Law graduate and vlogger Oghosa Ovienrioba, 22, sojourned into the dirty world of watching online pornography at the young age 14 and soon became a fully-fledged addict, watching over 400 hours in total after she got hooked on the habit, according to a Daily Mail UK report.
According to the report, the addiction started when she was aged 14 years old when she sneakily took a look at online porn on her computer. Thereafter, from the ages of 18 to 21, she would lock herself in a dark room and endlessly watch adult contents/movies, up to the point that she would masturbate between five and six times a day.
After publicly coming out to disclose her previous addictions, Oghosa is now trying to help others kick away the addiction through her brave speech on her personal experience with porn addiction on YouTube, a series that has gotten over 800,000 hits. Oghosa, who is currently based in London, said:
‘When I uploaded that video in February, I had no idea how phenomenal the response would be.
‘I received hundred of heartwarming comments from women who were going through the same thing for years.
‘Lots of people don’t think girls can suffer a porn addiction but it’s a problem for both sexes. I hope I can help others out there – talking about your problem is the first step.’
In this video, Oghosa Ovienrioba explains how she got into porn addiction:
Oghosa, who began watching online pornography in 2006, says that it was dangerously too easy for her to gain access to such adult content. She said:
‘I was 14 years old when I went to find porn on the internet. It was out of curiosity and it was just a simple Google search for me to get hold of an adult movie.
‘When I first watched it, my reaction was shock. But gradually over time, that shock becomes excitement and I would use any porn that I could get my hands on.’
She said: ‘I was watching it so much that I started to get bored by the “normal” soft porn movies. I wasn’t getting the buzz that I felt when I first saw it – in fact I was almost desensitised to that content.
‘I went from watching soft pornography to dodgier stuff to get the kick I needed.’
Oghosa’s addiction briefly stopped when she had a six-month relationship with a boy at age 18. But when she started university and found herself single again, the downward spiral of her addiction recommenced.She said: ‘I was at a university and alone in a new city. I guess it was a trigger and I just went downhill from there.
‘For a period of two to three years, I was watching porn on a daily basis and sometimes masturbating over six times per day. It was all I could think about.’
She continued:
‘I didn’t see people as people anymore – they were just sex objects to me.
‘The simplest things could set me off such as a girl unbuttoning her blouse or a boy taking his top off. Everything made me want more.‘I would sit in my room alone for hours, with the lights off, watching porn. I felt lonely and ashamed of myself.’
When Oghosa turned 21, she found Christianity and knew it was time to confront her problem. She made several lifestyle changes so she would not return to old habits again.She says: ‘I spoke to a friend about my addiction and that was a huge release for me. It was a first step. ‘Talking about it made me realise how much of a problem it was – you’re only as sick as the secrets you keep.
‘As a Christian, you have to be quite controlled about what you let into your heart, in terms of what you see and do.’