- Feb 5, 2002
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Rachael Killackey, a 25-year-old wife and new mother, was raised in a devout Catholic household by parents who reared her with what she calls “a strong moral code and beautiful faith life.”
As a child, Killackey experienced a few unwanted incidents with men outside of her family, which “crossed my boundaries and gave me a confusing lens about sexuality.”
On the cusp of puberty, Killackey stumbled upon inappropriate contentographic literature on Pinterest. “I was looking at innocent content and it just popped up in a tab as ‘related content.’ It turned out to be erotica. I was instantly hooked.”
Looking back, she thinks that viewing inappropriate contentography gave her a sense of control over a part of her life that others had breached.
Eventually, Killackey developed an addiction that would plague her for a decade. While she was attending youth group meetings at her parish, applying to Catholic colleges, and “sincerely striving for a friendship with Jesus,” she felt both “duplicitous and confused.”
“Growing up, at home and in church activities, inappropriate contentography was talked about as a guy’s problem,” she recalled. “The whole time I kept thinking, ‘Can women even be addicted to this stuff?’ ”
Continued below.
As a child, Killackey experienced a few unwanted incidents with men outside of her family, which “crossed my boundaries and gave me a confusing lens about sexuality.”
On the cusp of puberty, Killackey stumbled upon inappropriate contentographic literature on Pinterest. “I was looking at innocent content and it just popped up in a tab as ‘related content.’ It turned out to be erotica. I was instantly hooked.”
Looking back, she thinks that viewing inappropriate contentography gave her a sense of control over a part of her life that others had breached.
Eventually, Killackey developed an addiction that would plague her for a decade. While she was attending youth group meetings at her parish, applying to Catholic colleges, and “sincerely striving for a friendship with Jesus,” she felt both “duplicitous and confused.”
“Growing up, at home and in church activities, inappropriate contentography was talked about as a guy’s problem,” she recalled. “The whole time I kept thinking, ‘Can women even be addicted to this stuff?’ ”
Continued below.
https://angelusnews.com/news/nation/inappropriate contentography-addiction-women-catholic-god/