depression. I didn't feel good about myself as a man. I had such trouble
being in relationships, experiencing love. And I was so disconnected, not only from myself or from others,
and it kind of made sense why I abused pornography. I was just really unhappy. Yeah. You know,
and that's, you know, the thing that I've learned over the years is that recovery is not about stopping a
behavior. Recovery is about building a life you don't need to escape from.
Were you able to notice some of the things that you felt like you were escaping from
that you felt like we're kind of sending you in that direction? Yeah. Right. And I was kind of
emotionally unstable, right? And so part of recovery is being able to regulate your own emotions,
right? Part of people think that like recovery looks like this. It doesn't. It looks like
like a chart of the Dow Jones.
Yeah. Right?
And so what I end up doing recovery is just kind of softening
the peaks and valleys so that I could exist in life
and not have to numb the pain of the way I was living my life.
And so part of that involved being able to have a relationship
with my sexuality, that's beautiful and empowering
and made me feel good about myself as a man.
That's so missed in recovery circles.
Everything is about abstinence.
And I get that. There's value and abstinence. But if you truly want to transcend this compulsion,
you have to build the life that's more enjoyable, more purposeful than the life you are living.
Or else you're going to be vulnerable to returning to it. So part of that means like,
dude, Steve, you've got to learn how to be in a relationship. You've got to learn how to
experience the joys of your sexuality. You have to learn how to experience meaningful connection
in order to truly transcend this compulsion.
Yeah, it's so funny you're saying this,
because I was thinking the other day,
it's like, it's one thing to kind of like refrain from things, right?
Like I'm refraining from drugs and alcohol,
and I'm, you know, like I'm refraining from things
that I'm addicted to.
But it's another thing like,
but if you don't have a life outside of that,
then you're just sitting there playing defense all the time.
That's correct.
I was just thinking about that the other day
and somebody's like, what do you like to do?
And I'm like, you know, well, my hobbies became my jobs.
And I'm like, yeah, I got to find,
I got to find some things to fall in love with.
Yeah.
I got to find, like, and there's so many things.
How about a great woman?
Yeah, I mean, yeah, that's.
That would be awesome.
Hey, just saying.
I'm down.
But yeah, I see exactly what you're saying.
Like, I live a life today where I don't need pornography.
I don't need alcohol.
I don't need drugs.
You know, this is like a journey around really healthy masculinity.
You know, for so much of my life, my behaviors went out in alignment with my values.
Yeah.
And I suffered.
right, I needed porn to deal with the way I was living my life.
So when I started to live my life in alignment with like honor, integrity, love, service, kindness,
I felt good about myself as a man.
Like I didn't need to numb the pain of Steve.
Yeah.
I could look in the mirror and be like, that's a good guy most days.
Yeah.
That's good stuff.
Yeah.
So that's often what's missed in recovery.
This is not just about abstinence.
it's about becoming emotionally regulated,
kind of socially connected,
living with honesty and integrity
so that you don't need some maladaptive coping mechanism
to deal with life.
Amen.
Yeah, man, I think this has been like,
I mean, I have so many friends that talk about this a lot.
And even women.
I was talking to this girl the other day,
and I said, you know,
I have a guy coming in who started a recovery center
for a porn addiction.
And she's like, oh, you know,
I struggle with that.
I was like,
it shocked me.
Yeah.
I had never heard a woman to say that to my face and casually.
Yeah.
You know?
Why do so many men struggle with this?
So here's the truth that no one tells anybody.
This is really,
really difficult to overcome.
It's almost comical.
You go online and you see these ads.
We'll fix your porn problem in 14 days.
No, you won't.
Yeah.
Not happening.
Sorry.
You know,
And there are a bunch of reasons why this is so hard.
The ease and accessibility of this make this like a phenomenon we've never seen before.
And it's not just porn.
It's sexualized social media.
And so I'm in long-term recovery from cocaine addiction.
And could you imagine an early recovery having to walk around all day long with a pocket
full of cocaine and not do it when you have some uncomfortable feeling come up?
What do you think it's like for these guys that have their drugs?
of choice in their hand on their phone.
Yeah.
So the instant access makes this challenging.
So that's one thing.
But there's a lot more going on.
And so when you think, this is the way I think about it, right?
And so I think that pornography kind of hijacks the brain's reward system and so
dysregulate your nervous system.
Porn becomes this learned shortcut to avoid discomfort.
So when you stop watching porn, you're not just stopping a bad habit.
you are literally kind of throwing away
your primary regulation tool.
And when you stop watching porn,
I know if you can relate to this, I certainly can,
your nervous system can go haywire, right?
You can feel irritable, you can feel anxious,
flat mood, low energy, and cravings.
And these cravings can feel primal.
They're literally a function of multiple systems
in your brain and body, like screaming out all at once,
that something's missing for your survival.
Wow.
That's why guys return to the behavior
or quote unquote relapse.
This is not about willpower.
This is not about moral failure.
This is biology and neuroscience.
Your brain has been conditioned
with all the porn that you've watched
and your nervous system has yet to find
another way to regulate itself.
So recovery is not just about stopping a behavior.
It's retraining your nervous system.
It's learning how to deal with urges and cravings
so they weaken over time.
Second challenge is that you've heard it in my story, right?
Men use porn as a way to numb, avoid,
or suppress emotional pain.
Anger, pressure, anxiety, depression, trauma
that none of us want to feel.
And so when you stop watching porn,
these feelings come back with a vengeance.
So unless you begin to identify and heal those root causes,
you are going to routinely return to the one thing
you know provides you temporary relief. And that's porn. In the past, you know, I'd been hesitant to
invest to put my money somewhere. I'm that guy I make my money. I like to keep it locked in,
you know. And sometimes I was just too busy to learn about how investing even worked. The strategy
of it, the long-term idea of it. You know, I was too busy focusing on just where I was at the
moment. That's how it happens with a lot of us. Acorn.
That's what I'm here to tell you about.
Acorns is the financial wellness app that cares about where your money is going tomorrow.
Acorns is a smart way to give your money a chance to grow.
It's easy.
You can sign up in minutes and start automatically investing your spare money, even if all you've got is spare change.
Sign up now and join the over 14 million all-time customers who have already saved and invested over $27 billion.
with acorns. Plus acorns will boost your new account with a $20 bonus investment. Okay.
Offer available at acorns.com slash Theo. That's A-C-O-R-N-S dot com slash T-H-E-O. To get your $20
bonus investment today, terms and conditions apply. See acorns.com slash terms for details.
Paid non-client endorsement. Compensation provides incentive to positively promote
Acorns Tier 2 compensation provided potential subject to various factors such as
customers accounts, age and investment settings.
Does not include ACORN's fees.
Results do not predict or represent the performance of any ACORN's portfolio.
Investment results will vary.
Investing involves risk.
AcornsEV.
and SCOR's investment advisor.
View important disclosure at ACorns.com slash the O.
This show is sponsored by Liquid IV.
It's summer, baby.
It's warmed up.
You can feel it.
It's not even a joke.
The other day, I was just standing in the driveway and just thinking,
God, who cut the heat on?
Cut it off.
I was texting my neighbor.
is y'all's heat on?
Just overwhelmed, it's hot.
When you're on the go, staying hydrated is the key to enjoying all that extra sunshine.
And liquid IV is clinically demonstrated to hydrate faster than water alone.
I bring liquid IV with me.
When I'm on the go, I bring it.
After a show, I get me a little packet of one of them.
That liquid IV packet, I pour it, and I shake it.
I like the sugar-free flavors.
That's what I like.
I think peach and peach and strawberry.
and watermelon.
Just one stick and 16 ounces of water hydrates faster than water alone.
Powered by LIV hydroscience, an optimized ratio of electrolytes,
essential vitamins, and clinically tested nutrients to turn ordinary water into extraordinary hydration.
Stay hydrated while you're on the go this summer with Liquid Ivy.
Tear, poor, live more.
Go to Liquidiv.com and get 20% off your first purchase,
with code Theo at checkout.
That's 20% off your first purchase
with code Theo at liquid ivy.com.
But some men, it just shows up everywhere
that you kind of get addicted to it like that.
It's like a guy may not have a lot of problem.
A guy may be healthy,
but he accidentally picks up some cocaine off the street
and now he's using it, right?
As opposed to a guy who, like, is hurting
and goes to look for cocaine or porn.
You know, I'm just, I'm using cocaine as,
I don't know why I use that,
But, like, you know, there's some guys who accidentally just shows them on their phone.
Maybe it's a pop-up or whatever.
Or they just have some sexual energy and they take it there.
And they're not really, maybe they're healthy when they get there.
And then there's guys who are unhealthy that go there for a fix.
It feels like.
So it feels like there's kind of two different versions.
100%.
100.
There's casual porn use.
Okay.
So not everybody is.
Not at all.
Like is trying to, has all these things that they need a repair.
That's correct.
Okay, got it.
There are guys out there that are continue to engage in the behavior despite consequences.
And right?
And so I think the statistics say 10 to 15 percent of men have an addiction or severe unhealthy
relationship with pornography.
So I'm talking about that category of men.
Yeah, because for me, I never had like the addiction to pornography.
Like I had the use of it.
Give it time.
Give it time.
Don't sell you so short.
Please, no.
Um, but I definitely had, uh, where it, it was an, it was a way instead of having to connect
with the woman.
Yeah.
I would, this is an easier way.
And that became like just an easier, safer way.
I didn't have an, so I guess there isn't an addictive element there, but I didn't have like
the, the daily, like, you know, like that draw to it.
I had, um, more like, like, intimacy issues with talking with women and stuff like that.
And, um, and then I would just,
end up doing masturbation a lot of times
it's not even too pornography.
But then once porn came more prevalent
and stuff like that, it was easier.
Well, I think you highlighted a really good point.
There's another component to this,
porn abuse, porn addiction,
sexual compulsivity, whatever label you're throwing at it,
is often referred to as an intimacy disorder.
Meaning, for many men,
this is about more than just a sexual behavior.
This is about a pattern of avoiding emotional connection.
You just highlighted it.
That was my thing.
That's right.
Emotional connection was tough for me.
I didn't have any experience of it.
And so when I finally got into like dating or like where you're having attraction with girls and they're having attraction for you and women, it was a lot of, it was like, it was scary, I guess, or it was alarming.
It was a lot of things.
And I didn't have like a safe outlet to talk about it.
And I didn't have any groundwork of like healthy connection at all.
So that
So I think
Yeah, that just made it like
Kind of tough
And then to avoid it
I would be like
Okay, well I have these sexual feelings
I'll just go and
Use jerking off or whatever
Something like that
As opposed to
Trying to figure out how to work them out
Because working them out in real time
When you're a kid
Like when you're young
You know
When you're adolescent or whatever
It's kind of scary
You know
Where do you go to talk about this stuff?
Right
And your peers
Like some of them are kind of helpful,
but some of them are also like,
like other kids can be assholes about the stuff.
So,
anyway,
I'm trying to,
some of it I can't,
I can't remember exactly some of the ways.
But yeah,
instead of like engaging,
sometimes I'll be like,
oh,
I'm too nervous to even talk to that girl.
I'll just masturbate later on or something.
You know,
it's interesting.
Does that make sense at all?
Perfect sense.
Okay.
I mean,
men begin to prefer the safety of porn
versus the unpredictability
of relationships.
and real people.
Yeah.
So once again, recovery is not just about stopping a behavior.
Recovery is learning how to relate, engage, and connect with others.
Recovery is about learning how to experience real intimacy,
which sorry has to include some vulnerability and taking some emotional risk.
Recovery is about learning to experience the joys of connection and love.
Right?
Because, you know, if you're not on that path,
it's hard not to be in pain and suffering.
And so it's so important in recovery.
So when you think about why this is so hard, right?
You just talked about it, right?
If you don't understand the neuroscience
and the nervous system regulation,
guys just stay in this hamster wheel loop.
If you don't identify some of the root causes
that are driving this compulsion,
you're vulnerable to returning to it.
And if you don't do a deeper dive
around intimacy and what's blocking you from connection,
you stay in pain and lonely.
So kind of all three of these need to be addressed
in order for lasting recovery to occur.
Yeah.
But it's more than that.
And I'll tell you a few other thoughts I have
on why this is so hard.
Early recovery can be very painful.
And so when you so over-stimulate your brain
from pornography and from sexualized social media,
when you stop engaging those behaviors,
Your mood can be flat.
You can have low energy.
And you can have intolerable boredom.
And people think that boredom is the enemy.
It's not.
It's actually your body recalibrating.
Everything you want in life is on the other side of you learning how to tolerate boredom.
But for so many men, they quit too early because they can't sit with this discomfort.
The other challenge we see constantly
is that so many guys quit before the miracle happens.
I struggle for many years before I was able to make real progress
in my recovery.
You know, oftentimes in recovery circles,
we measure sobriety success by continuous days of sobriety.
30 days, 60 days, 90 days, six months a year.
All good stuff.
Right.
All good stuff.
Right.
However, however, that cannot be.
the sole measurement of progress.
Because for many guys, myself included, they're not going to get it right away, right?
It's going to be a journey.
And if you keep kind of having to relapse and you go down this massive shame spiral that you're
failing, that you're a failure, you give up.
So recovery is about becoming emotionally regulated, socially connected, learning to live
with honor and integrity so that you don't need porn anymore.
That can take time.
Recovery is about building a life you don't need to escape from.
That can take time.
And so for many guys, especially single guys, right, where there's not external leverage
or consequences on you, right?
A married guy, he's really in trouble his relationship.
He's got to get sober or the marriage is at risk.
Right.
That's one dynamic.
But now you've got a single guy right now.
What is the motivation for him right now to continue on this work?
you got to keep that person inspired and motivated to continue to do the work.
And guess what?
If the best that you can do is watch 80 to 90% less porn in any given month, great job.
Right.
Great job.
As long as that is in conjunction with you developing new habits to take better care of yourself, physically, spiritually, and emotionally.
Amen.
Right?
Recovery is a, the ability to sustain abstinence will be a byproduct of you taking better care.
of yourself, physically, emotionally, and spiritually.
Yeah, it's a three-sided deal.
100%.
So guys quit.
Too early.
Like, where are you going?
We just got started.
And so, why not also measure consistency of going to the gym?
Consistency of making social plans.
Consistency of learning a new hobby.
Keeping your word.
Dude.
Take care of yourself.
Let's measure that stuff in addition to your sober day count.
Yeah, there's a lot of other factors that start to gauge, like, that you can use
to self-gauge as well, and that are super important.
But also, a lot of those factors are things that it's also just like, you know, it's getting up.
It's getting up.
Being active.
I want to take care of myself physically.
You know, I want to meditate.
I want to have a relationship with a higher power.
I want to, like, nurture this gift, this thing that I am, right?
And there's this other, it's such a Pandora's box porn is because it's like,
Here's this thing.
And it's just,
it's tricked.
It's tricked.
It's,
it's,
it's,
it's,
it's,
just a,
finally calculated
molecule of the devil,
really,
you know?
And it's,
and so when,
sometimes people are like,
man,
we're not at war.
There's not a lot going on.
But if we're sitting here,
losing a battle a lot of times.
So I do think there's,
there is,
there is this inspirational element sometimes,
um,
where I'll feel like I can,
I,
like if I want a war,
there's one every single day
for me against the dark arts,
against the things that want to drag me down,
you know,
against the things that are literally are,
uh,
are finessed to take away the essence of me, right?
The essence of me, man.
And so it's like,
there's a battle right now,
I think for a lot of that and a lot of us don't realize,
um,
well,
and,
and we can get kind of,
like a lullabyed into the comfort of it.
You don't think it's a big deal.
You're looking at it once or twice, right?
But then you, like, I would notice for myself
if I was doing jerking off or whatever,
something like that, the next day I'd feel a little bit
kind of bad about myself or I'd be shorter with people.
If I looked at pornography, it made me look at, like,
dates and stuff.
It just made me, like, it carried, I had a little bit of shame inside of me.
You don't even realize that sometimes it's like,
you don't think it's on the forefront.
of you or that it's affecting like the look in your eyes or anything but there's a little bit of
that in there you know it kind of like colors your coffee a little bit it's like um but it's not the best
color you know does any of this stuff make sense that i'm saying you you you bring up kind of ramble
no no no there's a i want to i want to it's hard to explain yeah you did a good job with it a few things
that come to mind number one you talked about the rig system and so i read this i shared this with you
on a phone a few weeks ago i read this stat that said that the dopamine spike
is from the anticipation of watching the next video
and not the video you're actually watching.
Wow.
So the addiction is to the scroll.
And like dopamine, this is, I may butcher this,
but I think that's what it said, dopamine is not the pleasure chemical,
it's the motivation chemical, it's the chemical of pursuit,
what's next.
So social media is,
rigged this way. Pornography is rigged this way. You know, back in the day, you know, getting access to porn
was going to some creepy video store. Yeah. Going behind a curtain. It's an adult only or beads,
those beads that would hang it. You obviously know. And all of a sudden to get this VHS in a brown
paper bag, put it underneath your arm and do the walk of shame home. Yeah. Right? But you go watch that
VHS, you know, for 15 minutes. Do whatever and go about your day. That's not what,
modern day porn abuse looks like.
It's infinite novelty,
where you're constantly scrolling for sexual imagery,
hours at a time.
This is a whole new beast.
Yeah, it says it right here.
Industry analytics and search engine studies
estimate that pornographic content accounts
for roughly 20% of all internet searches
on mobile devices.
That's astronomical.
This is notably higher than desktop search rates, which generally clock in around 13%.
The primary driver of this higher mobile percentage is the privacy, portability, and convenience
as smartphones provide.
Because of this, studies from major adult entertainment networks indicate the vast majority
of adult content is accessed via a cell phone.
Yeah, I read the other day that Pornhub, which is banned here in Tennessee, I do want
say that. Is that right? You have to have an ID to access it. That's correct. And that's how,
that dude, that, that thing that they have, I think it's the, um, Tennessee Miners Act. Is that
what it is? The Protect Tennessee Miners Act, uh, is a state law mandating that commercial
websites and digital platforms containing a substantial portion of content harmful to minors,
uh, implement reasonable age verification methods. So you have to, you have to enter your ID.
So that's a good stuff. That's a huge thing because it makes you take some accountability. Okay,
Well, am I, is this something that I'm willing to say I do?
Right?
Is this something I'm willing to put my name, my height, my data?
Am I really, you know what I'm saying?
Am I willing to go that far with it?
I love that.
I love that.
Like, there's been times where I've wanted to go look at stuff and that stopped me right there.
Great.
Yeah.
So I do find that that is helpful because it like, yeah, I don't want to put myself in there, really.
Like, I want to look at it as like this guy in the distance, right?
Have they seen fake ID spiking right now?
That's a great question.
Good business, perhaps.
Yeah.
Around 7 to 11% of men self-report experiencing problematic pornography use or feeling addicted.
I mean, that's unbelievable, man.
And it's just not porn, right?
You look at the content that's on X.
You look at the content that's on Instagram, Facebook Reels, right?
That sexualized content can have the same effect on the brain as watching pornography.
And so it's an issue.
And so we live in a really tricky time right now because it's everywhere.
It's unbelievable that it exists.
It's unbelievable that we allow it as well, you know, that we allow it.
Well, there's also a societal thing with guys.
Like, that's what guys do, right?
It's cool watching porn.
And I'll tell you the truth.
It ain't so cool.
Guys don't do it together.
Guys watch a game together.
I've never had a guy be like,
hey, man, I'm having a couple of the guys over.
To watch some porn?
Yeah.
The thing that's really interesting to me is here's the truth.
So many men who abuse pornography, right?
It affects their sexual performance.
It affects how they show up in relationships
and it builds shame.
Right.
So many men struggle with sexual performance.
That's not a new thing.
But what is new, and I think quite concerning,
is how many those men are under the age of 40,
They turn to Cialis, Viagra,
testosterone replacement therapy,
thinking that something's wrong with them physically.
When the truth is, and the reality is,
is their sexual dysfunction is probably caused
by all the porn they're consuming.
So heavy porn use can rewire the brain.
And even my own story.
Is that true?
Heavy porn use can rewire the brain
and cause all types of problems in the bedroom.
Like even in my own story, right?
I had difficulty,
getting and maintaining an erection during sex,
especially with a partner.
I had difficulty orgasming
towards the end of my run with pornography.
I had difficulty maintaining an erection
and I needed porn stimulation to stay aroused.
And heavy porn use can absolutely lead
to premature ejaculation.
You know, one of the things I didn't share in my story,
which is important to talk about, right?
Because there's probably a bunch of your listeners
right now listening waiting for someone
to tell the damn truth.
You know, when I first started,
consuming porn early in my life before that relationship, I struggled with premature ejaculation.
And I had so much shame and embarrassment around it.
I got to a point where I'd rather not be with a woman than be with a woman and have that type
of sexual performance.
You feel like you were just so nervous about sex?
I mean, it makes sense.
Sex is a nervous thing for a youngster.
I didn't realize a few things.
For the children.
Sex is nervous for the children, you know.
It's a nervous thing.
Even for adults.
Yeah.
And so what I didn't realize at that time was that all the porn that I was consuming
and the way that I was actually masturbating to it kind of conditioned my brain to orgasm quickly
and that carried over to real life scenarios.
I didn't realize at that time that the intense porn that I was watching so overstimulated my brain
leading to early orgasm.
Wow.
So my porn use was tied to shame and secrecy which fueled kind of anxiety around sex.
making it kind of uncomfortable.
And, you know, porn was the cause of this.
Yeah.
So that's one area, men, not so manly when you think about, hey, you know, is it really that cool?
Right.
Second challenge that guys tend to have.
It can totally affect how guys show up in relationships.
Oh, yeah, dude.
Watching, like, touching your body or whatever, jerking off or whatever, it was like, it was like, it just made it easier than having to be.
having to go and try with women and having to go and have a relationship.
It made it all just easier.
And if you came from like, for me, I just, there was so much, it was so uncomfortable that
I was like, I don't really, I mean, I guess I had a choice, but it just was too much of a,
of a easy alternative.
It was like, I don't, I don't know, like, you know, I'm so embarrassed.
I'm so, like, just have so low self-worth, so many little things.
They were like, man, I can't, I can't go ask this girl out or do, you know.
So it became this little thing.
And then this was the part that I was going to get that you made me think about.
Sorry.
Everything about sex felt like a secret.
Right?
Like I would, like, it was always like when I was growing up, we would go in the woods and see the tits or whatever, chiseled in the wood or whatever.
Or you would sneak into your.
Is that still around you think?
I'm sure it's been.
No, I think they had weevils or whatever got it.
of Stan Weevils.
I think it was that.
I can't remember exactly.
I have to look it up.
Okay.
Or it could have been one of those new ticks that Bill Gates unleashed or whatever.
But whatever, I'm sure it's gone these days.
Or it's really, it's eroded to an A cup, you know, for sure.
And what's the point to visit it then, right?
Come on.
At the time, those things were, oh.
And they're making a road trip for an A cup.
Dude, they had a woodpecker would land on one of them.
That's big.
Pretty nice.
So, but, dude, the biggest thing that I think about,
like it was just like seek everything was set sex when I was young became like
secretive mm-hmm it became like secretive because yeah if you were looking
in pornography she was doing masturbation you was sneaking off and doing it so
everything became secretive so then like everything like even like dating I never
want anybody to know what was I was very secretive about stuff so it always had all
this like a little bit of extra like kind of taboo around it I think I don't even know
what that means but it was just like you know when things are in secret it's it's
you know, they, things in secret can be kind of uncomfortable.
Things you're always trying to hide can be kind of uncomfortable.
That's right.
And, you know, I think also that secrecy can lead to shame.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah, well, you're always, if something's in secret,
you're always worried somebody's going to find out about it.
That's right.
And I didn't have any positive, like,
relationship with sex or no, like, I didn't have any not, like,
nobody taught me, it told me nothing about it.
It was just like your body, you know, change,
and then you're like dealing with it.
I mean, I'm still waiting to get the birds and bees conversation from dad.
Do you know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
Yeah.
They should just have a decent man that travels around the country.
Helping just have the birds and the bees conversation.
Like a temporary rented dad to have the conversation with you when you're like 12.
Yeah, just like some wiener Santa or whatever.
He travels around.
He pulls up, you know what I'm saying?
Do it outside where it's in view of, you know, where the Lord can see it.
But anyway, you were going into a second part about
How it affects relationships
And dude, I'll even remember like
If you be if I say if you but if I'd been like
You know doing touching myself or whatever
Yurking off or whatever like that then I would uh
You're right when you said it's like it changed the amount of intimacy now it's like if my girl and I are going somewhere
Maybe I I don't I wouldn't touch her touch her elbow or like you know what I'm saying or like give her a pinch
Or like, you know what I'm saying?
I wouldn't create that energy.
So a lot of that energy disappears.
And that's the thing I think that we don't realize a lot.
It's that little like that yin and yang, that whole thing that keeps like nature and society
and really the future because of procreation, which keeps it all in balance, is this
kind of tension, right?
A romantic kind of like samba between like her aura and mine and pornography like weakens
And then you're right, people take into their head,
like a woman will take in her head, like, oh, something's wrong with me
or he thinks I'm not this way or I can't do these things.
You know what I'm saying?
So it's just, it's a tough cycle.
And I think a lot of it does fall in us men because we've got to be stronger, you know.
I'm not saying that I'm great at it or anything.
But I do think that somebody's got to come to the rescue of us,
and I think it has to be us.
Well, no one's coming to rescue us, right?
You've got to take accountability in your own life.
But I think you really eloquently kind of laid out the dynamics that porn abuse can have in relationship.
Did I really?
You really did.
That was really well said.
And, you know, I just, I feel bad about some of the, I feel like, dang, I wasted a couple of relationships.
I wasted some, and I wasted somebody's time and I wasted like, and I didn't even know it.
But yeah, some of that.
You know it now.
The only way you learn and grow.
Yeah.
And, you know, what you often see when men abuse porn over time, they can lose attraction for their partners because they can't compete with porn.
I mean, how unfair is that?
Right?
That could be less desire for romance.
I'll say it again, pornography abuse burns off the nerve endings of sensuality and relationships, less touching, holding, kissing, caressing.
So if I'm watching porn, you know, maybe I don't notice the waves in my wife's hair.
If I'm watching porn, we hold hands less perhaps.
So pornography abuse can deaden the vibrancy of our partners, our wives, and our marriages.
I mean, that kind of sucks.
Yeah, well, it dims the way you feel.
For me, it dims the way I feel if I'm waking up.
That's right.
Like, oh, I still, my first thought sometimes is if I'd looked at pornography today before,
it's like, oh, man, I wish I hadn't done that.
I think I can not do it.
You know, it's like, but you're always in this war, you know, it puts you always in, like,
this battlefield.
It's like being hooked up to an ivy drip of shame.
And for not every guy, right?
We're not talking about the casual use.
We're talking about the compulsive use.
And the other thing you tend to see, over time, the guys that end up abusing pornography,
porn and masturbation just become the preferred sexual outlet.
And shame and secrecy and guilt become the norm.
And because of that shame, so many guys, especially our young guys are not dating.
they've given up on dating.
They're not actually having physical sex.
I read a stat not too long ago
that one out of three men under the age of 30
have not had sex in the last year.
One out of three men?
One out of three men under the age of 30
have not had sex in the last year.
But some of those men could be 10 years old or whatever.
I would imagine, I didn't look at the fine print of the thing.
I would imagine it probably told me age 18 to 30.
Oh, they should say that then.
They should probably, yeah, good point.
Because, yeah, if it's like in this five-year-old
I'd say you're like, yeah, I hope not.
Yeah, we'll fact-check this right now.
Anyway, recent data from the general social survey
indicates that nearly one quarter of young adults
aged 18 to 29 reported having no sex in the past year
looking specifically at younger single men under 30.
The rate of sexlessness can climb closer to one-third.
And then, bro, you know what happens?
I think when you start to, when you start to like,
when you dim the men in a culture,
anything can come in there.
It's like when you dim the warriors
who are standing at the gate,
anything can slip in there, you know?
And then they come in
and now they got the women on only fans
because they're not in a relationship
and there's not like a provider
and there's not like a leader
and you're not part of like a,
we're doing this together, right?
And then like everything's for sale.
It's like what's for sale now, you know?
And I don't mean that.
It's not, none of that's negativity at anybody.
It's just like,
you know, it's just like, I don't know, do I sound judgmental?
I'm just kind of looking at it.
I think it all makes me just like, I don't know, I feel like we're stronger than this,
but we are in a war.
Well, I think what you're highlighting, and what I'm hearing you say is so many of our
young men in particular, they lack confidence in themselves.
They're full of shame, right?
They don't have the, they can't handle rejection.
right, the world needs healthy, strong men.
And pornography abuse is emasculating our men today.
That's what I'm saying.
That was definitely the case for me.
100%.
But here's the deal.
And I need your listeners to hear this right now.
Yeah, amen, because I don't want to get stuck in the dower parts of it
and that things are not healable because that's not the truth.
That's not the truth.
The truth is it is time to reclaim your damn manhood.
Type shit.
You know, seriously.
No, I feel it.
You know enough is enough.
Right.
Enough is enough right now.
There's a cesspool out there that are killing our men today.
So let me tell you, in my own journey, when I got the right type of help, I was able to work
through these sexual dysfunction.
When I got the right type of help, I was able to be in a healthy relationship where I felt
good about myself as a partner, as a man.
So it's not just like Steve stops watching porn and everything fixes Excel.
Right.
Don't work that way.
Right.
It's a process of retraining your brain, your body, and your relationship to intimacy.
Amen.
What were some of the first, like the initial moments, was there kind of like a day or a time
and a rehab?
Because you went to some different, is it okay to say that you went to some different rehab?
Yeah, I went all of them.
You did?
My boy.
Dude, Steve was a animal out there in the part, like, his old partying stories are great, bro.
That's right.
You have some great ones, man.
And I'm not talking to just sex.
I'm not talking sexual stuff.
I'm talking like just your AA partying stories.
And sometimes we tell those war stories
because it keeps you out of the battle.
100%.
And you got to laugh at them now.
Oh, dude, if I go to an AA meeting
and I laugh with my friends
about times where we always do stupid stuff
or something ridiculous,
the feeling I get laughing with friends,
I leave out of there.
I don't want to drink.
I don't want to use.
I don't want to do anything harmful to myself
because I've just felt connection
and that gives me something that I'm supposed to have.
So you ever see like on maybe Theo Vaughn
or the Red Hot Chili Peppers
go on tour,
t-shirts that list all the cities they visited. Yeah. I did that with rehabs. Yeah. So, I mean,
come on, dude. And so what was your tour called? Do you have a tour name for it? Maybe you can
help me out with that. And so, you know, it's just the journey's the journey, man. Yeah. And so once again,
it's, you know, it's about perseverance and not giving up. But I'll tell you some things that are
interesting that when I was able to get the right type of help,
as it relates to my porn addiction,
I was able to stabilize my arousal.
Stabilize your arousal, you said?
Arousal, okay.
Tell me what that means, kind of you say that.
You know, I was pornography abuse
so distorted my view of women.
Pornography abuse had me in a constant place
of euphoric recall and fantasy, right?
And so I had to learn how to not rely on that kind of
dopamine-fueled kind of energy to deal with life.
I had to learn how to build sensation for sexual experiences, to be present in sexual experiences.
So when I got into recovery, dude, my sex life was so enjoyable, right?
I learned how to kind of make love and connection and kissing and sensuality,
all kind of beautiful stuff.
When you get into recovery, oftentimes you hear you have better erections.
and more satisfying sex.
That's what I want.
I want that super erection.
That's it.
And you hear all the time
and guys get into recovery
and sustain recovery,
it's so much more enjoyable.
They're present for it.
They're not full of shame.
There's a confidence that comes from it.
Yeah, that's what I'll,
yeah,
I want that winner that plays the game.
Like, I feel like my wiener's like a designated hitter.
Like, it'll get up to the plate.
It's kind of like,
but it knows it's not going to be out in the fee.
It's just like showing up for the freaking, you know.
Otani's a DH sometimes.
Otani is?
Yes.
Well, what are you trying to say?
I got a small wiener.
I'm not sure what I was saying with that.
Although he gets a lot of home runs.
Hey, there we go.
That's what we're talking about.
We might take that part out, which is fine.
So you're saying, like, you know, and you noticed that?
Like, do you remember, do you remember, like, a first experience where you kind of noticed
something small that you were like, oh, wow, these things that I'm doing in recovery
are working?
And then what were some of the things that you were doing in recovery?
Well, I did a bunch of.
recovery, right? And so I did a lot of therapy. I was really active in 12-step recovery. I was,
you know, had my own personal coaches that were really helpful. And I'll tell you, I believe that
recovery is a team sport. I think men need other men to become better men. Amen. I think men need
vulnerability role models. Men need love and support. Men need around other men that have similar
life experiences around sex to transcend the shame that's keeping our lives small. Praise God,
I think that's really, really important.
I think men heal best in community as it relates to sexual compulsivity.
And so it's so hard to heal and shame by yourself.
You can't.
I don't think you can.
I know, man.
I don't think you can.
It's tough for people, huh?
Yeah.
So I think, you know, in conjunction with that, so many men today are so isolated and so lonely.
And so that's the driver of some of these behaviors.
So once again, the roadmap to healing has to lay the,
the groundwork for connection and community.
And so where you practice kind of being part of something bigger than yourself,
you practice honesty, you practice vulnerability.
It gets modeled to you.
Really important for men to see other men living this way.
Like in recovery circles and stuff?
100%.
Oh, yeah, man.
Oh, sometimes, man, I'll be in a meeting and it's like some guy will say something.
my friend James Boshara, he always tells me,
he says, we are the keys to each other's locks.
That's what he says.
That's sweet.
It's one of the best things, man.
I think about it every single day, you know.
It's like something that gives me hope, I think, a lot of times.
Yeah, because it's like somebody will say something, man,
that like something inside of me has been trying to save my whole life,
and I just couldn't put the right few words together.
It doesn't even have to be a big, huge words or fancy words.
Sometimes it's just a simple thing, but somebody,
will say it.
And a part of me will exhale that's been waiting to exhale for so long.
How sweet is that?
Yeah.
Oh, it's amazing, man.
So, yeah, I can't iterate how much recovery and the community, right?
Yeah.
And then the fact that, like, dude, sometimes, like, I'll notice, like, especially
these days, we get so caught up in our own worlds.
But it almost feels like a gift when I think about when somebody else comes into my mind
or heart.
Like, there's times where I purposely sit down.
I want to think about people and stuff.
But if I'm just like, oh, I'll be like, oh, I just saw them the other day.
And they mentioned this.
Let me call and check in about it.
Or just something that's like if it's about somebody else, bro.
That's like the, when that happens naturally in my head, it's the best thing that ever happened to me.
And it's just because of community.
But it only happens if I go to those meetings, if I'm interacting with guys.
That's right.
If I'm a part of community, right?
And you need guys in your life like, okay, Theo, enough with the show.
What's really going on?
Right.
You need guys like that.
Oh, dude, to tell somebody that, bro, I'm fucking, yeah.
Like this one, I was in a meeting this morning, man.
I'm trying to, let me think about what I said if I'm really honest, right?
I got into a meeting.
A lot of times I'll do a Zoom in the mornings.
You and I go to one that's similar.
Is that okay to say?
Please.
And I'll be in the gym.
I'll work out while I'm in there.
So I'll listen because it helps me get two things done.
It makes me feel pretty like I'm doing something.
And what I say today,
oh, I'm trying to keep some negative things out of my head.
So I'm staying focused.
I'm staying on a path.
Like I'm staying active.
Because if I stay active,
I stand a better chance when those things coming in my head.
And I was trying to be honest to guys.
Like, hey, these are some of the things that I've been thinking about.
I know that these things grow.
If I don't share about them at this level,
at this level of being a seed,
I know it'll grow into a cactus.
that I don't want inside of me.
So I have to share it at a seed, right?
I had to learn a lot of times
I fucking juggle with a lot of cactuses
because, but learning to share
something at a seed level.
Calling it out early.
Calling it out early, yes.
And then just said like,
yeah, like I'm so sick of myself,
but I feel like I'm the only person that I have.
And that was like,
and I know it's not true,
but to share, even if it's a feeling, right?
Because once I shared it's a feeling,
I know it's not true.
I have a ton, I have a lot of friends.
I have people that love me.
But sometimes I have to share what a feeling is, right?
So it doesn't, because that feeling
sometimes can grow if I don't share it,
it sits in there, you know?
Anyway, does it make any sense?
I make, you know, it's so interesting as you're,
as you're sharing.
I'm just thinking about this concept of like,
like recovery is about
this journey towards healthy masculinity.
And when you think about like,
Like the word masculinity often gets conflated with toxicity today,
which I think is kind of unfair.
Oh, it's unfair, and I think it's by design.
That's right.
Masculinity to me is what you just talked about.
Honesty, integrity, vulnerability, courage,
being a protector, being a provider,
being a great friend, showing up for others,
and living a life that's bigger than just yours.
Yeah.
And so when you think about like this journey of recovery,
this journey to becoming a healthy man,
what a beautiful journey it is, right?
You think about like, you know, porn abuse
teaches us and trains us to objectify
and disrespect women.
I think healthy masculinity is about humanizing women.
Women are beautiful and amazing.
Yeah, and we came from a woman.
Like, I wonder what the effects are.
See if you can find something about this.
What are the effects of pornography
on young men's relationship with their mothers
of watching pornography?
You know what I'm saying?
Like, if you start, because it's like,
I do notice when I'm,
healthy and I'm taking care of myself,
I'm able to view the women in my life
differently, right?
And I'm able to view them how they should be viewed.
Visit BetMDM casino and check out
the newest exclusive. The Price is Right Fortune Pick.
BetMDM and GameSense remind you to play responsibly.
19 plus to wager.
Ontario only. Please play responsibly.
If you have questions or concerns about your gambling
or someone close to you, please contact Connects Ontario
at 1-866-531-2-600 to 6.
speak to an advisor free of charge.
BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with Eye Gaming, Ontario.
Hey, I'm telling you this right now, that Shopify,
Shopify is hands down the best place to start and grow a business these days.
If you're trying to start your own thing, you need to know them.
We use them.
They've helped us put a store together and have it adjust as we adjust.
When things are busier, we can up it.
and when things are not as busy, we can down it.
Shopify is the platform where you really own everything, your store, your community, all of it.
Plus, Shopify gets your products in front of shoppers wherever they are, Google, YouTube, TikTok, shop, the shop app, and even chat GPT.
Chat GPT.
We use them for our merch store.
Yep, I told you that.
Shopify, they made me realize, look, you can't do it alone.
Thought about starting a business, this is your sign.
Get started today at Shopify.com slash Theo.
That's Shopify.com slash T-H-E-O.
Today's episode is brought to you by Manscaped.
The men's grooming brand trusted by over 13 million men worldwide.
That's a lot of men.
Now, let's be real, a lot of these grooming tools,
they overcomplicate stuff and they,
and they don't perform that well.
Some of them, you got to whistle into the back end of it to even get them started or something.
Or they run on diesel or it's too much.
So if you've got a beard or you're thinking about upgrading your setup at the house to take care of your hair,
the new beardheader Plus from Manscaped, well, it's just dagged gumbed worth checking out.
I've used a lot of tremors and this and that and, you know, just butter.
I've used it all.
I've sharpened a butter knife and try to take it, you know, things get clunky.
This one's simple.
Yep, I've been using one.
I've had it for two weeks now.
If you want something simple that actually works and upgrades your routine, the beard hedger
plus is the way to go.
Head to mansecape.com and use code Theo to get 15% off and free shipping.
That's 15% off your entire order plus free shipping with code Theo at manscape.com.
or if you need it today, you can just go find manscape
at a store near you.
You know, I think a lot of guys are in hiding.
I think a lot of us are afraid to say that we know
that we're in a war and everybody's going
and fighting behind closed doors.
And that's kind of crazy.
When you think about that, that's kind of,
when you think, that's scary.
It's scary.
It's scary.
Right?
And how can, is there a way to win it?
That way, I don't know.
Well, you know, I could tell you from the life I live today,
I mean, I don't feel like I'm in a war, you know.
I have a life that's kind of rooted in love.
Bro, you've changed so much since I met you, man.
Yeah, I have.
You give me hope for the life I could live, man.
That's right.
And, you know, you really do.
I'm glad.
You do.
And you were always everybody's favorite.
You said earlier that people cared about you or like there was something.
There was always somebody like your family was always.
You were like the guy in the meetings, dude.
It was like, because we went to meetings that had like some fancy people.
in them. Real fancy. Some tall people, too.
Oh, yeah. Tall guys. All types of... One tall guy, anyway.
Yeah. A couple of real grade A perverts, right?
The Crem de la Crem, right?
I'm sorry. But, bro, we got in those rooms and we, here's the thing.
We laughed in there. We were, people were honest. We laughed.
But, yeah, you were always, it was like, dude, I wish I could be friends with Steve.
That's sweet. It was a truth, bro. And you just made this.
it's so important to laugh in recovery.
Oh, dude.
You've got to realize this shit.
It is,
people laugh so much.
It's not just this dour thing.
No.
No.
Because this stuff is dark.
It's heavy.
And,
dude,
laughing at each other.
I think laughter is so good for the soul,
man.
You read the news right now.
It's so heavy.
You listen to the news.
It's so heavy.
Finding a place to be lighthearted,
to have fun,
to laugh is so healing.
Oh, yeah, man.
You know, me, guys, I struggle with that I talk to
and work with that are struggling.
And if I can get them on the phone,
I can get them to laugh.
Amen.
Oh, dude.
Oh, yeah.
It just takes it from a nine out of a ten
to a six out of a ten.
You know?
Yes.
And it's just so important
to let the air out of the balloon with laughter.
What are the things?
How do guys not realize?
Okay, here, Trevin found something
right here, I'm going to interject real quick here to go back, because I'd never thought about
that before. Does it affect the way I look at my sister, my mother, women in my life and world?
Could be your teacher, anyone, if you're consuming pornography. How porn-shaped beliefs affect
views of mothers. This article explains that frequent exposure to pornography reinforces rigid
gender norms and the objectification of women, or where women are seen primarily as sexual
objects rather than full complex people. Yeah. As these attitudes become part of
teenage boys' belief system, he may begin to see women, including his mother, through a more
dehumanized, stereotyped lens, weakening genuine mutual respect.
And I'll tell you, the challenge today with what you just read is so many men today started
watching porn when they're 10, 11, 12 years old, right? That was like they're part of a generation
where the iPhone just came out. And so they had access to porn at this very,
early stage of their life.
And so at the time you get to work with them in treatment or therapy, and you hear about
like their childhood, they've had pretty normal childhood, normal, right?
Not a lot of trauma, as we would understand trauma.
The trauma is the porn that they started watching at 10 years old.
And it's just kind of intense porn.
You know, how many guys you hear like 10, 11, 12 years old watching rape porn?
Oh.
I mean, how painful is that when you think about that?
Well, yeah, you have to know.
Oh, it's unbelievable.
it's unbelievable.
And you have to know that these companies,
and I'm not setting myself apart from anybody,
like I've been down these roads, you know?
But you have to know that these companies,
this is strategy by them.
This is, I believe,
I don't think that the people that work in porn
or sex work or anything like that,
I don't have any ill thoughts or any of that
towards anybody like that that's involved in it.
I just think in mass,
that they don't have the best,
these companies don't have the best interest for us, right?
Like a lot of the pornography now it's like mother's son,
grandmother's son, you know.
You can't unsee that.
Right, right.
And it also makes you think it's like,
well, these are the most important relationships in the world,
boss secretary,
you know, or just like, whatever it is, sisters.
You know, it's like they're taking the most valuable relationships
that have been given to.
us by our creator and by the world and even by science and they're trying to manipulate
those that they don't have any value to us other than sexual, some sexual perversion.
And if you're 12, 13, 14 years old consuming this stuff, how are you supposed to process that?
Yeah, and just even seeing the words, while you're looking at pornography, you see the word mother, son,
father, dog.
It's all like it's all a strategy.
The devil is at work.
I believe that.
You know, it's the dark arts.
And I'm not saying that I don't wade through the waters of them, you know,
but that's one thing you said.
It's like we continue to fight.
We don't give up, you know.
And you learn so much along the way.
Yeah.
Yeah, before we keep moving on what I want to ask you too, Steve,
what are there things that could be happening that mothers or fathers might not see
that how their use of pornography or like checking out.
out like that sexually checking out of like their environment you know they're used to watch them
pornography um could be affecting things with their interactions with their children or their home
life uh yeah totally you know it's so interesting as as a because sometimes you don't correlate that
no you don't you'm saying you just think man my marriage isn't working but separately i'm watching porn
that's right and so when you think about the idea of healthy masculinity being in recovery
and being a father right and so i'm a new father right now and
You know, my son's young.
He's almost about a year right now,
but just the responsibility I have
in modeling to him how you treat a woman.
Really important, right?
The kindness that I show his wife,
getting to see affection, touch,
all that stuff is really important.
I don't, you know, you, I know your story
from your childhood, you know my story
from my childhood.
That wasn't necessarily modeled to us.
And so if you're watching,
pornography, right? And as a result of that, it's distorting your view of women can be challenging, right? You think
maybe they don't know? Trust me, they know. They may not know you're watching porn, but that energy
you have that you can't hide that. Yeah, it's a little bit of shame, it's a little bit of I'm
keeping something secret. That's right. It's a little bit of something's wrong. And I'm,
it's a little bit of, I'm scared, somebody's going to figure this out, and I don't even know what it is.
Well, you know what happens too also guys that abuse porn, right?
They're just not present for their lives.
Yeah.
They're not showing up for their kids, right?
They're on their phones.
They're consumed in fantasy.
They're not present.
They're missing life.
Yeah.
You're missing life.
And so when you guys get into recovery, dude, you see this all the time.
They start coaching flag football teams and loving it.
They're able to show up in their lives and be present.
they're better fathers, they're better husbands.
They're emotionally regulated.
Yeah, they're not involved.
It's almost like porn is like your,
it's like your wiener playing video games.
That's interesting.
It's not real.
If you walked into a room every day
and your wiener was playing a video game,
at some point you'd be like,
turn it off and get the fuck up and go outside.
You know what I'm saying?
Like you would tell,
you'd want your main...
Depends on what video game.
That's a good point.
That's if it's Castlevania or something.
Yeah.
But I'm just saying like,
anyway, I don't know what I'm saying.
that's one thing I noticed in, in meetings what I've been in when people share,
and people start to get better.
They start to say, man, like today I had the desire to spend time with my kids,
to engage, to go outside and do this with my daughter,
to, like, flirt with my wife in the kitchen.
Like, I walk in the house and there's a look on my face that I'm excited to see this person that loves me.
Just little things like that I've heard guys sharing meetings that are like,
that just let me know that, um,
that recovery's real, you know?
And the joy of living.
Yeah, what have you seen recovery look like for people?
Like, what are some testimonials that you've experienced in the rooms?
Yeah.
And even through valor.
Yeah.
And so lots of good stuff.
Let me think of a few good ones that might be, well, I'll share a story.
One of our first clients, 62-year-old man, been abusing porn for about 40 years.
And long time, you know.
And by the time he got to Valor, he was six years sober
and alcoholics Anonymous.
But he was in so much pain.
He had not been divorced for 10 years,
had not had sex in 10 years,
and was so full of shame.
And when I first met with him, you know,
I would try to get some goals.
Like, what do you want to try to accomplish here?
And he said, I want to stop watching porn.
I said, awesome, we're going to help you do that.
What else?
Tell me what to play with it.
And he just couldn't get there.
just make something up.
Tell me a long-term girl.
If you had like a genie in a bottle,
you had a wish,
give me something.
I'll never forget what he said.
He said, you know something, Steve?
For as long as I can remember now,
on Sundays I go grocery shopping by myself for the week.
And I see families shopping and couple shopping.
And it's so lonely.
He goes, one day,
I'd like to go shopping with a girl I'm dating.
I said, okay.
You know, about eight months later,
that guy sent me a shot of him and his girlfriend grocery shopping.
And it broke me.
And I remember telling my wife this story and just crying.
And she's like, what's coming up for you?
And she can't really understand because two things.
I know that pain of loneliness.
and I know how good it feels to be free of it.
Wow.
Great story.
Love that story on what's on offer here.
That's what's on offer here, huh?
Yeah, the toys of living, finding love.
Another great story.
You hear this with consistency, you know.
I get a phone call with a guy that's maybe sober six, nine months.
This one guy in particular, and he says, Steve, you know,
last night I was on the couch, staring at my wife.
and it's like I'm seeing her for the first time
and I can't believe how pretty she is.
Wow.
Like to me,
hearing that brings me so much joy
when you kind of,
that fog lifts,
that porn-induced shame-based fog lifts
and you can actually see life in color
versus black and white.
What a gift,
you know.
Yeah, man.
And then you see,
guys that get time. This is what drives me wild. They get time. They get six months, nine months a year
away from pornography, and wild stuff starts happening. They go back to grad school. They launch a new
business. They get a big raise. Like, what the hell is I got to do with you not watching porn?
Yeah. The answer's everything. Because what's happening now is you're transcending the shame that's
keeping your life small.
Mm.
You always hear like a guy all of a sudden,
a guy lacks confidence in himself.
He's so full of shame,
lives a double life.
He walks into a restaurant.
Can never actually make eye contact
with that woman at the bar?
He maybe looks over,
puts his head down, and walks to his table.
He's now nine months sober, right?
He makes eye contact, walks over,
and introduces himself.
Yeah.
And they're now engaged.
Let's go.
These are the stories of recovery.
didn't mention anything about not watching porn.
Not watching porn is just the point of entry.
Learning how to live a life that you don't need to escape from
is what recovery's all about.
Recovery is about learning how to experience
the joys of love and connection.
So one simple question I tell guys all the time,
it's real simple, it's real simple.
Is your porn use bringing you closer to
or further away from the man you want to be?
And if you don't like the answer to that question, what do you want to do about it?
Yeah.
Yeah, it's, it's, I've been in a lot of the meetings where I've seen guys share about stuff
and you've seen a guy have a new experience, you know.
It's the best.
When does a lot of this, is there a time that you notice how and when a lot of this starts
for a lot of guys, Steve?
Have you been able to put together new theories about that?
Younger and younger, you know, because you've talked a lot about,
Valor on your podcast, we have seen a lot of younger men in their 20s. When I first started Valor,
I thought I would work with guys like me, older professional men that are dealing with a porn
addiction, sexual compulsivity, and need to get help. And we've worked with a fair amount of that.
But because of your fan base, there are a lot of single men in their 20s. And challenging dynamic
because they're not married. They're not in a relationship. There's no external
consequences and they've been doing this for like 10, 15 years. Right. And so it's like,
you know, they've been in full-blown addiction for over a decade and they're 22 years old.
I don't even realize it. I don't even realize it. That's the craziest part. Wild. Wild. It's just
like a regular habit. It's like taking a melatonin. A hundred percent. It's just part of their life.
Yeah. It has rewired and conditioned their brain and they're full of so much shame. And they're
they lack such confidence in themselves.
So breaking them free of porn.
It's interesting, how do you motivate and inspire a guy like that to stay on this journey?
How do you create motivation in their life to continue on this path, even though their path
can be choppy at times?
Yes.
How do you get that guy to continue to show up and not be in shame if he watches a little
bit of porn, right?
That guy can be getting better.
Watching 80 to 90% less porn over any given month.
Great job.
keep coming back.
If you return to the behavior
and you relapse or return to use,
own it quickly, talk about it,
learn from it, and keep growing.
Yeah.
And so motivating younger men
is been a little different
and to create inspiration
because here's the truth.
They're so isolated and so disconnected.
They have significantly less friends
than decades before.
everything is kind of online everything is virtual and so the loneliness is profound well as part of
existence it's not like i think some people you don't even notice that you're lonely anymore that's
one of the wildest things you'll spend all day by yourself but you won't really notice that you're
because you have some interactions you see people you see them so there's all this hijacking of things that are real
that would normally make you feel like you are not alone.
You see people, you hear voices, you know, I mean, you're, you know, you can even engage
on people.
I'm not hearing voices is perhaps the best thing.
It's like you can see people on your phone or on your computer.
You can, you can do FaceTime.
Like you can, so there's all these like, like these secondary little pieces, but the connection,
the true, the reality.
And remote work certainly doesn't help.
I mean, there are guys that just don't leave their home.
Well, yeah, it's like you could basically go to work online.
You could get off or get some order some food online.
Then you could look at pornography or something, go to bed,
and that's your day and that's your existence.
And you're just sort of this thing.
But there's so much, we're supposed to be so much more than that.
I think some of it has become almost just this habit that we don't even know that we're in.
Yeah, I could see that.
I mean, yeah, and I'm not preaching at anybody.
think it's just like, I don't know, just the, like, the awareness that you could be in something
and not realize it is something kind of wild, you know?
Yeah, I think that's, that's, that's absolutely true.
And what are some, what are, what are, I want to ask you outside of valor, because you run
Valor Recovery, that's your program. And, um, and thank you so much. I know there was a lot of guys,
like, who kind of came in through, through the podcast who you were like, were trying to help
and offer recovery too.
So thank you so much for having conversations
with those guys over the years.
And by the way, so many of those guys
are killing it right now.
Are they?
Yes, they are.
And I'm going to say this to you
because it needs to be heard.
There are so many men
that because of your vulnerability
on this podcast
talking about your challenges around that
gave them the courage
to reach out and ask for help.
So your vulnerability is a gift
to this world.
Well, thank you.
I appreciate that.
Yeah. Yeah, sometimes it's scary to be vulnerable.
I don't know. It's not scary. It's like, I don't know.
I don't know any other way to live, really.
You know?
I don't think I know any other way to live. I don't know.
I don't know. Sometimes I'm, I think I share too much, probably, but.
Well, I could tell you, as it relates to this topic,
I can't tell you how many conversations we've had in the thousands now,
where the conversation starts.
Theo said it was okay to talk.
about this I've shared those stories with you over the years yeah I know you have
appreciate it that's important man yeah some point and stuff what a gift yes I
yeah I mean it makes it's it's it's tough to know that a lot of people are hurting
you know it's tough to know that I that we've all hurt you know it's tough to know
most of the people that I love the most have have have hurt a lot of us you know
me included and we didn't just
And, you know, yeah, I'm just glad I've met a lot of good guys through recovery, you know.
There wouldn't be a program, you know, if you didn't do it.
That's right.
And the great thing about recovery is you can live a life that's superior to the life you were living.
Yeah, that's the truth.
That's the beauty of it.
And so not easy sometimes to get there, but if you stay the course, you don't give up, you keep leaning into this.
you're going to build the life that brings you joy
where you don't need to engage in behaviors
to numb the pain that you're in.
That's a process.
Yeah.
What are some of the triggers that you see that you notice?
Is that okay to ask?
Yeah.
You know, there's just patterns, right?
So many men struggle with profound loneliness and boredom.
They're disconnected.
They're alone.
And so when you look at these urges,
right? There tends to be a predictability to when you're vulnerable to them, right? So late at night
scrolling on your phone. Dude, leave the phone, don't bring the phone in the bedroom. Yeah,
set it down. Simple fix. Well, Steve, I work all week long Friday nights. I'm by myself,
and there's just this period of time right now, of unstructured time where I'm really vulnerable.
Okay, let's make a plan around that. Why don't you book dinner? Why don't you bookend the evening
with a friend of yours? So you're not alone right now. Make some, a dinner date with a
with a friend right now, get out of the house, right?
And so there's just these patterns that men experience
as it relates to stress, boredom, and loneliness.
And so when you pull up and kind of look at this stuff, right,
and learn from this stuff, you can, men don't plan to fail.
They fail to plan.
And so working with people that understand this
can go a long way to putting you on the path to being successful.
Amen, man, yeah.
The other thing that's really tricky today is social.
You're going for a walk with a friend.
Just go for a walk.
Dude.
Dude, my best time.
Maybe we'll go for a walk after this, me and you.
Yeah.
I'll go for a walk with you.
Yeah, sure.
A little time.
No, I'll make time.
I'd love it, dude.
Yeah, bro.
Thank you, bro.
Dude, there's nothing better than going for a walk with one of your friends.
It might seem like, and even if y'all are straight, y'all can do it.
If you're not straight, you can do it.
But some of that stuff got hijacked by the gay community, I think.
Like, just going for a walk with your buddy.
I'm not saying it did.
But it got slightly hijacked.
Just a hint.
Hey, we got to take our pedestrian rights back.
But anyway, what were we saying?
We were talking about triggers.
Oh, yeah.
So that's one for me.
I noticed things that would leave me to do masturbation
or be touching my body sometimes like that,
looking in pornography.
Stress, right?
I'm up later than I need to be.
A lot of times I'll have a deal with myself.
I have a plan to go to bed.
Shit will happen.
She'll have with work next year.
I'm up 45 minutes later.
I can't handle it.
Right?
So now it's like I got to go to sleep.
I'll think that masturbation will help me.
you go to sleep, right?
What else?
Social media.
Yeah, social media just, I know that that keeps me up late.
So I do a pretty good job of that.
Like, I know now when I open, there's not even super good in there.
You know, I'll maybe say, all right, I'm going to go for 30 seconds.
If I find one thing that's kind of engaging, and I'm shutting it down.
I'm starting to realize that what a Pandora's box it is.
It really is.
And, you know, the science will support that, like these.
dopamine spikes from this endless scrolling on social media.
Yeah.
And you look at the sexual content on social media.
It may not be full porn, but it can be pretty explicit.
Yeah.
And so it's a real problem because it's this funnel.
And oftentimes guys in early recovery get tripped up because they're on Instagram right now.
There's this kind of image, which is a link to an only fan's account, and all of a sudden,
they're back in the dance.
And so that's really important.
that's kind of, you know, endless scrolling,
and endless seeking novelty can be really challenging.
Because then the alternative is,
though, you have to think about what that is,
and you have to plan for that in your head,
I notice for myself, right?
So if I'm not gonna be scrolling,
I might just be laying there in my bed, right?
And what's wrong with that?
There's nothing wrong with it.
But at first it can feel a little bit uncomfortable.
Oh, I should be doing something.
Those are the feelings I go through.
I should be doing something, right?
And, you know, you're like, well, what was,
Would that be?
So at first it's a little tough.
Now, sometimes my mind will start to just imagine or think of things, which is kind of nice, right?
Like if it's not negative stuff, it's like my mind.
It's like daydreaming or something.
It used to be something people did a lot, daydreaming.
But so that can happen or I can read or I can just go to sleep.
But there is a little bit of like an uncomfortable moment sometimes where it's like, ah, I should be doing something.
But I don't really, I'm not really mean I should be doing something.
I mean I should just be looking at something on my phone.
Can you tolerate the boredom in that moment,
or do you need to go get a quick fix?
I'm doing meditation pretty regularly now.
Good.
So I'm having a little bit more toleration with it.
It's important.
Yeah, I think like the short-form videos,
these kind of quick fixes on all these social media,
is such a distraction.
Yeah.
Right?
And so getting time away from your phone.
Oh, yeah.
That's key.
Long-form reading, hobbies, creativity,
working on projects,
I think are so healthy for you.
Yeah, I think, yeah, doing things,
building a little birdhouse,
doing something like that,
getting excited about leap year,
just doing regular shit.
When is leap year?
Huh?
When is the next leap year?
We'll never know, bro.
Because for you know, it is gone.
That's right.
That's how it is, bro.
I missed a lot of leap years over the years.
Who hasn't, twin?
Let's look at some of those stats.
What did you have, Trav?
I want to get in a little bit of information here.
I want to say this just so people, to give a little bit more context to pornography overall,
Pornhub was the fifth most visited website in the world by December 2020.
Just if people don't think that we are at war, right?
Some people think like, oh, America, we're safe, we're not, we're, we're at war.
Pornhub had about 170 million visits per day and 62 billion visits per year.
And that was 2020.
the amount of content uploaded a porn of in a single year
would take about 169 years to watch
if you played the videos back to back.
And this was some information
because sometimes you're watching stuff on there
where the people in it have not consented
to it being put online,
or that it was even recorded,
and sometimes that it's not
that they haven't consented even to the sex in the video.
Right? The Broward County
Florida case. This was a case. A 15-year-old girl missing for a year was found only after a
Pornhub user recognized her and tipped off her mother. Police eventually found her in 58
monetized videos on the site. So just to know how Pornhub is okay with operating. Lila McElwate,
who came on here, and she has done a great job with exposing the porn industry, for the negative
aspects of it. The London Sunday Times investigation,
reporters were able to find dozens of illegal videos on the site within minutes,
including videos of children as young as three that were on on Pornhub.
So just to let you know like the kind of stuff that can be happening on there.
Oh nice. So Lila tested that. Oh, at the time Lila tested the upload flow to just see how easy it was to just put something up.
All it took to upload a video was an email address.
There was no ID or age verification,
no consent verification required for people in the videos.
Oh.
Anyone with a smartphone could upload a video in under 10 minutes from anywhere in the world.
So, anyway, it just gives a little more context to what we're even watching.
Because sometimes you're looking at something and you don't even really know what it is.
Or where it came from.
Or where it came from, right?
And if you can add some context to it, it makes it a little bit different.
You know, so many of those people are been either physically or sexually abused in their childhood, right, have been trafficked.
This is not, sometimes this is non-consent.
And there's just a gross element to a lot of it.
There is.
And you kind of get tricked in a little, I think, in a way.
You don't maybe realize it.
I don't know, especially if you're kind of susceptible.
Oh, yeah, this right here, I remember this, Visa and MasterCard suspend payments for ad purchases on Pornhub and Mind Geek amid controversy.
um visa and mastercard said thursday card payments for advertising on porn hub and its parent company mind geek would be suspended after a lawsuit stoke controversy or whether the payment giants could be facilitating child pornography uh visa condemns sex trafficking sexual exploitation and child sexual abuse it is illegal and visa does not permit the use of our network for illegal activity because visa was was being accepted on these websites
So it's kind of crazy.
It's like, okay, so you're saying that if this is happening on these websites, then you're okay with your...
Kind of complicit.
Right.
You're kind of complicit.
Give me an update on that if you can.
And who owns Mind Geek changed to ALO?
I remember that AYLO.
Who owns that company?
Ethical Capital Partners.
Of course they do.
Of course they do.
Unbelievable.
Parent organization is ethical capital partners.
Key ECP leadership is Fadi.
Mansoor, a managing partner, Rocco Milibro, and Solomon Friedman.
Through its parent company, ECPO and some of those highly traffic digital networks in the adult
entertainment industry, including PornHub, Red Tube, U-Porn, browsers, and men.com.
Find photos of those guys if you can, just so we can put the faces with just who they are.
And that's all according to what site?
Wikipedia.
Okay, that's all Google and Wikipedia.
So, yeah, give me.
pictures of those three guys. Let's put them up just so people know who is, who feels like it's okay,
you know? And I do want to say most recently I saw there was a, there was an artist,
there was a story I saw where one of the financial companies failed to stop a payment for,
was it only fans, it was something that was MasterCard Visa failed to stop payments on only fans for
child sex abuse content says a whistleblower. Let me see, MasterCard and Visa failed to stop
their payment networks from laundering proceeds from child sex abuse material and sex trafficking
on the popular website only fans according to allegations that a previously unisclosed whistleblower
complaint filled with the u.s treasury's financial crimes unit the complaint was filed in january
2023 the complaint said the whistleblower and other anti-trafficking experts including u.s federal
agents alerted visa and master card to unlawful content on only fans in a series of calls in
2021 and 2022.
The federal agents corroborated the presence of child sexual abuse material on only fans.
The complaint said it also drew heavily on a 22 study by an anti-trafficking group that said
it had found a high volume of only fans accounts with common indicators of child sexual abuse
material or sex trafficking.
The whistleblower said he helped with the study, which was shared with the card companies.
In the interview, the whistleblower said the agencies never contacted him to discuss his
complaint, the card companies had the power to turn off the switch to stop illicit material
from being monetized.
So there's just, you know, it goes to that place I guess there's like a, there's a business
element to it.
A visa spokesperson said financial institutions and merchants that don't comply with
visa's robust compliance requirements will be terminated from its network.
The company uses best in class controls to deter, detect, and remediate illegal activity.
If there's anything else I should in there, let me know.
Since the whistleblower complaint was filed,
Reuters uncovered more allegations of child,
sexual abuse, and sex trafficking on only fans,
a porn-driven site that generates money
through subscriptions and pay-per-view content.
Huh.
I mean, those companies are also so big.
I bet it's so hard to police everything.
Sure.
And that was just a complaint, Trevin?
That's right. Not a ruling.
But it was officially filed.
It's on the record.
Okay, got it.
Okay, thank you so much.
Tell me a little bit about Valor Recovery.
And this episode was not intended at all
to be an ad for your company or anything like that.
Sure.
But, you know, this is just such a thing
and you're the guy that I know
and we've been friends for so long.
But tell me about Valor and thank you for starting it.
Yeah, thank you.
Valor Recovery is a company I founded many years ago now
that helps men that are struggling with pornography abuse
and sexual compulsivity.
It's a virtual program.
You know, what we have found over the years is so many men struggled getting help for this,
finding the right type of help.
Using community-based resources are challenging because of shame and stigma.
Like, what do you mean by that?
Like, going to a meeting locally?
Going to a meeting locally.
Going to a program locally.
People are just, they're so concerned, given the nature of this.
And they don't take advantage of those resources.
So creating a virtual program that can be accessible
with a click of a button is amazing, right?
And offering something that's more discreet
just helps guys feel more comfortable getting help.
And so virtual program, it's a coaching program
and the thing that's really unique about
that what we have found is so many men benefit
from coaching on this topic, different than therapy.
Therapy is very valuable as well.
but coaching is around accountability, setting goals,
learning new skills,
and practicing those skills
so you think and feel differently about yourself over time.
Got it.
Yeah, you have to put something on the other side of the scale.
That's one thing I've learned in recovery.
I'm not saying I do it all the time,
but you can't just,
you have to put something on the other side of the scale
that has valuable weight to it.
I think that's right.
And so, you know, the program is unique.
One of the unique aspects around it, everyone that works at Valor Recovery is in long-term
sexual recovery.
So these are men that have 10 years, 20 years, in several cases, 30 years of sexual sobriety.
Why is that important?
It's just the shared life experience puts us in a very unique position to help people, to understand
people, because we've been there.
We are you.
So collectively, this team has helped thousands of people over their lifetimes deal with these
challenges, right?
So that's really important.
It's a program that really is set up with small intimate groups so that men learn to be part of a community.
Got it.
Men learn how to connect with each other.
You know, the opposite of addiction is often not recovery.
It's often said to be connection.
And so we're a program that offers small group settings, process groups, there's curriculum around, you know, how to deal with urges and triggers, identify root causes that are driving compulsions.
curriculum around healthy intimacy,
healthy sexuality, and healthy masculinity.
Amen.
And so we've had a lot of men come to this program and get better,
something we take a lot of pride in.
Now, it's not easy work.
I can promise you that it's not easy work,
but we take a lot of pride in helping men become the men
God intended them to be.
And whatever that word, God means you higher self,
whatever that is.
We help men put them in alignment with their higher self
so they can go on.
and do good things in their lives.
Are there guys or women out there
who may not have a problem specifically with porn,
but is there other things they could be having a problem with?
Yeah.
I think what you're asking me is if the,
can people be suffering from other behaviors other than pornography?
That could be having the same outcome for them.
That's correct.
Yeah, that's what I'm asking you.
Is it relationship compulsivity,
infidelity in relationships,
prostitution, I mean,
I mean, there's just a host of behaviors that can manifest itself that are just really unhealthy for people.
And so men or woman doesn't necessarily have to be pornography.
And so the answer is yes.
And there are just a lot of great resources out there for both men and women to deal with these issues,
whether it's working with a therapist that may be trained in sexual compulsivity or sex addiction.
There are great 12-step programs out there,
different fellowships for men and women,
sex addicts anonymous, sex-in-love addicts anonymous,
sex-aholics anonymous,
that men and women that are community-based,
12-step-based programs that could be really valuable.
Adult children of alcoholics, sorry to interrupt you,
I just want to forget.
There's a lot of important, yeah,
people don't realize that there's things out there
that it's like, you might be like,
well, I'm not this, I don't have this,
but maybe my parent did,
and you lived in the shadows of it,
or you lived as a recipient of the byproducts of it.
There's recovery stuff for that.
And we're not saying everybody needs recovery,
but we're saying that some of this stuff is a big issue
that's facing people,
and we both struggle with it.
So shit, other people might.
And that's right.
And I think the one thing you can listen to,
this is not a life sentence, not death sentence, man.
You can get better.
For sure.
You can absolutely get better,
and you can live that life that you've dreamed of.
It's going to take work,
but there are great people out there to help you.
Yes.
And so if you're struggling,
I mean, have the courage to reach out and get some help.
Yeah.
And we'll put links to like Valor.
We'll put links to sex and love addiction, intimacy disorder, anonymous.
We'll put a link to some of those things in this so people can check it out.
There's like some online like Zoom sex addiction meetings that you can go to.
Can I share that out publicly?
Yeah, there's those meetings that you can go to.
You can just sit with your camera off and just listen and see what it's like.
see how people are sharing and see what's going on.
Yeah, I just want to know that that stuff's out there.
I think sometimes people don't even know that it's out there.
I didn't know it existed, you know, until you get in a certain places and you're like,
you know, I was realizing I was just having such a tough time in relationships and a relationship with myself.
It was like, it was so hard for me to get to know myself without like,
I always felt like how to just prove who I was, even to me.
Like almost every day
It was like
Yeah
It was like if I didn't
I had to do something to show you who I was
I couldn't just be
Right
I've had like that love
What's it called love attraction love avoidance?
What is it?
But what is it when you
It's like come here or go away or whatever that thing
Not sure
It's like come here go away
I would have whatever that shit was
Sounds awful
Yeah
Oh but it was it was a lot of my
relationships. Yeah. It was like, hey, I need you over here. I want to be with you, but then the second
somebody got close, I was like, that's right. That's right. And if a lot of guys, there's sexual
anorexia. What is that? I mean, just a complete avoidance of all sex. Oh, I thought you're starving,
so you have sex or whatever. A good hamburger. Yeah, no. That's how that American pie scene came to be.
Sexual anorexia is a term coined in 1975 by psychologist Nathan Hare to describe a fear or
deep aversion to sexual activity.
It is considered a loss of appetite
for sexual conduct
and may result in a fear of intimacy.
May result in a fear of intimacy
or an aversion to any type of sexual interaction.
And the compulsive non-sex
is an addiction of it itself, right?
And so you just think about like, you know,
what we are striving for, right?
Is a version of healthy sexuality that works for you.
Yeah.
So many guys get into recovery, and then that's it.
I've stopped these behaviors.
And they can go for a while, but they're kind of unhappy and miserable.
So unless you kind of lean in and challenge yourself to date, companionship, connection, healthy sex, that's what recovery is about.
Yeah.
That's how you put these behaviors in the rearview mirror and never look back.
You have to replace it with something that brings you more joy and purpose.
Amen.
Yeah.
And a lot of times that will have.
happen because you're the way the program set up.
It's like you interact with more people.
You say yes to more things.
It's like, you know, so it's like it can.
And it's easier to say yes when you're not full of shame.
Oh, for sure.
When you're feeling better about yourself because you're not putting that junk in your
system with consistency, you know, it just gives you your ability to show up as the best
version of yourself.
Kind of happens over time.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's a learning process, man.
Yeah.
And the thing is the program is always there.
So if something happens or something, you know, I'm saying,
if you have a setback or whatever's going on, it's always there.
It's there.
It's like unconditional.
That's pretty cool.
It is great.
That's like that.
Oh, here's a summary of how shorries come here, go away the dynamics of fearful attachment.
Wow.
I think this is what I had.
Past tense?
Fearful attachment.
Yeah, I don't think I have this anymore.
Nice.
Which is, it's kind of crazy.
It's like now I feel like,
I used to never think I would, dude, it's so funny,
when I was a kid, this is true.
And when I was even a teen and young adult,
I didn't understand how people could be married.
It didn't even make sense to me at a level of, like, human affection.
Like, I don't even understand.
I remember I'd go watch people's families eat dinner
and should I go sit and, like, watch peeping Tom and or whatever, right?
Because it was like a, I didn't even understand it.
Well, what was modeled to you when your child at home?
Now you understand it.
Nothing.
There it is.
I mean, nothing.
In fact, the opposite.
The opposite of nothing.
Yes.
Less than nothing.
Less than nothing, dude.
Some weird integer.
But at the time, I didn't even know what I was doing.
But I was just so like, it was like watching somebody find something, I don't know, see something foreign.
And then, and then slowly over time, it made sense.
sense to me. And then there was like times where I remember the first time that I thought I wanted
to have a family. Bro, it blew my mind. I never felt that in my life, you know? I cannot wait to you
get married and have a kid. Yeah, we got to get it out there, boy. I cannot wait. You're going to
just, hey, you're going to be, you have a heart as big as any person I know. Thanks, bro. And the more that
you get comfortable showing that side of you to a woman
and build a life right now with that person, my goodness.
It'll be incredible to be part of.
Yeah, we're going to have to get a camper, dude, right for hit the road.
That's it.
Yeah, take that love on the road, brother.
But no, I feel you, man.
Thank you, bro.
Yeah.
Like, yeah, my first instinct is kind of joke.
Sometimes when things get serious or something.
And I used to be that way all the time.
Now I'm not that way.
You know, there's times where I can be in some of those spaces.
But, dude, I remember the first time I thought, man, I would like that.
Yeah.
It blew my mind.
But it's all because of just things I've learned in meetings over time, you know?
Things that there's a different way, right?
Yeah, what would you say?
Somebody out there who's thinking, I think this is me, right?
We're talking about porn addiction or some of this intimacy stuff.
Yeah, what can they do to start getting some hell?
Yeah, there are lots of great resources out there.
And we'll put Valor, too.
Valor Recovery is a great resource.
out there. Happy to talk to anybody listening here to see if there's a way we can help you.
Happy to refer you to other programs as well if you need a higher level of care, right?
There are great therapists out there. There's great 12-step communities out there.
I think anybody that listening to this, the one thing I hope is that you have the courage
to reach out and ask for help. Amen, bro. That's it. Dude, and I want to say this. I want to say thank you.
There was like, I have received message from so many guys that said, I call.
called and I talked to Steve.
I, like, he, like, you know, a lot of places, that's not the thing.
No, I promise you.
Early on, I promise you made a promise to you that I was going to handle your people
that called me a podcast myself personally.
Yeah.
And I did.
I appreciate that.
I didn't.
It was important.
And I, you know, it was, it was rewarding.
I learned so much about how these men are hurting and struggling.
And, uh, I also learned.
learn so much on how important your voices
in these men's lives.
And so keep doing what you're doing, brother.
Well, thanks, man.
Yeah, yeah, we're just learning as we go, you know,
and we don't have to do it alone.
So I haven't had to do it alone with this show.
This show helped me not be alone.
This show gave me something to do, like,
you know, there were times I probably would have been using
or doing things that I, you know, like,
there's times it hasn't saved me from that,
but there's been so many times where it has, you know?
where it gave me like some sense of like value or purpose.
Your voice matters, man.
And sometimes not even my voice, just listening.
Just being somebody like, I learn that at sometimes.
Sometimes I still make mistakes on it, but let me just listen so other people can listen.
Yeah, beautiful.
You know?
And I don't mean that in any egotistical.
I just feel like it's just been like, yeah, I think when I was little, I just wanted to have a voice.
Like I just, like I wanted, like, I wanted, like.
yeah I was just I think when I was really young I was in so much pain and just nobody could hear me
you know and I didn't even know what was wrong I just knew that it hurt and then yeah you get to like
and that's all I wanted and God helped me have that you know and so it's been like it's not by accident
you're here yeah we all have this belief like some reason like going it should have looked differently
it should be different than it was.
And the truth is, it all happened exactly the way it had to happen to be here right now.
Right?
I look back at my history and be like, oh my God, like that should have looked,
all the money that I wasted on drugs or crazy behaviors.
Well, if I had $1 more, maybe I would have bought that line of Coke that had fentanyl.
If I had $1 more, perhaps I don't meet my wife, have my son, or start valor recovery.
So who am I to go back and say that should have looked differently?
Everything I went through I had to go through to be here right now.
The only way to put purpose to your pain is to have lived through that pain.
I think that's what you just shared.
Thanks, man.
Yeah, amen.
I'm glad you did, bro.
I'm glad you stayed the course.
Yeah, me too.
Yeah?
I really am, man.
I was super him.
Mike Tyson said that same thing, man, when I talked to him.
He just said, man, I wouldn't trade any of it.
as painful as parts of it were,
as disgraceful as parts of it were,
you know, I had to go through all of it
to be the man I am today.
Yeah.
It's kind of crazy.
I mean, it's unbelievable, really.
It's kind of crazy.
Yes.
It's kind of crazy.
You had to go through everything you went.
I know a lot about your child.
I know a lot about your life, right?
It prepared you for this moment.
So it's crazy to go back and think,
oh, it should have looked differently.
That's a good point, huh?
Wow, I think sometimes it's tough to, yeah, you're so right.
And sometimes I still will think that.
I don't know if I still will think that,
but I still will suffer some of like,
there's still like some old pain that flares up.
Me too.
And people sometimes would be like,
you have to get over,
you have to get rid of that.
And it's like, you can,
but sometimes it's still a real thing.
It's like, just because you forgive and you move on,
doesn't mean that there's sometimes still not some shit that hurts.
That's right.
And both things can be true.
You could be living a good life
and still be hurting at times from your past.
Yeah.
It's not either or it's yes and.
Yeah.
I agree with you.
There's this idea in recovery
that, you know,
everything is rainbows and unicorns.
Yeah.
That's not life.
That's not life.
Yeah.
Right?
Part of life is discomfort.
Part of life is being uncomfortable.
Yeah.
And I wish they kind of would have told us that.
Would you have joined if that was the selfish?
That's a good point of.
If you, if they would have told us,
So it's such a...
Here's a dude.
You're not really going to feel that much better about yourself.
But come on in.
Try this.
I'm not sure that's a good selling point.
Yeah, dude.
They just show you your future and it's just you like, you're just crying behind a wind
Dixie in your truck.
You got to do a better way selling me on this recovery thing than that.
Dude, it's so true, bro.
We had some calls, man.
These are calls.
We have a hotline here on 985, 664-9503.
That's a hotline.
We're coming up on 10 years.
I think we've had this podcast.
When did this podcast start?
December of 2016.
Wow.
Incredible.
That's crazy, man.
Incredible.
In your place in L.A.?
Yeah.
Incredible.
In my kitchen,
I was in Westwood.
We put those curtains up.
Shout it to my ex-girlfriend Megan
who would put up with me
and when I would,
you know,
it'd be like our one night of the weeks
to spend together and I would,
you know,
I would spend it doing this.
Yeah.
And then like get in a bed,
you know, just, you know.
She was such a nice.
nice person. I know. She's the best.
She's the best.
Let's play a couple calls that have come in on the hotline.
This may sound weird
because it's like we're like one of those call-in shows where we're like experts.
We're not experts. We don't know anything.
We're just two guys who are surviving and doing our best.
Steve's doing better than me.
But let's play some of those calls if we can. Please.
Steve, if you'll sit here.
Sure.
Thanks, man.
Hey, Theo, this is Siege from New Mexico, and I just want to tell you, man, you've been happy.
You've been a great help.
And I'm not going to lie, I'm kind of drunk right now.
It's like 12.
You know, it's afternoon.
It's about 110 or whatever.
But I just want to seek your advice on some shit.
You know, I've been addicted to porn and masturbation my entire life.
and that led me to being addicted to alcohol and a way to coat maybe, I don't know,
but, you know, I was texting these Filipino ladies on some bullshit app,
and it turned into me sending them money, and they sent me nudes,
and then it turns out it was all scam.
Obviously, I should have known that, and I did know it before I even went into it,
but I don't even know if I'm addicted.
I've been on a seven-month bender.
I think I've only missed four days of a,
drinking alcohol in the last seven months.
Hey, Siege, thanks for the call, man.
Yeah, I just appreciate you sharing so honestly.
Steve, what do you think is, like, can addictions jump from one to the next?
What have you noticed about that?
That's kind of the thing that I'm taking away from just listening to this.
And thank you, Siege, bro.
And just thanks for being honest.
And I think I'm going to let Steve kind of share some of his insights here.
I see that with frequency, just the relationship between alcohol and drugs and
compulsive porn use. And so making recovery difficult. You know, that was the case for me,
but I had history of porn abuse, but also challenges with cocaine and alcohol. And hard,
really hard. Yeah, because it'll be one can cause the other. Chicken or the egg. Yeah.
Chicken or the egg. And how many guys kind of, because they're hungover, turned to porn to try to
feel better, how many guys kind of make a bad decision like he did, reaching out, giving money to
this scam because he's under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
It's just really hard.
And one of the things that he highlighted, these scams,
how often we hear guys kind of being blackmailed
because they got caught up reaching out to people.
There's photos.
There's information.
It's dark stuff.
It's really dark stuff.
So it sounds like this person can really benefit, you know, getting help.
And here's the truth, you know, sometimes it's hard to address all this at once.
Right.
And so maybe you pick one.
And maybe you start with alcohol and say, okay, I'm having some issues with alcohol.
What can I do to get help?
I mean, I'm a huge fan, as are you, Alcoholics Anonymous?
Great resource right there.
Oftentimes you see guys kind of pouring you spike in early recovery coming off alcohol because it's just a way to numb.
Oh, yeah.
I've had issues where it's like I don't want to engage in certain behaviors.
so I'll even masturbate to keep myself away from those behaviors.
It's like sometimes you're, you know, you're cutting off a chicken to save the horse or
whatever it's called.
I'd like to think of it as harm reduction.
Yeah, harm reduction.
That's what I'm saying.
Nothing wrong with that.
Yeah.
Nothing wrong with that, especially, you know, oftentimes, even with sexual recovery, sometimes
you get sober off more detrimental behaviors first.
You know, if a guy has issues with a married guy and you're dealing with things that might
end the marriage, infidelity, strip clubs, or a host of those behaviors, you know,
know, getting sober off those first can be critically important.
And then over time, exploring your relationship with porn and masturbation.
Oftentimes, porn and masturbation can be a harm reduction tool not to engage in more harmful
behaviors.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's all the process.
And the good thing is, even if you just go to AA, bro, you go to 12 steps, you start learning
about this.
You start getting into the world of it, you know, or if you go to like a SLA Zoom.
or if you call and talk to someone that works over at valor,
it's like, you know,
you just start to get into the world of realizing
that there's some hope for whatever's going on.
Well, you're not alone.
Yeah, that's a fine.
You're not alone, man.
You're not alone.
I mean, looking at two guys right here.
You're not alone.
I know, man.
You're not alone.
And anything is possible.
That's right.
You know, anything is still possible.
But I'm going to quote one line that I hear you say all the time.
nothing changes
if nothing changes
nothing changes yeah
and guess what I'll learn that in the rooms
that's right so whatever
do something don't do nothing
yeah I can guarantee the one way
nothing will improve is doing nothing
yeah that's for sure
I mean this ain't rock a science oh dude
I've walked into some meeting rooms
and be five like and then 10 years later
walked in again that's right
walked in and said man I think I need this
but I'm not sure 10 years later I'm back
five years later I'm back
You hear that all the time.
I was like, I knew 15 years ago there was something wrong,
but I didn't, I didn't step all the way in.
It's okay.
Yeah, it's okay.
Here now.
It takes what it takes.
That's what they say, too.
That's right.
It takes what it takes.
Let's take another call.
Thank you, Siege, bro.
Hey, Theo.
This is Ashley.
I just wanted to call, I guess,
and get some advice about my relationship.
My boyfriend of almost two years now struggled a lot with lust and not being able to control himself when it comes to looking at porn or only fans and things like that.
And I love him so much.
and I just wanted to get your advice on if you think men can change.
That's a nice, that's thoughtful of her to call.
What came up for you when you heard that?
Just, I thought it was nice how much she cares.
That she chose to call up.
First of all, I believe her.
Sometimes you get a lot of calls, you say, you know, I don't know,
if this person's realistic or not, but I just, to me,
I felt like she was genuine about it.
and it was kind of
and can people change
she didn't really make it about her
you know and she said about lust
like she understands the bigger picture of it
so it's obvious that she's put some attention
towards it to maybe even
go search and look online
see some ideas or read up on it or something
because it's not just like hey this guy's watching porn
it's like he has a problem with lust
and it's fascinating to think about lust
what do you think like what does she says that
like what do you kind of think Steve like what is that about
like first thing I felt
was she was sharing.
I felt, the first thing I felt was a little sadness.
Oh yeah, I did feel some sadness for her.
I know she's going through a tough time.
And thank you, Ashley, for calling.
Sorry, I should have said that first.
Thinking about her boyfriend,
the behaviors that she actually knows that he's engaging in
are leading him down just a dark path.
And so the first thing I was thinking about is, wow,
I hope she has the ability to take care of herself.
You know, oftentimes,
you know, we focus so much on trying to get the significant other some help, which is important,
directing him to really good resources out there if he wants to get better. Does he recognize
this as a problem? And if he does, you know, get him some help there because guys can get better
and your relationship can thrive at some point in time in the future as he does the work. And
hopefully you guys get to do the work together and grow closer together. Doesn't always work that way.
but there are some countless amazing stories
where couples kind of do the work
and their relationship gets better
than it ever was before.
That's the truth.
That's the truth.
That's the truth.
Sometimes it doesn't work out that way,
but as she was sharing,
I just hope she's got a place to go,
a person to talk to,
perhaps a therapist that she can just share,
find ways to take care of herself
in the process right now.
Yeah.
And she stays on this journey.
Yeah, and you know what?
Sometimes it's like the first time,
you have a real intimate conversation with somebody.
You know, I was at a meeting the other day,
and my friends and I were talking and they were saying after,
like, dude, we never even really talk like this, you know?
And I was like, fuck, hey, like recovery gave me the,
I've been waiting my whole life to talk about something that meant something.
And it gave me like the language, too.
Like, think about growing up where, like the kind of man rules, right?
Men don't cry.
Men are tough, right?
If you're sensitive, you are a fill in the blank.
Yeah.
And so all of a sudden...
If you see a Ford Festiva, you gotta yell
down the street or whatever.
Yeah, and so not a Mustang.
Yeah, it's not a Mustang, dude.
And so, you know, so there's so many men, right?
You know, where did we learn how to be vulnerable?
Where is it a safe place to be vulnerable?
To be sensitive.
Yeah.
The truth that matters, I'm a very sensitive guy.
A lot of men in recovery or dealing addiction are very sensitive men.
And for so much of my life, I tried to hide that part of me, thinking it was a weakness.
And I used drugs, I acted out in certain ways to numb the pain of that sensitivity.
I can tell you right now, my sensitivity today is a superpower.
Amen.
Because that allows me to have empathy and to feel your experiences in pain.
given where I've been with this.
Facts, dude.
Yeah, man, facts, bro.
And you have the best stories, too, dude.
We didn't really tell any of them today.
Thank God, because you'd probably have to filter them out.
You have the best stories, dude.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And we can take this out.
But you have one story I remember about partying so hard in Miami
that you and a friend went instead of, like,
you guys bought more drugs and more diapers out on the dance for it,
so you didn't have to.
Yeah.
Well, we bought dope.
It was obviously laced with a laxative, and we had a choice.
We had a choice to either throw the drugs out or make these kind of makeshift diapers and keep the party going.
Needless to say, you know how the rest of the story goes.
Yeah, brother.
Just so you got to know, Steve is a real one.
Steve is, and that is the tip of the Ewo Gima, dude.
That's the tip of the iceberg.
Steve's a real one.
Oh, and what else was?
She was asking about something else, though.
Oh, she was asking, oh, do she think it's possible for him to get better, right?
Did we answer all that?
I am such a believer in the power of recovery.
Yeah, for sure.
Yeah, no doubt.
This whole episode, I think, could maybe be beneficial to him if you want to share with him.
You can tell him, like, it's a, just say, hey, Menthia, I want you to listen to this if you want.
I don't know if I know them or not, or if I've ever met him.
You know, you meet a lot of people, but, um, um, um, um, um, um, you know, you meet a lot of people, but, um, um, um,
So, yeah, just say, hey, man.
Hey, this is something your girlfriend wanted you to listen to.
I've had issues with it.
So if you feel okay listening to it, then check it out.
So you can send him that little clip right there,
and that can go along with this episode if you want.
And then, oh, lust.
She talked about lust.
Lust kind of gets hijacked or something, doesn't it?
We don't talk about lust too much, do we?
Yeah, you know.
Does it matter?
Is it a word?
It's just a word.
But I'll tell you what's interesting.
How many guys come to me
like Steve, you don't understand.
I think I'm just so horny.
Maybe.
But what's probably closer to the truth is
you're actually just really uncomfortable
and you've sexualized that discomfort.
Oh yeah.
If every time you get uncomfortable,
you end up jerking off looking at pornography,
then when you get uncomfortable, you're like, oh, I'm horny.
It's like, maybe not.
You're connected to in your brain.
And so, you know,
and what happens when guys get into,
they're recovering, get some time, you know, they stabilize.
And they realize they're not as horny as they think.
Yeah.
Because you're no longer using it as a tool to deal with your emotions.
Right.
Dude, they hijacked us, bro.
The devil hijacked a lot of us, bro.
You got to give props to the devil in a weird way because...
Check on this one.
You know.
Yeah, they win this round.
They won this round.
They won this round.
They won this round.
Hey, what's going on, Bill?
My name is Donald.
So I have a situation.
I have a girlfriend.
She's a long distance type shit.
Yeah, we've been together for three years.
But for the first year and a half, I would just, you know,
laid that seaman around type shit.
Yeah, I was a big end fidel.
Just cheat on her.
I'll stop.
I told her a couple times, you know,
made me feel a bit proud of myself.
But yeah, lately, you know, it's been a while,
and I've just been jerking off, to be honest.
Just been jerking off a couple times a day, honestly.
So, not really sure what your thoughts are on that.
I mean, it's better than cheating, but, you know,
I'm struggling out here.
Yeah, we've been watching more.
porn um that thing yeah okay yeah dude i think we've kind of we've talked about some of this thanks
for calling bro donovan or jonathan um donald donald okay thanks for calling donald i didn't know
people saw the name donald but i'm glad they do i'm glad they do bro and bring it back b y o d bruh
what i'm saying is this dude is um yeah sorry this whole this this whole segment to me just
it feels like it's very foreign it feels like here's the end of the end of the
energy I don't like and this isn't the real energy of it,
that we know something you don't, right?
Like, we're just two guys who fucking try on our best here.
But we have shown up a lot to places to try our best.
So I'll give us a lot of credit with that.
And Steve has done a great job of like transforming his whole life.
Yeah, dude, I just know if you do that, it just weakens a spirit.
So something's uncomfortable in you.
Something's uncomfortable in your spirit.
Right?
and you're only going to get clues from it
probably if you stop masturbating and stuff
you'll start to get some clues
but the tough part is
and this has been tough for me
the clues get scary and it's
sometimes it's hard to handle
you don't know something's ah
you know sometimes you just want to scream
and sometimes it's like primal stuff
you don't know what's going on
and so you just you sedate yourself
with like pornography or masturbations
to keep yourself at bay
but um
but it can be different right Steve
yeah what I told
from the call was this kind of idea like,
you can't really do this alone.
Yeah, because this dude sounds like he's pretty capable
of getting stuff done.
That's right.
He's insightful, he's honest,
but he's running the show.
Right.
And so, you know, I would strongly suggest
to get some help.
You know, willpower will only get you so far.
Yeah.
Right.
Getting some time to understand
what's driving these behaviors.
Get to the root cause
of some of these challenges,
get some professional help,
great resources out,
get involved in the community,
a men's group,
where you can kind of have
a band of brothers
where you can kind of run stuff by
and talk through these things.
Tough to do this by yourself.
Yeah.
What happens is it'll be 10 years from now
and you'll still be struggling with this stuff
and you'll just lose time.
That's, bro, that is the truest thing.
If you relate to some of this stuff,
if you relate to it at a pretty strong level,
Were you like, I think I had, it does not just go away.
No.
I cannot.
There's nothing that's been, that's the most honestly I could ever tell you in my whole life.
It does not just go away.
When I started this process, I had a head of hair like you.
And I look at this thing right now.
You just lose time.
You lose hair.
You look great, man.
And bro, you've done a great job today too, dude.
Yeah, thank you.
It's been a pleasure being here.
Thank you, bro.
Thank you so much.
Just for being here for talking about this.
Man, some stuff it's like, I don't know.
I just have been so much more comfortable when I thought it would be.
And I don't even know why I didn't think it would be, you know.
All right, let's see.
Let's have one more call that came in, please.
Hey, Theo.
This is Cody from Florida.
And I've seen you're really big on porn addictions.
And that's kind of a weird topic to get personal about, you know what I mean.
Very awkward topic, but I feel like I just lost the love of my life because of it.
I can't control myself.
I can't.
I feel like this is my generation because I'm 19, man.
I just, I feel like it's so normalized.
It's so routine.
It's so normal.
for me, the feel normalized about doing this shit.
And I just lost, the best thing that's ever happened to me, she broke up with me, man.
This is a gooner national anthem right here.
She left me, and I can't believe it, though.
Can't stop thinking about it.
I can't stop dreaming about her.
I can't get past the memories that we had because my actions, my actions made me lose
bro. And I just wanted to
see if I could get some advice from you.
Yeah, dude, thanks for calling in about it, bro.
And, yeah, sorry, I was kind of joking around, dude, but it's real.
And it's, and if you really have this porn addiction,
if you related to it enough of you, where you kind of call,
you heard it and thought about it and called, then it must have some relative,
there must be something inside of you that's connecting with it, right?
If you've even just heard me talk about it before.
Because today's the most we ever even talked about it ever.
so if you're picking up on something from before
it won't get better
you have to you have you got to help it get better right so you got to show up for it
it and help it get better and it will get better
and as far as yeah you might have lost your girl
this situation for now
but you I believe you get second chances
and I believe that you won't miss out on the next good one
and you will be so grateful down the line that
you started to solve some of the issues
now, then waited.
That's what I think, man, from my own experience.
Steve, what do you think?
I think
everywhere I go, there I am,
meaning that, you know, that's just the reality.
If I could date that woman without me,
it'd probably be a great experience,
but I bring me to that relationship.
So I think pain is the,
cornerstone of spiritual growth.
And what happened happened,
sounds like awful, tragic, horrible.
But I'll tell you what,
what would be really tragic
if you didn't use this moment in time
to get the help you need.
Leverage the pain you're in right now
to get the help you need.
Really important, right?
The gift of desperation.
Don't let this go by and pass.
I'm like, oh, maybe it wasn't that bad.
Use the pain you're in as leverage.
to get help.
Amen.
That's the truth,
bro.
That's,
dude,
dude,
yeah.
Yeah,
brother,
the gift of desperation.
We both lived it.
But yeah,
thanks,
Cody,
for calling in.
Did we get those three guys,
guys,
by chance?
If we have accurate,
shot them.
Here we go right here.
These are the
ethical capital partners.
This couple of guys right here,
there's the managing partner,
Fadi Mansour,
Rocco,
Melyambrough, and he's definitely been gooning.
And Solomon Friedman had a feeling he was involved.
There he is right now.
He's the partner VP compliance.
I love how compliance is part of it.
I mean, what do you do working at a porn company for compliance?
Yeah, yeah.
I'm curious.
I don't know, dude.
I do not know.
So, there, that's them right there, ethical capital partners.
So we want to thank those guys for being basically they are,
those are your porn sackler family right there.
That's what I allege that that's what I call them.
That's just my thoughts.
Those are the sacklers of pornography right there.
There's good people.
Fadi Mansour, Rocco Meliombo and Solomon Friedman.
Thank you guys for your service.
Steve Waltman, thank you for your service.
Dude, today is a service call.
That's what they say in recovery rooms.
If, like, you know, you make a service call on people, you do something to be helpful to the group or to someone.
What a treat to be here.
Thank you.
Dude, what a long journey, huh?
Yeah, it's only just started.
That's the craziest part, bro.
And that's the best attitude to have.
Congratulations, man, on starting a family, on making something real out of something that was just, like, do you look back sometimes and you're like, I cannot even believe it?
I really do.
I just talked to my wife last night
in anticipation of this
and I was like, I can't believe I'm here.
Really unfathomable.
And how'd I get here?
Just one day at a time, one step at a time,
taking better, making better decisions.
Yeah.
Anybody can do it, huh?
100%.
You believe that.
I really do.
Yeah.
Doesn't matter if you have money
or don't money.
If you're in a wheelchair,
if you can't see far,
it doesn't matter.
No.
Anybody can do it.
as long as you don't quit before the miracle happens.
Amen.
Steve,
Oprah, I love you, bro.
Thank you for being a part of my life, bro.
Thank you for letting me be a part of your life.
You showed up for my comedy show.
When I came out to Bend, Oregon, we had so much fun.
That was awesome.
That was cool, dude.
And you've just been such a light over the years,
dude, we know so many friends.
Most of like the most important people in my life,
you know them.
That's right.
Best friends in the world that have friends in recovery.
Oh, dude.
Nothing better.
No, amazing human beings.
Crazies can be.
They could be decades sober, off their rockers.
Incredible and beautiful.
Yeah.
Oh, the good times do not end, bro.
No, they don't.
You always want to know who's got the best story in the room, dude.
You finally get to meet all of those people.
That's right.
That's right.
It's good stuff.
Steve, Volcker Recovery, you guys can check out his program.
If anything, you feel like you can relate to.
Steve, I love you, bro.
Thank you, bro.
Thank you.
I'm just floating on the breeze and I feel I'm free.
I must be cornerstone.
I'll share this piece of mind I found I can feel it.
Hey Canada, I'm Jake Kalick, co-founder of Madein Cookware.
Over the past nine years, we've outfitted over 4,000 of the world's best restaurants
and millions of homes with professional quality cookware, and now we're proud to be shipping live in Canada.
At Made In, we meticulously craft our pans in the US and Europe.
Now you can cook in Canada with the same high-performing cook
as the world's best chefs. Shop pro-quality cookware at made-in cookware.ca.
That's M-A-D-E-I-N-Cookware.ca. We look forward to serving you.
