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The Effects of Pornography on Individuals, Marriage, Family and Community
Effects of Pornography on Individuals, Marriage, Family and Community
The Story of Former Porn Star Shelley Lubben

The Story of Shelley Lubben,
Former Porn Star
by Judith Reisman
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Chris Hedges, in Empire of Illusion: The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle, writes that the “cruelty” of the “new” pornography “takes a toll on the bodies, as well as the emotions, of porn actresses.” But someone is trying to help them:
The Pink Cross booth has a table of anti-porn tracts and is set up in the far corner of the Sands Expos Convention Center in Las Vegas. It is an unlikely participant at the annual Adult Video News (AVN) expo. Pink Cross is a Christian outreach program for women in the porno industry, run by ex-porn star Shelley Lubben.
I first watched Shelley Lubben on YouTube in early 2009. An “ex-porn star,” she has created the Pink Cross (www.thepinkcross.org) as a public charity to reach out to “adult industry workers, offering emotional, financial and transitional support.” In the YouTube segment, filmed before a church audience, Shelley describes her past life and her current work. A tall, stately woman, she treads the boards, moving her hands to emphasize her words, looking directly and earnestly at her listeners.
As a veteran student of pornography and prostitution, I did not expect to learn anything new from watching Shelley Lubben’s public testimony. I was wrong. Shelley’s description of the sexual violence and degradation of modern pornography was a shock, even to me. It made me think that it made perfect sense to hear that she had left her economically rewarding “star” roles to return to a safer life doing “straight” prostitution. The “glamour” of porn is only a mask:
You have to do what they want on the sets. . . . Girls . . . feel like stars. They get attention. . . . They don’t realize the degradation. . . . Raised on porn, [they] don’t even ask if it’s wrong. . . . They get into drugs to numb themselves. They get their [bodies] ripped. . . . They get HPV and herpes, and they turn themselves off emotionally and die.
Shelley says such women totally lose their identity and live on drugs and alcohol. They cannot plan, save their money, or eat properly. The survivors commonly have only sexual diseases and “fake boobs” to show for their lives in porn. She used to be one of them.
The Back Story
In the autobiography she wrote for her website (www.shelleylubben.com), Shelley, born in 1968, notes that she attended “a good church” with her family and that, “as a little girl, I knew and loved Jesus very much.” Unfortunately, her stable if unaffectionate family moved to another location and stopped going to church. Television became the basis of their family life. A creative child, Shelley put on her own plays at her elementary school, with the approval of her amazed first-grade teacher.
Then, at age nine, a classmate and the girl’s teenage brother sexually molested Shelley. With no one to turn to or redress her abuse, Shelley defused her anxiety via autoeroticism and furtive sexual forays with both girls and boys. “It felt good to be wanted by someone and to receive attention, but at the same time I felt dirty. I didn’t recognize until much later that my entire childhood had been sexually hijacked.”
She carried shame and self-blame into her teen years. “It must be something evil in me,” she thought. She “started having sex at age 16” and became a “rebellious resentful teenager who acted out to get attention.” Hoping to keep peace in the home, her parents let Shelley dress up as a Playboy bunny and date strange boys, who led her into drug and alcohol abuse. The family tried counseling to no avail. Unable to understand what to do, her parents “told me to leave home at age 18.”
She landed in the San Fernando valley with no food and no money. “A ‘nice’ man saw I was upset and told me how sorry he was.” Still shocked and angry about being kicked out the house, so “that I didn’t care any more . . . I sold myself for $35.”
Thus Shelley entered the “glamorous” life of prostitution, but the money, jewelry, and gifts soon included bizarre sex with strangers who stalked her, slashed her tires, and threatened to kill her if she demurred from performing certain sex acts. One man tried to kill her with his truck, and she often had to lie her way out of frightening situations. During her eight years as a prostitute and exotic dancer, she had two miscarriages and one birth. Little Tiffany grew up living “with a lewd wild woman.”
Now a single mom, “Jesus kept tugging at my heart,” Shelley writes, “but I ignored him. I figured, God wasn’t taking care of me, so I had to do whatever I could to survive.”
Most of her prostitution money went for drugs and alcohol to blot out the trauma of her life. To avoid the rapes and arrests for prostitution, she turned to pornography because “it seemed safer and more legal.” However, even prostitution did not involve the brutal kinds of rape and degradation that she endured while “starring” in pornography. Soon she was required to do very hardcore scenes.
[O]nly more drugs and alcohol could get me through them. . . . I sold what was left of my heart, mind and femininity to the porn industry and the woman and person in me died completely on the porn set.” After becoming infected with herpes, I quietly left the porn industry but went back to prostitution to survive.
The Rescue
In 1994 Shelley met her husband Garrett at a bar. At first she refused his requests for a date, but when she finally accepted and the two went out, they became instant friends. Garret was raised in a Christian home and had attended a Christian school. He wanted to rescue Shelley. She says, “He was a friend to a prostitute, just like Jesus. We knew God was working in our lives, so we turned back to Jesus and got married on February 14, 1995.”
It was a rough marriage, but Shelley says God sent them to a church called Champions Centre in Tacoma, Washington, where they learned “to live a champion life.”
With God, I had true forgiveness from all my sins and a chance to grow into a whole new person without being perfect first. That was a relief! I learned that God loved me unconditionally, regardless of my past, and even had a plan for my future. God had a plan for my life? It was like someone turned the light on for me.
Shelley says she “practiced God’s principles in everything I did.” She learned web design and operated her own web design business for four years. She also attended college and got a bachelor’s degree in theology and counseling. She had walked into Champions Centre “broken and shattered,” she says. Eight years later, she was a Champion woman healed and excited to live life! God restored me from drugs, alcohol addiction, painful memories, mental illness, sexual addiction, sexual trauma, and the guilt and shame from my past. . . . He also restored my femininity and healed my sexuality, which is a major miracle for me.
Shelley reports herself cured not only of herpes but also of cervical cancer. In addition, she says, “God also healed our marriage in a remarkable way. Garrett and I have a beautiful and loving relationship and are best friends!” Their “three beautiful daughters are being raised as Champions,” and, says Shelley, her daughter Tiffany has forgiven her and “allows me to be a mother to her.”
The Ministry
As a child, Shelley had dreamed of being a preacher. Having received her bachelor’s of theology degree, she is indeed a preacher now, sharing her testimony of transformation and rescue out of drugs, porn, and prostitution “by the power of Jesus Christ.” Her website says:
Now happily married to Garrett, her husband, and the mother of three daughters, Shelley takes a message of transformation against-all-odds to prisons, TV, radio, film, conferences and rescue missions. She has been a guest on talk shows such as Dr. Phil, Michael Reagan and most recently, FOXNews. Her message is one of exposing the $57 billion porn industry for what it is—full of lies and deceit, addiction and broken lives. Shelley maintains that women who turn to the industry to make money “probably didn’t grow up in healthy childhoods.
“Almost all pornography performers were sexually assaulted as children,” she says, but hide their broken hearts. “That would kill the fantasy, now wouldn’t it?” She told Chris Hedges:
Porn is like any other addiction. . . . First, you are curious. Then you need harder and harder drugs to get off. You need gang bangs and bestiality and child porn. Porn gets grosser and grosser. . . . And meanwhile the addicts make their wives feel like they can’t live up to the illusion of the porn star. . . . He wants what isn’t real. Porn destroys intimacy.
She says, “God now sends me out to proclaim to the world the reality of his awesome love. I also want everyone to know that whatever God did for me, he will do for you. He’ll do this because he loves you and sent his Son Jesus in order to give you a whole new life.”
Shelley tells the women she rescues that God has a plan for their lives and that they “were made for greater things.” Her website offers the real stories of these women, and includes a tragic Dead Porn Stars Memorial.
Shelley’s story is indeed inspirational. “All I wanted was a normal life. Then I discovered the truth. Sure enough, I finally found the life I always wanted.”
My time as a porn star left me suicidal -- but now I help others escape this twisted industry
Former sex worker April Garris reveals all to Chrissie Russell
By Chrissie Russell
Thursday March 18 2010
April Garris is a mum. She is bubbly, well-spoken and works as a service technician, fixing warehouse equipment around the area where she lives in California. She is also an ex-porn star who appeared in 20 hardcore films, used crystal meth and was committed to a psychiatric ward after she reached rock bottom and wasn't sure she could go on with the life in which she found herself.
"The whole porn industry is a twisted and destructive lie," says April. "I was completely naïve about it but when the cameras were on I acted like I loved it. I told people about my voracious sexual appetite but the whole time I felt violated, worthless and empty.
"Unless you've been there, no one knows the dark side of the porn industry. I do and I'm sure if people knew the reality of what goes on, they would think twice before watching or condoning adult movies."
Born in 1971, April grew up in southern California. An only child, her parents divorced when she was five and while her mum remained at home, her dad moved to Missouri where April would see him for two months a year in the summer.
She says: "I was never close to my dad. After I turned 13, I had no further contact with him. My mother was very religious and sex was never discussed at home. I grew up with a really skewed attitude to it and men. When I was 14, my mum was diagnosed with breast cancer. She retreated into herself and I became very lonely and depressed."
Despite battling feelings of isolation, April studied at school and got grades that enabled her to go to college to major in religious studies. While in her junior year and when her mum's illness was in its final throes, April met and married her first real boyfriend and shortly after they had a baby girl.
April says: "I was in financial trouble. As a way of making money fast, I started stripping in bars but hated every minute of it. I was so miserable stripping that part of me thought making movies might be better because at least I would have more control over what I did. But I had no idea about what really goes on in the industry and what I was getting in to."
April signed to an agent and started making graphic sexual movies. Her husband became her manager.
"I hated what I was doing, but after I'd made the first movie, I felt I was already trapped. I felt even if I stopped now, there was already a film out there of me that I had no control over.
"After a day's filming, I just felt relief that it was over, but there was also a weird comfort knowing that I was finally able to make some money.
"I was making between $500 and $1,000 dollars a scene. I finally felt I was contributing to my family but at the same time I felt totally worthless and miserable."
Submerged in the seedy underworld of the sex industry, April started regularly using drugs such as speed, marijuana and crystal meth to try and cope with what she was doing.
"I just wanted to be numb," she says. "What I was doing was physically and emotionally destructive. I just wanted to feel absent."
During six months in 2001, she made 20 films, earning more than $10,000. However, April lived in constant fear of contracting sexually transmitted infections from other performers.
She says: "One day I just felt I couldn't go on. I wasn't well and I was scheduled to film a particularly horrific and degrading scene with two men. I told my husband I couldn't do it. I never made another film."
After walking away from the industry, April became severely depressed and self-harmed so badly that she was hospitalised. A year later, her marriage collapsed.
She says: "I hated myself. My dream had been to be a vet, to marry and raise a family. Instead I was divorced and an ex-porn star. I had no sense of self-worth. I felt suicidal but too afraid to do anything."
In desperation April reached out on the internet and found former porn star Shelly Lubben. Shelly started the Pink Cross Foundation in 2008, a faith-based organisation that offers to help men and women break free of the porn industry.
April explains: "Shelly was amazing. I went from feeling completely alone to realising I could use my experience to help other women. I rediscovered my faith and started counselling women like me as well as trying to raise awareness in the public of the reality behind porn."
Now April is bringing her message to Ireland. She'll be sharing her experience and knowledge at Dublin's Sugar Club where she'll be interviewed by Matt Fradd, who runs The Porn Effect, at whodoesithurt.com, a website geared towards helping sex workers and porn addicts realise the destructive nature of the world they're involved in.
April explains: "There's a perception that it's harmless but I have never met a girl who honestly enjoyed what she did. What people see in a movie is far removed from the pain and degradation than goes into filming."
Now clean from drugs and working as a service technician, April is moving on from her past.
She still worries about what films exist of her in circulation and she's been unable to form a lasting relationship with another man.
She has on-going custody issues with her 12-year-old daughter and still suffers attacks of depression and anxiety, but she is determined to try and make something positive out of the experience.
She says: "There's a huge part of me that is grateful that I'm in this position because I can help other people. I can educate and enlighten people and if I hadn't gone through what I did, I wouldn't be able to do that."
- Chrissie Russell
Irish Independent
Ex Porn Star Tamra Toryn gets baptized
"On January 16th, 2010 (just one day after my birthday), at Rock Harbor Church in Costa Mesa, California... I was born into a new life with Christ by being baptized. Going under I felt like the Holy Spirit wrapped His arms around me and and while coming out of the water, I was immediately filled with joy. That following Wednesday, Rock Harbor church contacted me and asked if I would speak at the evening prayer night in front of 170 people about my testimony a long with how I came to be baptized. It was the first time I ever spoke of my past in front of a church or any crowd of that size. Afterward I received a lot of hugs and praise.
Through all that's happened, it feels amazing to be set free from my sinful past. Although I'm still working on a strong recovery, nothing seems impossible anymore with God guiding me through. Everyday, I thank Him for connecting me with Pink Cross and all the wonderful people in this ministry. You are all my family in Christ who I love very much. Thank you all for your continued support and prayers. It means more you know. God bless! "
Lots of Love,
Tammie
P.S. Looooooooooooooooooooove you, Shelley!!! *BIG HUGS*







