Notes Sexadiction
Notes Sexadiction
Notes Sexadiction
Detrimental or not?:
If you enjoy sex, it does not mean you're addicted. If, however, your sexual
activity hinders your relationships, keeps you from forming a long-term, honest,
loving relationship, or compels you to be deceptive, you are definitely addicted.
You can tell if your behavior is out of control by observing if you can keep it from
becoming detrimental.
Eating is not detrimental and should be enjoyable. But if you cannot stop eating
before it becomes a negative force in your life, then you are out of control.
Having an intense sexual appetite is not addictive. If satisfying your sexual needs
brings you and your partner closer together, then you're not addicted.
If your sexual needs lead you to promiscuity, distant relationships, pedophilia,
short-term flings, compulsive masturbation or a dependency on pornography,
you're out of control.
Sexually addictive behavior is not a matter of how many times you have sex. If
you have sex 5 times a day it does not necessarily mean you are addicted.
Sex is about relationships. If the relationship between you and your partner is
meaningful and monogamous and you both have the time, energy, and desire to
have sex 5 times a day, you are engaging in enjoyable sex.
On the other hand, if you have sex only once a month but it is with a prostitute,
you are addicted because the sex is meaningless and impersonal, thus
detrimental to you.
Sexual addiction is driven by what a person wants from relationships. Does the
person want a relationship based on intimacy, openness and commitment? Or do
they want to experience a series of sensations without commitment?
Sexual addiction is overcome not just by addressing the behavior. What the
person seeks in a relationship is actually more important than the behavior.
Sexually addicted people do not have a sexual problem. They have a relationship
problem that manifests itself sexually.
Pleasure:
Freedom:
All addiction is a form of psychological slavery. No one made the addict a slave.
The addict did it to him or herself. By the same token, it is the addict who frees
him or herself. But until they are free, addicts don't know when their addiction will
call and what they will do to satisfy it.
Overcoming a sexual addiction liberates a person from the beck and call of their
compulsion and fills the person with a wonderful sense of freedom.
Positive Outlook:
To be addicted is to be out of control, which fills the addict's everyday life with
anxiety and despair.
Most people who are addicted have no idea that much of the despair and anxiety
they experience is caused by their addiction.
When they overcome their addiction they're amazed at how much better they feel
about life's possibilities.
Self Respect:
Sex addiction takes a great toll on one's self-esteem. Being out of control causes
the addict to lose confidence in him/herself. Cheating and deceiving to hide the
addiction or engage in it result in self-disgust. Not being able to sustain a genuine
loving relationship causes despair, loneliness, frustration, and self-alienation.
Real intimacy demands emotional investment. It takes hard work over time to
build a solid, loving relationship. Fantasy requires no emotional investment, no
effort, and delivers an instant high.
Real intimacy can only be derived from a genuine, loving, romantic and sexual
relationship with a real person. Such relationships do not occur instantly. They
are developed over time through dedicated effort. One result of the effort is
loving, intimate sex between the partners.
Here's what's going on: 1- You feel that you have to compete against his
addiction. 2- You feel that his addiction is driving a wedge between you and him.
3- You may or may not realize that if the addiction is not handled it will destroy
the marriage at worst, or cheapen the marriage at best. 4- You may or may not
feel that if you were a more attractive woman or a better wife he wouldn't be
involved with an addiction. 5- In your marriage you have probably been the sex
police at times. You didn't like it. Neither did he.
Your husband loves you. And he is drawn to his addiction. His problem is that he
wants you and the addiction. If you give him a choice between you or the
addiction, he will choose you. But then he will go back to his addiction because
he simply does not know how to carry out his choice. He needs help from
someone who understands him and who comprehends how to overcome
addiction.
Here’s what I advise: 1- Be honest. 2- Protect and comfort your partner. 3- Don’t
involve your children. 4- Be careful about developing new addictions or returning
to old ones.
The importance of honesty. When Mr. Letterman’s wife first confronted him about
his cheating, he made one of the worst mistakes.
He responded like most unfaithful partners; he tried to lie his way out of it. A
ruthless strategy some employ is to tell the partner, “I would never cheat on you.
I love you more than anything in the world. I would never do anything to hurt
you.” That’s the sympathy play. Then comes the kick in the stomach, “You’re the
one with the problem. You don't trust. You’re attacking me. You don’t have
confidence in me and in the relationship because of your problems.” Then the
cheater gets the partner to apologize!
I don’t know if David Letterman tried that approach. What he did was not as bad
but it was awful. By confronting him, his wife was giving him an opportunity to
come clean with her. When someone asks you for the truth, they don’t want more
lies or half-truths. They want you to be completely honest.
But Mr. Letterman had been living a lie for so long, he did not hear the plea for
truth in his wife’s voice. He was listening more to his own voice that was telling
him, “Protect yourself. Tell her nothing. If you have to tell her something, tell her
as little possible.”
Mrs. Letterman was giving Mr. Letterman the chance to tell her everything. He
looked her in the eye, sincerely, and lied by admitting as little as he could and
hiding the rest. She, like most partners in her situation, probably put her doubts
aside because he promised her that there was nothing else to tell. When the
whole truth comes out, as it usually does in these situations, the partner feels, “I
can’t trust him. Even when I believe I can trust him, I can’t trust him.” Her pain
and anger is almost unbearable.
Mr. Letterman should have told his wife everything when he had the chance.
If you are cheating on your partner and your partner confronts you, don’t make
David Letterman’s mistake. Tell the whole truth. If you have made his mistake, go
back to your partner and tell her everything, the sooner the better. I know you’re
afraid that your partner will end the relationship if you tell her everything. Let me
suggest that you’re looking at the situation through the filter of “Lies are the best
way to save a marriage.” You’re wrong. You’re partner wants the whole truth. If
you have not read the first 48 chapters of my book, The Most Personal Addiction,
I hope you take the time to. It will help you understand what your partner is going
through.
You can’t save a marriage by protecting yourself. You save a marriage by giving
your partner what she wants. She wants the truth. Nothing less.
Here it is:
Non-addictive, genuine loving sex in a real relationship is the absolute best sex
there is. It is the greatest high, the greatest thrill, the greatest charge in life.
The client you read about in the first paragraph experienced it through this
counseling. Many, many clients have. Let's find out why.
In this counseling you start by understanding that you have a natural, inborn
need for good sex. Natural sex is not something to feel guilty about. It is not
something to be denied, repressed or resisted. But it is something that can be
abused. When the natural need for sex is abused it becomes an addictive
compulsion.
Once you become addicted, the natural desire for genuine, loving sex is
overwhelmed by the addictive compulsion to escape. Which brings us to the
query: Escape what?
When sex is used as an escape it is not really a pleasure. It's a relief. There is a
profound difference between pleasure and relief. Relief is like banging your head
against the wall because it feels good when you stop.
The difference between addictive sex and natural sex is the difference between
screwing and making love.
When you screw someone you use their body to provide you with a thrill. When
you make love you are emotionally involved. Your body is an expression of the
feelings you have for that person. Their body is an expression of the feelings they
have for you.
• It teaches you to hide, to sneak and to live with shame and guilt.
Natural sex is not shameful. It doesn't lead to guilt. It entices you to enjoy life and
to enjoy yourself and your partner. It fills you with real emotions, not fantasies. It
teaches you to love life. It can make you laugh, cry, sing, dance, or just fall
asleep blissfully. It fills you with a special, wonderful feeling that you can't get any
other way. It makes addictive sex look like a bad joke told by a boring stand-up
comic in a sleazy nightclub.
So how does someone tell the difference between their natural sex drive and
their addictive sex drive?
As a general rule - not true in all cases - sex outside of a healthy relationship is
addictive. For example:
• Using pornography to the extent that you neglect your partner in real life is
another sign of sexual addiction.
• Many people whose childhoods were as bad or worse than yours did not get
sexually addicted.
• Many people who became sexually addicted had childhoods better than
yours.
Consider the following queries and answers about your childhood. Even though
you and I have never spoken, my answers are correct.
• Question: Did you do everything your parents told you?
Answer: Of course not.
Were there kids who had it tougher than you and came out better than you?
Definitely.
•
Were there kids who had it better than you and came out worse?
Of course.
You are the result of your own decisions. I am the result of mine. Every
human being is a result of his or her own free will choices. We are not victims.
If you've ever attempted to stop any addictive behavior, you'll probably find some
of these symptoms familiar:
Living in fear of experiencing an addictive desire you can't get rid of.
•
Excruciating pain when you try to push the desire out of your mind.
•
Feeling afraid to go outside, turn on the TV, read a book, listen to the radio,
or even answer the phone because your addictive desire might be "triggered."
•
When the desire strengthens, you feel you are bad or weak. When it
subsides, you're afraid it will strengthen again.
•
The symptoms we're going to discuss can be identified by you or your partner
just by taking a close look at your actions and being honest about them. What
blocks people from identifying that they are addicted is the a desire to deny one's
faults. No one is perfect. A greater mistake than developing an addiction is
refusing to admit you are addicted.
This discussion will help you understand why certain symptoms mean you are
addicted. There's a separate section on how to get through to an addicted person
who doesn't want to admit their addiction. If you're displaying any of the
symptoms discussed, read the section on how to get through to the addicted
person, carefully.
However, after a while, most addicted people reach an abusive level of addictive
behavior and don't increase it; they maintain it.
Some addicted people try to deny their addiction the way Bill, a middle-aged
client of mine, did. He argued: "I haven't increased my behavior in 10 years, so
I'm not addicted."
If you are trying to get through to someone like Bill, ask this query: "Did your
behavior escalate in the first few years?"
Once the person admits that their behavior escalated, don't take it any further.
Instead, move on to the other symptoms, because many healthy behaviors
escalate over time also.
Increasing behavior over time is a symptom. It's not final proof. It's a strong
indicator if combined with other factors.
Soft-spoken, easy-going Tommy claimed, "I'm not hurting anyone; I'm just having
harmless fun."
I used the data on the list below to get through to him. If you're trying to get
through to an addicted person in denial, go over these points with him or her
carefully. Don't use them to attack. Approach the list as an opportunity to explore
and discover the facts.
The activity takes up too much time and/or costs too much money.
Most addicted people don't realize how much time and money they put into
their addiction. Others know and wish they could stop wasting their time and
money on it.
If you don't know how much time and money you put into your addiction,
now's a good time to start thinking about it.
If you're trying to get through to an addicted person, ask him to write down
everything he spends on the behavior and to keep track of the time he puts into
it. These factors alone can become the wake-up call that gets your partner to
admit his addiction.
•
Addictions are usually done until the point of exhaustion. Most addictive
people don't realize the terrible stress addictive behavior puts on the body until
they stop.
The next time you feel exhausted, think about the last time you acted
addictively. Did it contribute to the exhaustion? Was it the main cause?
Many addicted people in denial will argue that their addiction decreases
stress and gives them energy. This can be a very difficult defense to break
through. However, addicted people are exhausted at the end of an addictive
binge. Ask your partner, "How do you feel at the end of a binge?" That might be
all you need.
If you can get him to at least admit he has a dependency, the door is open to
discuss more symptoms, which might break through his defenses completely.
•
Some defensive addicted people will say, "If you weren't so intolerant, we
wouldn't have any problems." In other words, he blames the problem on you.
Suffer through life with an addicted partner who does not want to work on
his problem, or
o
Luke's family was living from hand to mouth while he spent money on
prostitutes.
•
Instead of the loving, intimate marriage Doreen expected, she struggled with
the burden of Henry's deceptions and betrayals.
•
Sylvia endured years of emotional neglect because Phil spent more time with
porn than he did with her.
•
Sally went without sex for five years and didn't realize that the cause was her
husband's sex addiction. She thought there was something wrong with her. Her
story is not that unusual.
•
Another far too common tragedy: Linda caught a sexually transmitted disease
from her unfaithful husband.
•
Going out in public with her husband was hell for Phyllis because he stared at
other women as if he were undressing them with his eyes.
•
Most addicted people, if they're honest and care about their relationship, will
admit the harm they've caused others.
If you're dealing with an addicted person who will not admit the harm he's caused
others, do not settle for anything less than a full admission and genuine remorse.
In order to get an admission from a defensive addict, prepare for a difficult, nasty
battle. Get all your data together before you confront him. Go over every possible
evasion your partner might come up with. I'm sure you know most of them by
now.
Figure out how you're going to respond. If you can't come up with a suitable
response, then tell him, "OK, these are the facts. I'm not going to argue with you
about them. Take it or leave it."
With some highly evasive people, your only option is to give them a take it or
leave it proposition.
We're only talking about the highly evasive few. The way to get through to them
is to have all your facts together and fight hard.
It might take the most draining confrontation you've ever gone through, but if he's
at all honest and caring, you have a good chance of getting his admission and
remorse.
After you've given it everything you have, if he still denies his addiction, then it's
time to tell him: "It's either me or the addiction you say you don't have."
If your partner admits the harm he's caused, then show him support. But not until
then.
When people take drugs to feel good or use alcohol to stop feeling bad, they're
trying to alter an uncomfortable mood rather than face it. Other people use
prescription medication, sex, and/or eating for the same escapist purpose.
Again, most addicted people will admit that they use the behavior to alter their
mood. But some will also say, "What's wrong with that?" The query could have
two interpretations because the person might mean:
1.
An effective way to reply to "What's wrong with that?" is, "It's not immoral or evil.
It just isn't good for you. Eventually, it will hurt you. You're always better off facing
your feelings rather than running from them."
There are some addicted people who will not admit that they use the behavior to
alter moods. Here's a query to ask them:
"If you're not addicted, then why do you (drink, overeat, use sex, etc.) when you
feel stress, loneliness, guilt, fear, failure, rejection or other uncomfortable
feelings?"
If they deny it, then point out the times that you have seen them use addictive
behavior to escape dealing with real life.
But addiction also causes an anxiety of its own because life's problems get worse
when they are not dealt with.
In the final stages of addiction, most addicted people know they are not deriving
genuine satisfaction from their behavior. But there are some who will say, "The
behavior is my greatest thrill."
1.
"If addictive behavior is your greatest thrill, you don't have much of a life.
Wouldn't you like to get more pleasure out of life than just a quick, empty high?"
2.
"Are you saying that being with your addiction is more satisfying than being
with someone you love?"
3.
"If you think fantasy is superior to reality, then why do you feel so bad when
the fantasy ends? Don't lie to me. I know you feel empty and miserable when the
fantasy ends."
4.
"If your addiction is so great, why are you ruining your entire life for it? Things
that are good for you make your life better. Sure, the addiction gives you a quick,
shallow thrill. And what good is that compared to the joys of finding real pleasure
with real people?"
5.
"The high you get from addiction is temporary and fleeting. The highs of real
life are always with you."
Attempting to stop
•
The Twelve Step Program and conventional, licensed therapy say, "If you can't
stop, it means you're addicted." I disagree.
I carefully prepared him to deal with the issues we're discussing, and many more.
He succeeded on his first try. Carlos and many of my other clients prove that
failure to stop does not indicate addiction because they never had a failed
attempt to stop.
Most of my clients were more like Doug. He had made many, many attempts to
stop before contacting me. Even in those cases, we usually achieved success on
the first attempt.
When you approach your partner about his past attempts to stop, don't tell him,
"You can't stop, so that means you're an addict." It does your partner a
disservice.
Instead tell him, "I respect your attempts to stop. It means you really care and
you want to make your life better. I just think you need a better approach. And I
think when you find it, there's a good chance you'll succeed."
Now we're ready to move on and talk about the unique aspects of sex addiction.
The unique driving force behind sexual addiction is the attempt to escape the
natural, healthy need for intimacy.
Some people escape intimacy more than others. Some escape differently than
others. But all sexually addicted people have one thing in common:
To some degree, every sexually addicted person flees from intimacy and turns to
fantasy to meet his or her needs for a healthy, loving intimate sexual relationship.
You don't have to analyze your childhood, change your environment, wipe out
stress, or chemically alter your mind to overcome sex addiction. The answer to
your addiction lies in two challenges:
1.
"Can I do it? Can I really overcome my sex addiction? I've struggled with it for
years. I feel shame about it. I feel guilt about it. It's ruining me and everything I
love. Can this horrible secret I live with really be overcome?"
1.
If your answer is "Yes," all you need is knowledge. You can gain that knowledge
by using this book and your own experience as the guides.
You will have an attractive excuse to continue with your sexually addictive
behavior:
If you were struck by cancer and your spouse said to you, "If you don't
overcome your disease, I'm divorcing you," your spouse would be totally
heartless.
Allan expected people to treat him as if he had been struck by cancer - and to
accept whatever his "disease" supposedly forced him to do. His favorite line was,
"The disease makes us lie."
Allan didn't have a chance of overcoming sex addiction until he admitted that
he was fully responsible for his actions - and his lying.
•
He also learned that his mind sent him a pain signal when he attempted to
escape the responsibility for his actions.
Test it for yourself. The next time you act sexually addictive, tell yourself, "I'm
diseased. There is nothing I can do about my actions. Someone has to come
along and cure me."
At best, you might feel a temporary relief of guilt. But your mind will know that
you are responsible for what you did. The guilt will return. And it will be more
intense because you refused to accept responsibility for your actions.
Now try this: Tell yourself, "I got myself into this mess, and it's up to me to get
myself out. I'll observe my actions, my thoughts, my feelings and then I'll look for
a solution. I'll seek advice if necessary, but I know it's not up to the advisor to
overcome my addiction; it's up to me."
Although that approach alone will not overcome your addiction, you will retain
the dignity of being responsible for your actions. Without that dignity, your
chances of overcoming sex addiction are just about zero.
•
If you tell your mind, "I have a disease," your mind will not know if it should
approach your addictive behavior as something you have a choice about, or
something you don't have a choice about.
I helped Allan clear up his confusion by getting him to understand that his
addiction was a result of choices that he made - and those choices could be
changed only by him.
•
Allan knew quite a few people who had spent thousands of dollars on
hospital programs to overcome sexual addiction. He had never met one who had
achieved long-term success.
Your addiction is not a disease because:
Anyone can attend Twelve Step meetings. The person sitting next to you
might be a child molester, a stalker, or whatever.
•
Allan was well aware of this, but would not tell it to new people he was trying
to get to join the program. He also knew, as did I, that there are people who go to
Twelve Step meetings to get a sexual high from listening to the confessions.
Others go to find new sex partners.
•
You are a unique individual with unique individual needs. The Twelve Step
Program uses the term "We" instead of "I" because it does not consider you a
unique individual. It considers you a helpless, diseased member of a group who
must turn him or herself over to a Higher Power.
If your only addictions are masturbation and pornography, you do not have
the same problems a child molester does.
•
If you are faithful to your partner, you do not have the same conflict as
someone who cheats on theirs.
•
If you have a history of long-term relationships, you do not have the same
difficulties as someone who prefers short flings.
•
You overcome sex addiction by relying on your own unique way of thinking and
feeling. If you get advice, make sure it's from someone who overcame sex
addiction.
What every woman involved with a man needs to know about sex addiction.
If you suspect, are not sure, or know that the man in your life is sexually
addicted, you're probably wondering, "What can I do about it? How can I talk to
him? What are the problems to expect? Can they be overcome? Should I leave
him? Should I give him one more chance?" But what if you've been giving him
one more chance for years?
This interview, written by a happily married man who overcame his own sex
addiction in 1982, is designed to help you understand what you are going
through and why you are going through it. It will answer the queries posed above
and more.
1.
Your partner doesn't take an interest in your life. If you don't volunteer
what's going on, he doesn't ask. Or if you talk about yourself, he doesn't listen or
doesn't seem to care.
•
You can share deeper feelings with a friend than you can with him.
• You want him to be your best friend. There was a time you felt that way
about him. He's changed since then. He's not as close. The friendship is still
there. But the deep interest, the feeling of sharing life together is gone or
disappearing.
Impersonal sex. It's just something he goes through with you and gets it
over as soon as possible.
•
You need to initiate the sex. If you don't initiate it, it doesn't happen.
• He doesn't seem to share the experience with you. He's an actor in a
role.
• He could be having sex with anyone. You just happen to be available.
Any one of the above signs means there's a problem in your sex life with him.
3.
He admitted he bought the porn magazine or video and said it was only
out of curiosity.
•
He doesn't know how to use the computer and he wishes he knew how to
stop the porn from popping up.
•
The answers you just read are not necessarily lies. They describe actual
incidents that happened to clients of mine who did not use porn. However, these
cases are extremely rare - most of the time you're being lied to - except for porn
spam; it's virtually unavoidable.
Whenever you find porn in the house or on the computer, assume you've
stumbled across evidence of a pornography addiction.
Every once in a while, a female client will tell me, "I don't care if he
masturbates, I just don't want him using porn to do it." That is a recipe for
disaster.
Some men and women are under the impression that a married guy needs to
masturbate to release extra sexual tension.
Let me give you another interpretation. Most men get sexually addicted. So
they have two drives:
•
Most sexually addicted men in a relationship act out only when they get the
opportunity. The less you're home, the more opportunity he has.
He gets up in the middle of the night to do work, but his boss complains
because he never gets his work in on time. He might be getting up in the middle
of the night to engage in addictive activity.
•
He's having sex with someone else and is using the "Sorry, honey, I have
to work late tonight" excuse.
•
If he spends long hours at the office and he's emotionally distant when he
comes home, it's a strong indicator of sex addiction.
7.
If he's lied to you, he's addicted. And the addiction didn't cause him to lie.
If he lied to you it's because he deliberately chose his addiction over having
an honest relationship with you.
9.
I talk to many men who cheat on their wives and/or hide a porn addiction.
The wife has no idea and will most likely never find out. Some men brag about
how well they hide it.
How do they get away with it? Answer: The wife does not know what's going
on with the finances.
If you suspect infidelity or a porn addiction, demand to see all the credit card
statements, all the checks, all the bank statements. Also, query the cash
withdrawals. And don't forget to check the phone bills - including his cell phone -
for strange calls.
If he refuses to be open with you about the finances or the phone bill, he's
probably hiding something from you.
10.
An open, honest, loving partner has nothing to hide. He's more than glad to
tell you where he's been and what he was up to.
If he's secretive, assume he's hiding something important from you. Don't
stop asking until you find out what it is.
11.
If you turn him down for sex, will he take no for an answer?
If your partner nags, hounds, complains or whines until you have sex with
him, he's sexually addicted.
One of the worst mistakes you can make is trying to please your partner by
degrading yourself.
You feel that maybe he's having an affair, but you haven't found any
signs of it.
•
You feel there's something he doesn't like about you, but he won't tell you
what it is and you can't figure it out.
•
The friendship is gone and the only thing left is occasional sex.
•
You used to be able to talk to each other about important things. Now
your conversations don't go beyond the mundane.
Some people will tell you that as a marriage ages, it's natural to lose interest
in each other. That's nonsense. Talk to people who have really great marriages
and they'll tell you that they grow closer every day.
If you feel something's missing, there's a good chance sex addiction is filling
the void.
Your best help comes from someone whose been through it himself and -
most importantly - knows how to break through your partner's defenses.
Whoever you work with also needs to be fully capable of helping •you•.
Usually in the beginning stages, overcoming sex addiction is more difficult for the
wife/girlfriend than it is for the guy.
•
What if my partner has made promise after promise to stop and he's never
kept his promise? Is there any hope?
Sure, if you work with someone who knows what they're doing.
Your partner's failure to stop is most likely a result of his not knowing how to
overcome sex addiction. I know that's difficult for you to believe because of all the
lies and deception. But it is true. Your partner can stop his sexually addictive
behavior.
Let me put it to you this way, my typical client has been lying to his wife
throughout most of the marriage. Before he enters counseling, his wife has
gotten to a point where she doesn't believe a word he says about his sexually
addictive behavior.
But the fact is he can stop lying to you. He can keep his promises and his
addiction can be overcome.
1.
There is no such thing as a positive addiction because all addictions are self-
destructive.
2.
Most people experimented with alcohol. You may have. Few became
alcoholics.
•
Millions of people experimented with cocaine, crack and other hard drugs.
Maybe you did. Relatively few became drug addicts.
The difference between the person who becomes addicted and the person
who doesn't has nothing to do with the substance. The difference lies in the
choice each person makes regarding the use of the substance. Look at your own
life. You made choices about substance abuse.
Substances don't take you over and make you act addictively any more than:
•
Morality and addiction are two different phenomena. For example, molesting
a child is much more of a moral issue than an addictive one. A person with an
overeating addiction is not immoral, just someone with a problem.
4.
There are millions of people who have alcoholic parents and do not get
addicted to alcohol or drugs.
Millions of people get addicted to alcohol and/or drugs whose parents never
abused either.
5.
These arguments assume that you have no free will, that you are merely a
product of the media marketplace. So, let's look at a few facts:
•
Addictions are not caused by the marketplace; they arise from choices a
person makes to escape dealing with the demands of real life.
Now that we've gotten some of the myths out of the way, let's discuss real
symptoms of sex addiction.
Given the correct approach, most people will gladly face their feelings and
choose to stop acting addictively.
You say that I can accept my addictive desire and actually enjoy not acting on it.
That's hard to believe.
You certainly can enjoy not acting on your addictive desire because:
3)Your natural sex drive becomes more enjoyable. You enjoy a closeness and
richness in natural sex that is being undermined because of your sexually
addictive behavior.
4)When you overcome an addiction correctly, not acting on the addictive desire is
not frustrating. It's empowering.
Sex addiction is meaningless sex. It competes with the genuine, loving, natural
sex drive. Overcome sex addiction correctly, and you'll experience the joy for
yourself.
By comparison, some people who engage in meaningless sex have only one
partner.
The promiscuous person and the person who has meaningless sex with only one
partner share a common trait. They are both attempting to avoid intimacy.
The difference between meaningless sex and loving sex is the difference
between addiction and intimacy
The promiscuous person doesn't even make the effort to create any kind of loyal
relationship. To him or her, people are interchangeable bodies. As one
promiscuous person told me, "I don't want to be stuck with just one flavor of ice
cream." He wasn't kidding. To him, people were just different flavors to be
sampled and discarded.
Helping the promiscuous person overcome his or her sexual addiction is more
difficult than helping the person who engages in meaningless sex but is not
promiscuous. The path to overcoming sex addiction for both persons is traveled
by opening oneself up to the need for intimacy.
What makes infidelity worse than promiscuity or meaningless sex with one
person is the lying and dishonesty that accompanies the unfaithful acts. Ask any
person who's been victimized by infidelity and they will tell you, "The lying and
betrayal hurt more than the unfaithful sex."
The unfaithful person needs to go beyond just sex addiction. He or she needs to
deal with honesty issues also.
This interview is designed to help you understand yourself, your partner, and how
you can save your relationship. Every query provides you with an explanation of
why it's being asked and a short, informative discussion about the issues
involved. There is no "score" because what's at stake for you and your partner,
you can't put a number on. What you can gain by successfully overcoming your
addiction is what life is really about. Keep an open mind and take a honest look
at yourself and don't forget your partner as you take the interview.
If there are conflicts between you and your partner over sex addiction and those
conflicts have not been resolved, you are in danger of losing her. She is probably
more upset than you realize. Even if she seems furious, she's probably more
furious than she's showing you.
She feels betrayed. The trust in the relationship has either been destroyed or
damaged. You can save your relationship. It's not too late. Start by answering the
queries in this interview honestly.
Here's a common scenario that might describe your situation: The wife or
girlfriend tells the sexually addicted guy she wants more time with him. He
doesn't give her the time she wants.
After a while she stops asking. The guy thinks everything is OK. He's wrong.
She probably still wants to save the relationship, that's why she hasn't left
you or thrown you out, yet. But if you take her for granted, you could lose her.
Some sexually addicted guys will say, "I need the addiction, it helps me
relieve stress." An alcoholic will say, "My day is so stressful, I can't get through it
without a drink." His drinking makes his day worse. Masturbaton addiction and/or
pornography addiction is helping your relationship as much as a drink helps an
alcoholic.
2. If you have sex with other people besides your partner, do you think it has
any effect on your relationship?
|Yes| |No| |Sometimes|
Let's take one issue: the guilt of living a double life. That alone hurts your
relationship. In order to conceal your double life, you have to stay on guard
constantly. You have to live a lie and live with the fear and anxiety of being
caught. You know that you have betrayed your partner. The tension of hiding
your betrayal creates anxiety and fear.
Your double life effects the interactions between the two of you. You have to
hide any feeling that might lead her to find out what you've been up to. You put
an act on for her if she asks you what's wrong. You've looked in her eyes and
lied when she asked you if you've been cheating. If she hasn't asked you, you
fear the day that she will.
Some guys lie to themselves about their cheating. They'll say, "It doesn't
count because it was only sex." Or "We have a great marriage, except for this
one little problem." First, it does count because you took an oath. Ask anyone
who's been cheated on. They'll tell you, "It wasn't the sex that hurt me the worst.
It was the betrayal." You've betrayed her and you know it. Since you know it, it
counts.
Saying "We have a great marriage except for this one little problem" is like
saying "Smoking doesn't bother me except for my emphysema."
Don't take cheating lightly. It's hurting you and her more than you realize.
3. Do you sneak your masturbation/pornography?
|Yes| |No| |Sometimes|
When you sneak the masturbation/porn part of your sex life, your relationship
suffers because of dishonesty. Many sexually addicted men fool themselves
about the importance of honesty in a relationship. They'll tell themselves, "This is
my private pleasure. What she doesn't know won't hurt her." First, you're not
dealing with a healthy pleasure. You're caught in an addiction - and giving
yourself the illusion it's a pleasure.
Also, if it's such a great pleasure, why are you sneaking it? You talk to her
about the other things you enjoy in your life. Why won't you talk to her about your
sex addiction?
Answer: You hide it because you don't want to admit your addiction to
yourself or your partner. Usually, the partner knows something is wrong. She
doesn't know what it is because most women don't get into sex addiction. But
she knows something is creating problems between you and her. If you want to
get those problems straightened out, start by being honest with her.
4. Have there been arguments between you and your partner about your
masturbation and/or use of pornography?
|Yes| |No| |Sometimes|
5. Have there been arguments between you and your partner about staring?
|Yes| |No| |Sometimes|
Talk to your partner about it and she'll tell you that she doesn't expect you to
walk around like you're blind to feminine beauty. Her point is that you don't just
notice an attractive woman. You stare.
You probably think your partner's overdoing it. She might be. However, if
she's overdoing it, it's because you're not honest with her about your staring. And
you continue to stare, even though she's told you it upsets her.
6. Do you wish the sex life between you and your partner was better?
|Yes| |No| |Sometimes
If you want a better sex life with your partner, work on overcoming your sex
addiction, first. You'll be surprised at the wonderful change in the sex life
between the two of you once a sex addiction is overcome correctly.
7. Does porn turn you on more than your partner does?
|Yes| |No| |Sometimes|
If your answer is Yes or Sometimes, assume that your are seriously addicted.
Pornography addiction is a fantasy based sex life. By sexually bonding with
fantasy, you lose perspective on the joys of a genuine loving relationship and
loving, intimate sex. The sooner you break away from the fantasy life of
pornography addiction, the better for both of you.
Let's use an FAQ to discuss other issues that might be on your mind:
You can either continue on with your addictive behavior and continue to
endanger your relationship. You can seek help. You can try to overcome it on
your own.
If you decide not to make any attempt to overcome your addiction, your
partner will most likely leave you or live in misery with you.
You're not a lost cause. The approach you've been taking hasn'tworked. It's
like anything else in life, if you set a goal and you don't achieve the goal then you
either change your approach or give up the goal. Overcoming sex addiction is a
goal you can achieve. Read through the information in this book, it will help you
realize you can overcome your sexual addiction.
You do not have to spend the rest of your life caught in sex addiction. You
can overcome it. You just need an approach that works.
Consider the following queries and answers about your childhood. Even
though you and I have never spoken, my answers are correct.
None of this would have been possible had Ira continued to focus on
the past and
treated himself as a victim.
Whatever your problem, whether it's sexual addiction, alcohol,
depression, anxiety,
phobia, obsessive-compulsive disorder, anger, etc., you overcome it by
focusing on the
present and holding yourself responsible for your actions.
You don't need medication to overcome sex addiction or any other
personal
problem.
Let's talk about three different people you're probably familiar with.
From them we
can learn that:
• Your mind creates its own natural chemicals.
• You direct the production of those chemicals.
• You can create a happy, joyous life, naturally.
Walking down the street and seeing an attractive child will occasionally
bring on a pedophilic desire. He is not afraid of it. He is in complete
control of his actions and feels better letting the desire go unsatisfied.
Most people who act addictively today feel hopeless about overcoming
their
addiction. They are not hopeless. You are not hopeless. You have free
will. You just
need to know how to use it.
If there is any message to take away from this book, it's this:
Given the correct approach, most people will gladly face their feelings
and choose to
stop acting addictively.
I used the data on the list below to get through to him. If you're trying
to get through
to an addicted person in denial, go over these points with him or her
carefully. Don't
use them to attack. Approach the list as an opportunity to explore and
discover the
facts.
•The activity takes up too much time and/or costs too much money.
Most addicted people don't realize how much time and money they put
into their
addiction. Others know and wish they could stop wasting their time
and money on it.
For the addicted person:
If you don't know how much time and money you put into your
addiction, now's a
good time to start thinking about it.
For the partner:
If you're trying to get through to an addicted person, ask him to write
down
everything he spends on the behavior and to keep track of the time he
puts into it.
These factors alone can become the wake-up call that gets your
partner to admit his
addiction.
•It affects a person's physical health.
Addictions are usually done until the point of exhaustion. Most
addictive people don't
realize the terrible stress addictive behavior puts on the body until
they stop.
For the addicted person:
The next time you feel exhausted, think about the last time you acted
addictively.
Did it contribute to the exhaustion? Was it the main cause?
For the partner:
Many addicted people in denial will argue that their addiction
decreases stress and
gives them energy. This can be a very difficult defense to break
through. However,
addicted people are exhausted at the end of an addictive binge. Ask
your partner,
"How do you feel at the end of a binge?" That might be all you need.
If he denies that he binges, that presents a more difficult problem.
Instead of trying
to get him to admit a binge, ask him, "Do you mean to say that you
cannot increase
your energy level and deal with stress in a more natural way? Wouldn't
you rather be
able to feel better relying on yourself without any artificial stimulants,
or overeating, or
compulsive sex?" That can help him or her realize their dependency.
If you can get him to at least admit he has a dependency, the door is
open to
discuss more symptoms, which might break through his defenses
completely.
•Addictions have a terrible effect on relationships.
Some defensive addicted people will say, "If you weren't so intolerant,
we wouldn't
have any problems." In other words, he blames the problem on you.
Your options are:
Learn to live with your partner's addictive behavior, or
Suffer through life with an addicted partner who does not want to work
on his problem, or give him the ultimate choice: "It's either me or the
addiction."
Chapter 13
It will also teach you how to deal with the following sexual intimacy
problems:
•Impotence and other sexual performance problems
•Using your partner as a sex object
•Forcing sex on your partner
•Avoiding sex
•Obsessing over sex
•Sexually abusing your partner
•Imagining that you are with someone else when having sex with your
partner
•Preferring sex alone
•Preferring sex with prostitutes or strangers
I divide sex addiction into two categories:
•Sex alone
•Sex with someone else.
The category of sex alone includes:
Masturbation (with no one else present)
Porn (with no one else present)
Cross dressing (same as above)
Any other form of sex that does not include an interaction with another
person.
Sex with other people is characterized by: interacting with another
person for the
purpose of sexual stimulation.
You do not need to touch the other person or even see the other
person for it to be
sex with someone else. Phone sex is a good example of interacting
with another
person for the purpose of sexual stimulation, thus sex with someone
else. Going to a
strip club and not touching anyone still falls into this category because
there is an
interaction between you and the other person.
Voyeurism falls into this category also, even though the other person is
not aware of
what the voyeur is doing. The voyeur is interacting with the victim for
the purpose of
sexual stimulation.
There are degrees of sex with someone else. Going to a strip club is
not as serious
a problem as having sex with a prostitute. Voyeurism is not as criminal
as rape.
We also need to identify that there are two groups of people who
engage in sex
addiction:
•People in a committed relationship, and
•People without a committed relationship.
Ask yourself:
1. "Do my addictive behaviors fall into the category of sex alone or sex
with
someone else?"
Keep in mind that many people engage in multiple sex addictions, so
your behaviors might fall into both categories.
One clear line is when staring becomes stalking. Then it's an issue of
sexual
harassment.
"Almost all of them were exposed to the Bible before they were
exposed to porn.
The Bible didn't make them follow the Ten Commandments. And
pornography didn't
make them become sexual predators.
"They made choices. You make choices. I make choices. We all make
choices. And we have no one to blame but ourselves."
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