He is thirty-one years old. He has a good job, a loving wife, and a one-year-old daughter. Nobody in his life knows that for the last twelve years, he has been struggling with compulsive pornography use. It started in college. It has grown slowly. He uses it every day, sometimes multiple times a day. He has tried to stop. He has made dozens of promises to himself. He has deleted apps and browsers and installed blocking software. He has prayed about it. He has read every article on the internet. Nothing has worked for more than a few weeks. He is deeply ashamed. He believes he is alone with this problem, because nobody in his cultural context has ever spoken about it openly. He is not alone. He is one of many men quietly carrying this struggle, and he is not a bad person. He has a recognised clinical issue that has treatments, and shame is the main thing keeping him from getting help.
If this is your struggle — or the struggle of someone you love — please read this blog. At Bharosa, we treat compulsive sexual behaviour confidentially in our LB Nagar OPD. We want to replace shame with accurate information and practical hope. This is a clinical issue with clinical solutions, and you deserve the same respectful care you would receive for any other mental health condition.
Compulsive pornography use falls under a broader category called compulsive sexual behaviour disorder (CSBD), which was formally included by the World Health Organization in its International Classification of Diseases, 11th edition, in 2018. This was a significant step in recognising compulsive sexual behaviour as a legitimate clinical condition that deserves proper assessment and treatment. The American Psychiatric Association has taken a more cautious position but acknowledges the clinical concern. Harvard Medical School has published extensive research on how compulsive pornography use affects brain function and mental health.
Not all pornography use is addiction. Many people use pornography occasionally without problems. The issue is when use becomes compulsive — when it takes over significant time, when it continues despite efforts to stop, when it causes harm to relationships or work, when it produces shame and distress, and when it interferes with real-life intimacy. The distinction between use and addiction is functional. It is about the pattern and the consequences, not about the behaviour itself.
Compulsive pornography use follows the same brain pathways as other behavioural addictions. The reward circuits in the brain release dopamine in response to sexual stimuli. Unlike natural sexual experiences, which are usually limited by the partner, the situation, and the refractory period after orgasm, online pornography provides unlimited novelty — an infinite scroll of new stimuli that constantly re-triggers the reward system. Over time, the brain adapts by becoming less sensitive to normal stimuli and requiring more intense or more novel content to get the same effect. This is the classic pattern of addiction.
This explanation is not meant to shame anyone. It is the opposite. It is meant to show that compulsive use is not a moral failure. It is the predictable result of human reward biology encountering a technology that was not designed with human wellbeing in mind. Understanding this removes blame and makes space for the practical work of recovery.
Indian cultural norms around sexuality create particular challenges. Open discussion of sexual health is rare, even in medical settings. Young men often encounter pornography as their primary source of sexual information. Many enter marriage with expectations shaped by pornography rather than by real-life intimacy, which leads to problems with performance, connection, and satisfaction. Shame about any sexual concern prevents men from seeking help, so the problem grows in silence.
Religious and cultural frameworks in India often treat any kind of sexual concern as a moral failing rather than a clinical issue. This makes the shame worse and the help-seeking harder. Many Indian men with compulsive pornography use have never spoken about it to anyone. They carry it completely alone, convinced that they are uniquely defective, when in fact they are experiencing a well-documented and treatable pattern.
There is also a growing recognition of pornography-induced erectile dysfunction in young Indian men — a specific pattern in which heavy use of high-novelty online content leads to difficulty with real-life sexual function. This is increasingly reported in urology and psychiatric practice and often improves significantly with a period of abstinence from pornography.
Compulsive pornography use has been linked to increased rates of depression, anxiety, low self-esteem, sleep problems, and sexual dysfunction. It can produce significant shame and distress, which feed back into the cycle. It often affects intimate relationships — both through the time and emotional energy it consumes, and through the way it can shape expectations about sex and intimacy in ways that do not match real life.
For many men, the realisation that they need help comes after years of slowly worsening relationships and self-esteem. By the time they reach out, they have often tried every self-help approach available. Reaching out to a professional is not failure. It is the step that actually works when everything else has not.
Treatment usually involves several components. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) helps the person understand their patterns, identify triggers, develop alternative coping strategies, and rebuild a healthier relationship with their sexuality. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) is another approach that has shown promise. Group-based programmes, similar to those used for other addictions, can be helpful for some people.
Treating underlying mental health conditions is essential. Most compulsive pornography use sits on top of underlying depression, anxiety, loneliness, trauma, or relationship distress. Addressing these is often necessary for lasting recovery. Just trying to stop the behaviour without treating what is driving it rarely works.
Couples therapy can be helpful when the issue has affected a marriage, though it should be approached carefully and only when both partners are ready. In some cases, medication for co-occurring depression or anxiety supports overall recovery. The approach is always tailored to the individual.
At Bharosa, our consultant MD Psychiatrists treat compulsive sexual behaviour with the same confidentiality and professionalism we bring to every other condition. We do not judge. We do not lecture. We do not bring religious or moral framing into a clinical problem. We treat it as what it is — a behavioural health issue with established treatment approaches.
Treatment typically includes Cognitive Behavioural Therapy, assessment and treatment of underlying conditions, and where relevant and agreed upon by both partners, couples work. Our goal is to help you build the life you actually want, free from the compulsive pattern that has been taking time and peace from you.
Patients who complete proper treatment often describe a recovery of self-respect, connection, and real sexual wellbeing that they had stopped believing was possible. The shame slowly lifts. The compulsive pull weakens. Relationships improve. Real intimacy becomes possible again. This is what evidence-based care delivers. Please do not let shame keep you from the help that actually works.
Q: Is pornography addiction a real condition?
A: Compulsive sexual behaviour disorder is recognised by the World Health Organization. Treatment approaches are well-established.
Q: Will my information stay confidential?
A: Yes. Confidentiality is a core part of our clinical practice.
Q: Is this a moral or a medical issue?
A: We treat it as a medical issue. Moral framing is for you to decide privately; it is not part of the clinical approach.
Q: Do I need medication?
A: Usually not for the behaviour itself. Medication may help with co-occurring depression or anxiety.
Q: Does Bharosa treat compulsive sexual behaviour in Hyderabad?
A: Yes. Confidential care is available at our LB Nagar facility.
Shame keeps you stuck. Confidential care moves you forward. Bharosa is here, in Hyderabad. Call +91 95050 58886.

Mental health struggles do not define you, and you don’t have to face them alone. If you notice any early signs of mental health disorders in yourself or a family member, take the first step today.