Why Men Pay For Sex

sex and intimacy

Men and Woman KissingUp to 70% of men will go to a prostitute once. To find out why, Marie Claire exclusively arranged for three prostitutes to interview their clients.

Tom* is in his early 40s. He is
a professional, "like a CPA," and
a married man who has "had a
couple of girlfriends on the side,
mainly out of necessity "He
doesn't think his wife knows.

Why do you need to pay for sex?
After many years of being married to the same woman, and giving her emotional rewards, I find she ignores my needs as a man. My wife has become very fat. She isn't attractive, but she always comes back with the line, "You should love me anyway." I have to say, "Yes, I do" or be kicked out of the house. She won't do what I want her to - use a dildo or even wear lingerie.

Among my married male friends, I would say seven out of ten have cheated because they weren't getting it at home the way they wanted. My female friends all seem to have a fantasy that they are going to find a man who will sweep them off their feet and take care of them for the rest of their lives. I keep telling them, "Honey, if you don't put out, you're not going to get the emotional rewards."

Do you ever feel guilty?
No, my wife has deprived me of sexual intimacy and fulfillment for about five years. She has made no effort to lose weight, and she always wears frumpy things, so I feel no regret whatsoever.


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I am looking to live out my fantasies with a beautiful woman. My last steady relationship was about four years ago. I don't want another girlfriend because they are so frustrating. I want a professional who has a desire to make sure the customer is happy. The most important quality is looks: She has to be petite, not robust like my wife. Age is not important if she looks fabulous. Location isn't important. It's like a good cigar: I'll drive many miles to find one.

I heard about my first call girl through a friend. I was so nervous when I got to her place: I didn't know who would he there. Would I be mugged? Would I be videotaped?

It was tense at first but she did everything I requested. including using a dildo on herself. We bathed together before sex, which I enjoyed. I didn't want to smell anything on her body, and I don't think she wanted to smell anything either. I told her exactly what to wear - flirt black cocktail dress, stockings, and no panties or bra. She stood over me so I could look up her dress. In the end, it turned out sort of bad for me, though, because I came very quickly.

It was purely sexual, and that's what a man needs every once in a while. I don't think it's what a woman needs but then, that's why we have call girls.

What would happen if anyone found out?
Well, the divorce would get quite ugly. On the bright side, I would be out of a marriage which I'm in purely for financial reasons. Because of the recession, I'd find a divorce difficult at this stage. Then again, I don't know if being found out would be all that bad.

Louis is 23 years old, single. and
a college student Although he has
a steady girlfriend, he regularly
uses the services of prostitutes.

Why do you pay for sex?

I simply need to have intercourse; stress from school and work and a lack of getting; it regularly builds up in me over time. You might think, "Well, why not just masturbate?" I feel that every now and then I MUST have sexual contact - something real - with another human. But paying for a sex is a nightmare!

The problem is, my girlfriend lives a long way away. When I have to have sex, I tell her that I intend to visit a prostitute; we talk about it, and it's upsetting for her. She doesn't want me to contract a sexually transmitted disease or to be with other women. But we both know that it's sexual need I'm acting out; not some whimsical sexual frustration. I'd rather be with her.

Are you nervous with prostitutes?
I've been terribly nervous each time. I find it pretty tough to start a conversation with a stranger, never mind to get naked with one!

The first time was with a street prostitute. It was a little strange and uncomfortable because we ended up in this sleazy hotel with drunks outside and the works that was awful. The woman herself was a bit worn out that evening; she seemed distant and somewhat weighed down. She was extremely concerned with time. Before she began, she said, "Let's sort out the finances first," which thought was a bit abrupt. Then she told me the rules: We've got 30 minutes, and you can come once." Great. Pretty humorless, actually.

The second time, I literally flipped open the telephone book, selected a classy-looking ad, and called an escort service. It was better because the prostitute came to my apartment and didn't seem overworked at all. At one point, she remarked that she was pleased to be with a guy her own age because most of her customers were older men who seemed unstable.


What are you looking for when you pay for sex?
I always ask for anal sex first; most women aren't interested in this. Oral sex is something else I ask for, which many women I've known casually tend to think is "yucky." I also want the woman to bite me, scratch me, or do other sort of wild things. But neither prostitute would bite me!

Do you feel guilty?
No, not really. I would prefer to see prostitutes regularly, but I don't have the money. I mean, sex is something I need in order to function the next day--without cracking up. It's just too bad that people have to buy it and sell it ... but we all know this isn't Utopia. If I get married, I don't think I will need to continue to do this.

Robert is a 48-year-old white collar
worker who has been married for over 15 years.
His wife knows about his fantasy of crossdressing,
but not about his visits to prostitutes.

Why do you pay for sex?
The fantasy developed when I was 25 and just out of the army. I had a girlfriend who used to dress for me in stockings, a garter belt, panties, and a bra. I enjoyed undressing her. After a year, I tried on the panties and stockings, and I enjoyed the silkiness and softness. I did discuss the fantasy with my wife and, before we were married, she used to dress sexy. But about a year after we got married, she turned to more comfortable cotton nightgowns. I asked her to dress up, but she said it was too much trouble. She feels it shouldn't be important to me. I think if it is important to me, why doesn't she care?

She was very negative about having sex after a while. I think that deep down, she never really enjoyed the physical act, and because of that I've had to look elsewhere. I don't think she ever thought about that. She's living in a tunnel where she thinks, "If I don't talk about it, I won't have to deal with it." When we did have sex, it was basically, "Let's jump into bed and get it over with. My mother's coming, the turkey's in the oven. Hurry up!" Then she started giving me instructions: I shouldn't do this, I shouldn't do that, did I touch the dog before I came to bed? It got to the point where, after I took a shower, she would ask me if I'd washed my hands. It was like throwing cold water on me.


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When I went looking for another partner, I answered ads. On the phone, I would always tell them my fantasy of cross-dressing and ask if it was OK. If they said yes, I'd make a date. Now I have five or six ladies who are regulars. There's one I would love to marry because she enjoys our experiences so much and is always so pleasant. I fulfill my main fantasy three or four times a month by dressing in panties when I go to work. The time and location at which I see a lady depends on my work schedule. Usually I do it at my office, or nearby.

Do you feel bad about yourself afterward?
I feel very good. I have a right to live my life as I like to live it, and if my wife doesn't share my feelings, that's her problem, not mine. I'm not hurting my wife. I take care of her; I provide her with a home and money and things she wants. I give her presents and flowers without any special reason. I still love her very much, though I resent how cold she's been about my sexual needs. Twice, my wife found my hidden stockings and garter belts and was upset that I was still cross-dressing. She laid them out on the bed so that when I came home I would see she'd found them. After the second time, I figured that if there was a third I would tell her, "Listen, I'm doing what I have to do, and I will keep on taking care of myself."

What would happen if anyone else found out?
My family would not approve. They're very Puritanical. I went to private schools all my life, and I didn't learn curse words until 1 got into the army. I didn't try sex until I was 23 years old. I used to have a friend I confided in, hut he moved to another state and we don't get to see each other anymore. Basically, I have no one to talk to about my most intimate desires or my problems.

Why Men Go To Prostitutes

Many are married and claim to love their wives. So why do some men pay for sex? Claire Halliday asks them.

"When I'm with them, it's almost like the equivalent of having a massage - physically and mentally. There's no pressure. It doesn't matter if she's had a bad day or I've had a bad day, either. Sex is guaranteed to happen with no emotional struggle and bullsh*t game-playing. If I'm tired, I know that I can still be satisfied without having to worry about what it is she needs. That doesn't come into it at all. Yes, it's selfish. But I'm paying to have a service provided. It's my time."

That's Joe Anderson's reason for outlaying the couple of hundred dollars he spends a month on visits to sex workers. And no, he's not some hormone-fueled 19-year-old, champing at the bit of sexuality. Anderson is 54-years-old and "happily married".

He's had the three kids, got the dog, paid off the mortgage on his house in middle suburbia, has greying hair and a waist measurement that is a little broader than it used to be. He works as a human resources manager in a large retail chain. He says he spends a sizeable chunk of his working life trying to understand why people are the way they are. But he doesn't really understand himself.

"It started when I was in my 30s," he says. "When my wife had our second baby, something happened to our relationship. I don't think it was about the way I saw her. I know some men say that after their wife becomes a mother.

"I really think it was about the way she saw herself. And she was tired all the time. Just not interested in sex any more. At one stage, it had been about 10 months and we hadn't had sex. Still sleeping in the same bed and not really arguing about much - just becoming more and more like mates.


"I know I still love her and I don't want to leave. It's not like I'm having an affair. I've been using the girls at the parlours for over nearly 20 years but, of course, it's not with the same woman all the time.

"I do have a couple of girls I like more than others but if I see them regularly, I start to feel guilty. It's not really about the person. It is just about a sexual release. My wife is still my best friend. She's the one I still sit down and have a cup of tea with in the morning. There's no way I want lose that."

Anderson's wife suspected he was having sex with someone else, but when he admitted it was prostitutes, rather than "another woman" in the classic sense, he was surprised at her reaction.

"I didn't think she would tolerate it or understand it but, in a way, she did. I think she was relieved that I wasn't having an affair," he says. "We talked about it at the start. She needed to be convinced that I wasn't in love with anyone else. Now we go out of our way to not bring it up. I would say she probably doesn't respect me in the same way. I guess it's perceived as a bit dirty, or a weakness. But I'm home with her every night and we have a great relationship as the parents of our kids."

Although their sexual relationship did restore itself to some extent, Anderson kept using sex workers and describes it with a nervous laugh as a "mild addiction".

"It's easy, the girls are young and they just give you their full attention. It's hard to pass that up once you know it's out there."

So difficult, in fact, that some men need to satisfy their urge for paid sex almost daily. As a trained social worker with the Men's Counselling Service, Chris Dawson sees a number of men from all social classes and says that, once it becomes a full-blown addiction, most want it to stop but feel they can't control it.

"It can get very expensive and they'll juggle finances like any other addiction. A lot of these people are self-employed and they're paid cash that doesn't go through the books. It's the white-collar worker, too. They might have a credit card on the side that nobody else knows about," Dawson says.


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Why do they do it? "If they're getting satisfied somewhere else then they don't have to be intimate with their own partner. Most guys aren't good at intimacy."

When they eventually come to him for help, Dawson says it is because their relationship with a wife or girlfriend has become so problematic that they seek counselling to beat the desire.

And like any addiction, Dawson says that the motivation behind it can become muddied. Just as heroin addicts develop a love of the ritual-like needle preparation, Dawson says that prostitution addicts he has spoken to are often more excited by the planning than they are by the sex act itself.

"Some guys talk about how the sex itself doesn't actually do much for them. It's the planning and preparation. It's selecting the brothel, the drive to that building, the selection of the girl. It's anticipation. A lot of men try to deal with their problems by going to the brothels and then just walking out. That might be successful for a few days but then they have to score with someone. They don't like it. They carry a lot of shame. They can't control it," he says.

Ben Wilke, 31, doesn't necessarily agree. Currently "between girlfriends", the IT executive says that his use of prostitutes is purely a physical relief that he utilises when he can't get sex from anyone else.

"You can wake up in the morning and masturbate but it's not the same as really being with a woman and having her touch you."

Wilke has been known to occasionally pay for two girls at once to indulge a common fantasy, though says he has no need for any other role-playing games to inspire his sex drive.

"I just want to have sex, basically," he says. And he doesn't feel guilty. "If it's out there on offer, for sale, and it's a service that I'm happy to pay for, why should I feel guilty? I'm not desperate and I don't take risks. I'd never go to a street girl. At the brothels, it's nice and clean and you know they haven't got any STDs. It's safe."

Despite his projected image as a confident regular, Wilke says his first visit to a prostitute, when a long-term relationship broke down over four years ago, was intimidating." I was scared to death," he admits. Not so much because of what he thought the act itself would be like but because of what he thought it would say about him.

"I know I'm a fairly good-looking guy. My idea of the type of men that used hookers was the ugly, lonely fat guy who just couldn't get laid by anyone else.

"I could go out to a bar and pick someone up without too much hassle if I really wanted to. Paying for it and getting exactly what you want is just easier. You don't have to ring the girl up a few days later and take her out to dinner. I'm busy with work and trying to concentrate on my career."

Reclining in the darkened lounge area of Melbourne brothel The Daily Planet, working girls Heather and Emily have their own slant on why men pay for sex. When asked to sum it up in just one word, Heather comes up with "safety".

"Sexual safety, commitment safety, emotional safety,"

Emily agrees. "Their anonymity. They know that they're not going to be walking down the street with their friends or their girlfriends and we're going to walk past and say hello. Health-wise, we have to provide a certificate to work here.

"You don't go out and meet someone and in the middle of foreplay show a certificate that says you're clean. Plus, they won't get criticised, no matter how bad they are. That makes them feel good about themselves."


Listen to Emily and Heather tell it and you could believe women are partly to blame for all the insecurity men suffer. Loveless marriages and resistance to sexual experimentation are all confidence-denters for the seemingly precarious male ego, they say.

"The majority of men that come here haven't been touched by anyone in a while. They've been autonomous and everyone needs contact. With men, their self-esteem relies on being sexually active, whereas a woman needs a healthy self-esteem to be sexually active. For them, it's the equivalent of us getting our hair done. They need to be touched and have some sort of sexual encounter to feel worthy," Emily says.

"And," Heather adds, "if they're constantly rejected by the woman they love, it really affects their ego."

As long as the boundaries are clear on both sides, both girls believe nobody can get hurt.

"I get a lot of regular clients and some of them are deluded about the nature of the relationship. They do think they fall in love with you and you have to remind them of exactly who you are. But most of them just feel comfortable with you and they love their wife at home," Emily says.

"They might feel guilty about what they do with us but they just needed the contact because their biological needs aren't being filled. Masturbation isn't enough."

James Ogilvy, 51, says his regular visits to sex workers stem from a self-analysis as a "borderline fetishist". Again, "happily married" Ogilvy says he has no need to leave his wife of 26 years, as long as he can keep paying for sex on the side. Colleagues at the financial institution where he works have no idea Ogilvy is aroused by, what he calls, "exotic" women. That his wife is a blonde-haired, blue-eyed English woman began to present a problem two years ago when his longing for someone "different" became so overpowering that sex with his wife became difficult.


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"I find it hard for her to turn me on. We can have sex every now and then - and in truth she doesn't want it very regularly anyway - but I have developed a sexual feeling for women that look different in some way and that's what does it for me," Ogilvy says.

"We've been together for a long time and for most of the marriage we were very sexually active and happy with each other. This started about 10 years ago when I had an affair with an Indian woman at work. My wife found out and things were really bad for a while. We didn't go to a counsellor - I just ended it. But while it was happening, it was so exciting and wrong that I think part of that has just changed something in me."

With what some might view as a skewed moral bent, Ogilvy made all apologies to his wife and swore he wouldn't do it again but gave himself permission a few years later to indulge what he realised had become an overwhelming fantasy. He won't tell his wife for fear it will make her relive her insecurity about the initial affair.

"It really wasn't about love, although I couldn't convince her at the time. I know it was just about sex. Not having to stay the night with someone or woo them in some way. By doing what I do, I can get the sex with no trouble or guilt. I still love my wife."

So, an average fortnight involves at least one interaction with a sex worker. He makes regular use of an agency that specialises in "exotic beauties". African, Asian, Indian and even southern European women make the grade. Ogilvy has justified it to some extent and feels less guilty because there is such a point of difference. "If I was after blue-eyed blondes but just didn't want my wife, I think it would be worse."

According to sex therapist Dr. Janet Hall, men like Ogilvy are probably just fooling themselves. It is an addiction and any addiction is potentially unhealthy.

"One of my patients has a good relationship with his lady but he has a thing for young women. He's late 30s and he's been doing it since he was 22 when he basically had his heart broken. He felt lost and he felt abandoned and now he's addicted to it and it's cost him a lot of money over a long period of time. When it's an addiction, it's often when they're stressed. Other people turn to alcohol or gambling - they'll need a fix. It can become a stress-management kind of anchor."

Power, too, in Hall's opinion, is part of it. While any working girl would argue the issue of just where control rests, Dr Hall believes that male clients perceive it lies with them.

"The money gives them the power to buy the girl and she's basically at their beck and call. She's supposed to do whatever they say so they really get off on that fantasy that they're the one in charge. If they do a slack job, it doesn't matter and if they do a fantastic job, that makes them feel bigger, tougher, stronger, anyway."

But sometimes it's not just about sexual performance. When artist Mack Jamieson, 29, visits his regular prostitute, Isobel (usually around every two months),

he often pays his money for the simple pleasure of conversation. Oral gratification usually comes with it, admittedly, but rarely full sexual intercourse. Admitting he also thrives on the "pathetic madness" of using a sex worker in this way, Jamieson finds some romance in the seediness of the situation.

"I'm not afraid to tell people I do it. In a weird way, I revel in it a bit. I like that my friends think I'm a bit out there. In a real sense, though, they probably don't understand that seeing Isobel really helps me out emotionally. I've had a couple of bad relationships with women that screwed me up a bit and talking to her - it's like I get a bit of female understanding.

"I really think she has taught me things I wasn't aware of about the way their minds work. I've been seeing her for about a year but there's no delusion about thinking I'm in love with her or anything. Yeah, I might get oral sex while I'm with her but sometimes I just do that because it makes me feel less weird about paying for her and just talking."

But Jamieson doubts that he would see another sex worker if Isobel retires. "She's talking about giving it up soon because she is with a partner and she wants to have kids. If she stopped tomorrow, I don't think I would look for another girl to see. She did give me the number of her friend and said I should try her but I still don't see myself as the kind of guy who sees prostitutes," he says.

"When I first contacted the escort agency and had her come around, I thought I was just doing it to get laid but it just became different. My Mum didn't bring me up to disrespect women and I think there was a bit of a block about just paying someone to screw me.

"I just ended up telling her all about myself and my relationships and my work and she was just really good at giving advice. In a way, she's been kind of like a muse. When she stops doing it, I'll stop, too. It was interesting while it lasted but it's been like a sort of therapy and I'm probably cured."

Some names have been changed.

The Sun-Herald

next: Intimate Thoughts: How to Develop Intimacy With Your Partner

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2008, December 15). Why Men Pay For Sex, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 6 from https://www.healthyplace.com/sex/psychology-of-sex/why-men-pay-for-sex

Last Updated: August 20, 2014

Respite Care for People with ADHD

Respite care services for people with ADHD, their family members and carers in the UK.

What is respite care?

Respite care is an arrangement whereby someone with a disability and the person who cares for them are given a short-term break from one another. Traditionally this has been seen as being for the benefit of the carer, but increasingly it is being accepted as beneficial for the person with the disability as well.

Where does it take place?

Respite care can be provided either at home or in a residential setting.

How do I ask for respite care?

In normal circumstances, you should contact your local social services department. A need for respite care can be identified via an assessment under the Children Act 1989, the NHS and Community Care Act 1990 or the Carers (Recognition and Services) Act 1995.

We have another Information Sheet which has more details on how to approach the local authority is on the Information Section - Introduction to Assessment by Social Services.

Is respite care available to people with ADD/ADHD and their carers?

Yes, but unfortunately it has to be acknowledged that respite care is a service that is generally in short supply and that people with ADD/ADHD are a group for whom it is often difficult to find places within respite services.

What should I do if I am denied respite care or I am unhappy with the service currently being provided?

In the first instance, you should utilise your social services department's complaints procedure. All social services departments must have a complaints procedure and, if requested, inform you of how it operates. If this is unsuccessful you may be able to take your case to the Local Government Ombudsman or even possibly the Secretary of State.

Are there any respite care services specifically for people with ADD/ADHD?

At the present time we are not aware of any specific respite care services, however, if we hear of any we will update.

Going on holiday

All of us can benefit from going on holiday and this can be the same for people with ADD/ADHD and their families. Finding a holiday scheme able to meet their needs can be difficult though. We do have a fact sheet available on our Information Section, which lists a number of holiday schemes that are willing to accept people with ADHD. This also contains details of useful organisations, some of which can provide practical or financial assistance so as to help people with disabilities and their families go on holiday.


 


 

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2008, December 15). Respite Care for People with ADHD, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 6 from https://www.healthyplace.com/adhd/articles/respite-care-for-people-with-adhd-in-uk

Last Updated: May 6, 2019

Living with Depression Homepage

Comprehensive site on clinical depression, living with depression, depression signs, depression treatments. For sufferers, family members and friends.Welcome to my Website. I am one of millions of Americans who suffer from clinical depression. I am not a mental health professional; my comments are no substitute for consulting with a trained professional. If anything, the point of this site is to encourage those who need it, to get professional help.

Clinical depression is one of the most common illnesses. It afflicts millions of Americans each year. It is a much more serious problem than most people realize. Also, it can be a terminal illness--untreated depression is far and away the most common cause of suicide. Suicide is the nation's 7th largest killer, overall, and claims the lives of more teens and young adults than anything else.

Remember that clinical depression is not the same as sadness that everyone feels from time-to-time, nor is it the normal period of mourning or bereavement after, say, the death of a loved one, a divorce, or anything like that. Clinical depression is much more severe and lasts far longer than normal.

Depression is not a moral failing, a character flaw or weakness, or any other such thing. It is an illness. And like any other illness, it can take its toll.


Table of contents

next: My Experience With Depression: How I Became Depressed
~ depression library articles
~ all articles on depression

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2008, December 15). Living with Depression Homepage, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 6 from https://www.healthyplace.com/depression/articles/living-with-depression-homepage

Last Updated: June 20, 2016

Using Questions To Be More Self Aware

"Let us not look back in anger, nor forward in fear, but around in awareness."
- James Thurber

Using Questions To Be More Self AwareQuestions can help you become more self aware. Are you where you live? Are you your job? Are you what you look like? The answers to these questions are only reflections of who you are to the outside world. But it's just that, a reflection of your inner self. To go below the surface, the questions need to be more meaningful.

Think of the questions as being in layers. Each level or layer of questioning takes you closer and closer to the "core of your being."

Example of Layers

What type of people do I enjoy spending time with?
Well...they have to be open-minded people. I really enjoy their company.

Why do I enjoy being with open-minded people?
Because then I can explore lots of different ideas. I enjoy searching for answers. And if they're open-minded, the exploration can go anywhere!

What do I mean by "exploration can go anywhere"?
I mean I can investigate all the big questions in life like...Why are we here or where do emotions come from?

How does being with open-minded people assist me in exploring those questions?
Well...if they're open-minded they won't make fun of my ideas.

Why is it important to me that people not make fun of my ideas?
Because it feels like my ideas are..well...me. I don't like being made fun of.

Why don't I like being made fun of?
Because then I feel shitty about myself.

Why would I feel shitty about myself if people made fun of me?
Because they're not accepting me for who I am!

Why do I feel shitty if others don't accept me for who I am?
Because it means I'm not OK.

How does others not accepting me mean I'm not okay?
Hmmmm.... I guess it doesn't have to mean that.

As you can see, the further down in the questioning process you go, the more you can tap into why you do what you do and who you are. It will take time for you to go through all the questions if you keep digging down each layer. Feel free to refer back to this example when answering the questions.

 


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next: Tips On Answering Questions

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2008, December 15). Using Questions To Be More Self Aware, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 6 from https://www.healthyplace.com/relationships/creating-relationships/using-questions-to-be-more-self-aware

Last Updated: July 10, 2015

It All Begins With You

"Who you are speaks so loudly I can't hear what you're saying."

- Ralph Waldo Emerson

It All Begins With You

Self Awareness
Self Acceptance
Self Creation

The center of your universe begins and ends with you. You are the source of everything you experience. You are foundation and common denominator to all aspects of your life, including your environment, your relationships, and your belief system. Without you, your world would cease to exist. Therefore, if you want to make any real and significant changes to your life, the only place to start is with yourself.

You must first know what materials you have to work with before creating the life you want. You have to have Self Awareness before moving into Self Acceptance. Once that foundation is established, you can then build yourself anew using your wants and desires as the building matierals to shape yourself and your world.

 


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next: It All Begins With Awareness

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2008, December 15). It All Begins With You, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 6 from https://www.healthyplace.com/relationships/creating-relationships/it-all-begins-with-you

Last Updated: June 25, 2015

Natural Alternatives: Evening Primrose Oil for Treating ADHD

People share stories about Evening Primrose Oil as a natural remedy for treating symptoms of ADHD.

Ed. Note: This has been tried extensively by many people with a lot of quite astounding success stories. We have to say though, we tried it with Richard for a long period with no obvious effect. This does not mean however, that it does not work for others.

Wendy writes:

I have a seven year old boy who has been severely hyperactive since birth. We joined the Hyperactive Children's Support Group when he was a year old.   Following their advice we placed him on a restricted diet (with doctors' advice as he was so young). This worked but was very hard work. When he was 2 years old we gave him evening primrose oil. It worked miracles. Within minutes he had changed. We found we could now give him a much more varied diet as long as he had the evening primrose. When he was four, we gave him another vitamin which was recommended which was Efavite (a mixture of B vitamins etc). By the time he was six, we had virtually eliminated all his hyperactivity. He was still an active child but most people would not believe he was hyper at all!

As far as his schooling is concerned, his teacher won't mention the ADD as she believes he is no different from others of his age now. We still have to be careful with diet as a wrong food may cause him problems with reading or math for a day or so, but he is now in the middle stream of the school.

We know that the evening primrose plays a big part, as sometimes if I run out for a couple of days, he does become the hyper boy again but even so, he is still relatively easy to manage as he is now beginning to know what is and isn't acceptable behaviour.

I know all children are different, but I can vouch that the Feingold Diet Program, combined with evening primrose oil can make a world of difference.

Sharon from New Zealand writes....

Both my girls aged 5 and 13, can be very hyper, although I wouldn't say that they have attention deficit disorder. Just wanted to let you know that I have them both on Evening Primrose Oil and the results are astounding. The 13 year old had such mood swings and now is calm, relatively speaking. The five year old comes out of school grizzly and in a frenzy and then I realise I forgot to give her a capsule in the morning. Within about 10 mins of taking it when we get home, I have a reasonably calm child again (I say that because what 5 year old is calm after a day of school? *grin*).

I take evening Primrose Oil myself and since I started taking it, I don't want to leave home once a month. I get a little ratty but not nearly like I used to.

So I have come to the conclusion that the "females" in our family are lacking the GLA or whatever in Evening Primrose Oil. I know it is present in breastmilk and the youngest nursed til she was 4 and it was only after she weaned that I noticed her getting hyper at times. The older one nursed til she was 3 and I noticed her becoming abominable after that but thought that's just what 3 year olds do...well...many I saw didn't!!!

Ed. Note: Please remember, we do not endorse any treatments and strongly advise you to check with your doctor before using, stopping or changing any treatment.


 


next: Natural Alternatives: Eye Q for Treating ADHD Symptoms
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APA Reference
Staff, H. (2008, December 15). Natural Alternatives: Evening Primrose Oil for Treating ADHD, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 6 from https://www.healthyplace.com/adhd/articles/evening-primrose-oil-for-treating-adhd

Last Updated: February 12, 2016

The Art of Healing Preface

I'm not OK,
when . . .
You're not.

Is about how control and boundary violation affect the healthy development of children into adults. How destructive control behaviors are learned and their use. How to unlearn destructive control behaviors. A look at finding serenity.

What this guide has to offer:

Section 1

"The Addictive Pull"
Learning how to Detach
As a result of Detaching . . .

Section II

"I'm afraid to say"
Learning how to Discover myself
As a result of Discovering myself . . .

Section III

"Acceptance of Myself"
Learning how to Accept what I've Discovered

next: Foreword
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APA Reference
Staff, H. (2008, December 15). The Art of Healing Preface, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 6 from https://www.healthyplace.com/addictions/articles/preface-control-and-boundary-violation

Last Updated: April 26, 2019

Pastoral Support Programme

Information about Pastoral Support Programmes for children  with behaviour problems in school.

What is a Pastoral Support Programme?

A Pastoral Support Programme (PSP) is a school-based intervention to help individual pupils manage their behaviour.

When should a Pastoral Support Programme be set up?

A Pastoral Support Programme should be automatically set up:

  • if your child has had several fixed period exclusions;
  • if your child has been identified as being at risk of failure at school;
  • if you child has been permanently excluded from another school

A Pastoral Support Programme may be set up in addition to an Individual Education Plan. If your child has additional or special educational needs, the Individual Education Plan should include approaches to support s/he who may be at serious risk of exclusion or disaffection.

How is a Pastoral Support Programme set up?

The Headteacher (or another member of the Senior Management Team) should invite parents/carers and an LEA representative to a meeting to discuss the causes of concern and what is reasonably required of the pupil to put the situation right, both academically and socially.

The aim of the meeting is to formulate a programme, which supports your child in managing his/her behaviour satisfactorily in order to successfully complete his/her education.

The Headteacher would normally chair this meeting. In some cases it may be useful to involve the Special Needs Co-ordinator if there are behaviour and learning difficulties involved, or the class teacher particularly for a young child.

The LEA should agree with the school what monitoring and help it will offer.

A LEA representative should be invited. This may be the educational psychologist or someone from the behaviour support or educational welfare service.

Other agencies, such as social services, health, youth service, careers, housing department, voluntary organisations or ethnic minority community group may also be involved.

What should a Pastoral Support Programme provide?

It should:

  • review any learning difficulties, particularly literacy which may affect your child's behaviour
  • provide a remedial programme, which must be put in place immediately and which may include
  • lunchtime or after school homework clubs
  • other forms of study support
  • consider/re-consider disapplying the National Curriculum to allow time for specific learning activities
  • consider changing your child's teaching set, class and/or seating arrangements
  • identify a "buddy" or adult mentor
  • consider involving the Behaviour Support Service for in-school support for the pupil and staff
  • consider jointly the possibility of 'time out' at a PRU as an additional behaviour management strategy
  • consider a "managed move" to another school.

How is this achieved?

  • short term achievable targets - reviewed at least fortnightly
  • strategies should be agreed to help your child reach these targets
  • date for review of what has been agreed

It is important that your child is aware of what is agreed.


 


next: Natural Alternatives: Pycnogenol-Proanthocyanadin for ADHD
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APA Reference
Staff, H. (2008, December 15). Pastoral Support Programme, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 6 from https://www.healthyplace.com/adhd/articles/pastoral-support-programme

Last Updated: February 12, 2016

Teen Hotlines

Please call them if you need help. Some of these numbers can and will tell you where you need to go and what you need to do to get help. Please use them.

Abuse

Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network (RAINN)
800-656-HOPE

Rape Crisis Centre (UK)
0171 8371600 or 0141 3311990

Alcoholism

Alcoholics Anonymous
1-212-870-3400

Hazelden Information Center
800-257-7800

ALANON
800-344-266

Cults and Gangs

Children's Defense Fund
202-628-8787

American Family Foundation
305-393-8193

Cult Clinic and Hotline
1-212-632-4640

Depression

National Depressive and Manic Depressive Association
312-642-0049

National Depression Association
312-642-0049

American Association of Suicidology
202-237-2280

National Depressive and Manic Depressive Association
800-826-3632

Depression and Cutting Yourself (Self-Injury)

Information Hotline
800-DONT-CUT

American Society for Dermatologic Surgery Information Hotline
800-441-2737

Drugs and Huffing

Cocaine Anonymous
1-800-347-8998

National Inhalant Prevention Partnership
800-269-4237

International Institute on Inhalant Abuse
450 West Jefferson Ave., Englewood, Co. 80110

Drugs telephone information service (UK)
0141 4201188

Eating Disorders

Anorexia Nervosa and Related Eating Disorders, Inc.
541-344-1144

National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders
847-831-3438

ANAD
780-831-3438

Eating Disorders Awareness and Prevention, Inc.
206-382-3587

American Anorexia/Bulimia Association
212-501-8351

Eating Disorders Association (UK)
01603 621414

Gay Services

The Hetrick-Martin Institute
212-674-2400

Indianapolis Youth Group
800-347-TEEN

Lavender Youth Recreation and Information Center
415-863-3636 (San Francisco area 800-246-PRIDE)

Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG)
202-638-4200

Grief Recovery

The Grief Recovery Institute
800-445-4808

Youth Crisis Hotline
800-448-4663

Teen Age Grief Incorporated (TAG)
818-997-0391

Pregnancy

Pregnancy Options
1-800-342-6688

Pregnancy Advisory Service (UK)
01564 793225

Runaways

National Runaways Switchboard
800-621-400 or 800-231-6946

Children of the Night
800-551-1300

STDs

AIDS/STDs (Canadian)
1-800-772-2437

Suicide

Suicide Awareness Voices of Education (SAVE)
612-946-7998

Teen Line (California only. 6pm to 10pm)
800-TLC-Teen

The American Association of Suicidology
4201 Connecticut Ave., NW, Suite 301, Washington D.C. 20028
310-855-HOPE

Distress, Suicide Helpline (Canadian)
1-800-232-7288

For extensive suicide information at HealthyPlace.com click here.

Mental Disorders

Social Anxiety Disorder

OC Foundation (for obsessive-compulsive disorder)
203-878-5669

National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (families of mentally ill)
800-950-NAMI

Teen Hotlines

Covenant House Nine Line
1-800-999-9999
www.covenanthouse.org

Kid's Help Phone (Canadian)
1-800-668-6868

Spanish Speaking Helpline (US)
1-800-344-SIDA



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APA Reference
Staff, H. (2008, December 15). Teen Hotlines, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 6 from https://www.healthyplace.com/gender/gay-is-ok/teen-hotlines

Last Updated: March 14, 2016

Living Through Others- Secondary Narcissistic Supply

The Disappearance of the Witnesses

I live through others. I inhabit their memories of me. Bits and pieces of Sam are strewn across continents, among hundreds of casual acquaintances, friends, lovers, teachers, admirers, and despisers. I exist by reflection. This is the essence of secondary narcissistic supply - the secure knowledge that I am replicated in the minds of many. I want to be remembered because without being remembered I am not. I need to be discussed because I have no being except as a topic of discussion. So, passive memory is not enough. I need to be actively reminded of my achievements, of my moments of glory, of past adulation. The constancy of these streams of memories smoothes the inevitable fluctuations in primary narcissistic supply. In lean moments, when I am all but forgotten, or when I feel humiliated by the gap between my reality and my grandiosity - these memories of past grandeur, related to me by outside "observers" lift my spirits. It is the main function of people in my life: to tell me how great I am because of how great I was.

I was a precocious child. Always the wunderkind with oversized spectacles, the freak. I befriended only men many years my senior. At the age of 20, the youngest of my best friends - among which I counted a mafia don, a political scientist, businessmen, authors, and journalists - was 40. Their age, experience and social standing made them ideal sources of narcissistic supply. They fed me, hosted me in their homes, bought me reference books, introduced me to each other, interviewed me, and took me on expensive trips to foreign lands. I was their darling, the subject of much awe and adulation.

Now, twenty years and some later, these are old people and they are dying. Their kids are in their late twenties. They are out of the loop. And when they die, their memories of me die with them. They take to their grave my secondary narcissistic supply. I slightly fade with every passing one of them. They, the dying and the dead, are the only ones who know. They are the witnesses of who I was back then and why. They are my only chance at ever getting to know myself at all. When the last of them is interred - I will be no more. I will have lost my stab at proper self-introduction. It feels so sad never to know Sam. It feels so lonely, like a child's grave in autumn.

 


 

next: Physique Dysmorphique - Distorted Physical Self-Image

APA Reference
Vaknin, S. (2008, December 15). Living Through Others- Secondary Narcissistic Supply, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 6 from https://www.healthyplace.com/personality-disorders/malignant-self-love/living-through-others-secondary-narcissistic-supply

Last Updated: July 2, 2018