My House Kansas City



The
My House blog for the Kansas City, MO "My House" anti-pornography apostolate supported by the Office of Family Life in the Diocese of Kansas City - St. Joseph.

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Playboy

Playboy seems to have made a more conservative move...they are no longer using nudity in their magazines.  However Luke Gilkerson of Covenant Eyes points out that there is no innocence involved.  The magazine will now be more like Maxim and the values are entry level to pornography use.  The disturbing part of this article is the research done on children by Hef's hero Dr. Alfred Kinsey.

Make sure your children are protected online.  Watch for signs such as sexual acting out, masturbation or depression.  Have that talk with your teen about sex.  Remember, it's not that we don't like sex as Catholics, it's that we love it, celebrate it and desire it in the context of marriage.  Porn shows too little and cheapens it, as Gilkerson says below...

http://www.covenanteyes.com/2015/10/15/why-playboy-is-saying-goodbye-to-nude-photos-and-why-i-have-mixed-feeling-about-that/?utm_campaign=pure-minds-online&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=23031403&_hsenc=p2ANqtz--8mx8nqSvzlr_mCVCqWJqNywpTeDw2SQvNL4yV6rRutlxUkFTeuZRVrXL_9DjddTXlTiCYiqdle3U2Miy5JrcY0Rs0Lw&_hsmi=23031404

Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Reclaim


Here is a link to an awesome resource for the brain science of pornography, overcoming unhealthy sexual habits as well as an online recovery program.  Check it out!

http://reclaimsexualhealth.com/



reclaim sexual health

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

The role of Play

Image result for two kids playing

My four year old is  like a monster on the tee-ball field.  He goes after every ball, he makes unnecessary diving plays and throws it to whatever base he feels.  He smiles, he laughs and it is clear he loves the game.  But what if he missed out on this?  What would the family dynamics possibly look like?

Have you missed out on play?  The literature is out that many who struggle with pornography and sexual addiction grew up in dysfunctional families of origin (Carnes, 1998).  There might have been a culture of perfectionism in the home, no mistakes could be made and if they were, criticism was showered.  Sometimes a sibling had to take on the role of parenting the little ones, leaving little room for the imagination and a serious sense of responsibility.  These families might look rigid, disengaged and emotionally distant (Carnes, 1998).  This teaches a little one not to be vulnerable, not to take a risk, some of the key facets to play.  

Adolescence hits and the need for play might come out in rebellion or the use of drugs to "let loose" and have a "good time" that they rarely experienced as a kid.  Kids have so much energy!  Psychology has shown that repressed emotions come out in some form or another.  More than likely, in a dysfunctional family, this energy comes out in an unhealthy way at some point.

Don't be worried if some of this description fits you.  You can still learn how to play but you'll  have to be creative, make time and will it.  It won't come natural and your need to control and fear of reprisal will surface.  But push through, play with your kids, your spouse.  Get into softball, acting or some recreation you've always wanted to do.  We all have that kid inside of us...



Monday, July 20, 2015

Denial

Image result for picture of denial

What is the function of denial?  Many men come into therapy with a certain level of defensiveness.  They have been caught with pornography, it has been a habit (hidden) and now their wife knows.  The husband doesn't want to lose the marriage, thus out of duty he pursues help.  A whole host of reasons make up denial, but protecting shame is one of the strongest.

After watching pornography, one clicks the red 'X' and the screen turns blank.  He is alone and just acted out.  Thousands of other men  have looked at the same pics and videos.  There is a psycho-spiritual element.  The devil accuses and the mind accepts, setting up a man for a myriad of core beliefs from worthlessness to inadequacy.  He then puts them in a box, deletes the history on the computer...however as everyone knows, that history is still there and accessible.  This compartmentalized box needs to be protected with 'passwords' such as defensiveness, anger, high levels of exercise, food or unhealthy work hours.  Shame is the devils work and the mind's field of play.

Shame is a hard emotion to face.  But the path to freedom is through it.  It's the addict's scourge, crown of thorns and cross.  Face the shame with Christ and remember what follows death...the resurrection.


Michael Ciaccio MS, LPC, SATP

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

How safe is your family? New survey tests the spiritual health of your home

Just how safe is your home?  Does your family have good practices to develop a healthy and safe environment for your children?  Do you have a game plan and if so, is it good enough?  What will you do if one of your children is exposed to pornography?

A new confidential survey is available online with the Diocese of Kansas City - St. Joseph, My House Initiative.  Participants who complete the survey will have their input reviewed confidentially and the results will be returned with personalized recommendations.
What are your waiting for?  The spiritual health of your family may depend on this.
Take the survey here.

Saturday, June 13, 2015

Disclosure

Many couples come to me presenting the classic,  now frequent case, of a wife finding out about her husband's pornography use.  A 'dance' starts between the couple, and the inner, or sometimes quite vocal, dialogue might look like this:

Wife: "I knew something was going on.  I could feel it, he was checked out.  I confronted him several times but he denied, defended and almost blamed it on me.  I started to feel crazy, like I had the problem.  Something was missing in the relationship, I was protesting, trying to figure it out but he always put me off.  Now I know.  Here's what I don't know: how often did he look, was there an affair, was he in chat rooms on the internet, how often did he think about it, what was he thinking about in the restaurant that one time when he was staring at the waitress...I have so many questions I don't know where to begin."

Husband: "I can't lose her, I'll do anything.  It didn't have much to do with her, I brought this into the marriage.  She takes it so personally but I just looked at porn to get a high.  My wife is still attractive to me.  It wasn't that I was looking for someone more attractive, I just needed  to relieve stress.  Now when she looks at me I see the hurt, the betrayal.  I can't bare it.  And all the questions!  How do I answer them.  She has way too many.  We just need to move forward and let this go.   It won't happen again."

Professional help is needed at this point.  The first step is disclosure.  A quality therapist will prepare the husband to answer her questions while working with the wife to take in the 'waves' of pain that will inevitably come with the truth.  She needs to prepare her questions ahead of time, work on coping skills to manage feelings and have the goal of forgiveness, as hard as that word can be.  The husband cannot engage in 'dribble' disclosure or giving pieces and parts of his problem in a several week span.  It needs to be a concise, one time owning up.

Then he can become the hero to win her back, it's in his hands.  The next step is working on triggers...to be continued.

References: "Shattered Vows," Laaser (2008); "Healing the Wounds of Sexual Addiction," Laaser (2004)

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Wake up call for parents... what is it doing to kids?

If you ask people who work in crime prevention and law enforcement if there is a connection between the increase in availability, use, and hardcore nature of pornography to the increase in sexual abuse of children and sex crimes they will almost unanimously say that the link is obvious.  Serious peer-review research has been done on the subject and you might read it here along with a host of other research articles on the subject of the harms of pornography.

The simple fact is kids (or anyone) exposed to pornography are more inclined to act out in a way that mimics what they have seen.  Today, the majority of the pornography readily available for free on the internet contains violent content.  Should parents be concerned about what their kids could be seeing on their own phone or ipod?  What about a friend's device?

A news story out of Wichita, KS serves as a wake up call for parents who are not yet concerned about this issue.  In the news story about a 13 year old suspected of abusing younger children they draw the connection (from law enforcement) and they also outline signs of possible abuse that parents should watch for.  Parents: are you on high alert yet?

Unfortunately we don't yet have anyone in politics talking like the Prime Minister of the U.K. did almost 2 years ago about this subject.  Let us pray for our leaders, for those who protect us in law enforcement, and get to work protecting our own kids and speaking out to protect all of the children in our society.

If you don't have software on your computer to help keep your kids safe I recommend that you check out Covenant Eyes or another monitoring and blocking service.


Thursday, May 21, 2015

Recent Media Takes on the Problem of Porn

In the past few months there has been a higher than usual volume of media sources that are talking about the problems that porn is causing to people who use it.  It is being talked about as an addiction, which it often is, and it is being talked about as a harm (which it most certainly is).

Here are a few of the most notable examples.  (Warning, some of the videos contain brief graphic scenes that are not for the young, nor for those for whom it may be a trigger!)


First we have actor Russell Brand's rant about 50 Shades of Grey and his observation (from his own personal experience) that porn use is messing up his ability to be intimate.  Admitting his compulsive behavior he says, "I feel like if I had total dominion over myself I would never look at pornography again."  He calls the atmosphere today one where we are "surrounded by, just, icebergs of filth, floating through every house on wi-fi.  It's inconceivable what it must be like to be a young adolescent boy now with this kind of access to porn."  "Pornography is not something I like. It's not something I have been able to make a long term commitment to not looking at and it's effecting my ability to relate to women, to relate to myself, to relate to my own sexuality, my spirituality."

Next, we have the ABC Nightline expose, "The Struggle of Overcoming an All-Consuming Porn Addiction." Unfortunately this video highlights emerging technology that is being used to make porn even more addictive and accessible to young people.  However, it also allows a married couple to speak the truth about the situation and be honest about how devastating it is for a marriage.

After discovering his porn problem that he had been hiding from her for years...
"With her trust shattered, Lyschel became obsessed with her husband’s daily activities.
'I was checking histories on computers. Quizzing him on where he’s been,' she said. 'I’m grilling him with a hundred thousand questions -- wondering you know...is he again lying to me.'
'My husband’s addiction became my addiction,' Lyschel added. 'It started to consume me.'"
The article/video goes on to point out the very essence of the "debate" about whether porn use is bad for people or not.
"Porn addiction is a hotly debated topic. Roughly 43 percent of online users view web pages with pornographic content, according to Internet Pornography Statistics, and it can also impact relationships. In a 2003 survey of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers, more than half of the 350 divorce attorneys interviewed said the Internet played a 'significant role' in divorces in the past year, and that online porn contributed to half of these cases."
Our answer at the My House Initiative: clearly you can tell fruit is rotten if it makes those who eat it sick and miserable.  One can also tell if something is addictive if people can't stop themselves from using.
You can get help.  Find a professional or join a group.  In Kansas City, call our helpline and get started on a new path that leads to freedom, self-control, and healing. 816-808-6544.