Jordan Gray says that sex addiction is more about shame, isolation, and unworthiness than it is about sex. This is his story. “My name...
Jordan Gray says that sex addiction is more about shame, isolation, and unworthiness than it is about sex. This is his story.
“My name is Jordan, and I’m a sex addict.”
As soon as the words left my mouth, I felt like a total impostor.
The men and women seated around me, legs crossed and arms
folded, draped over orange plastic chairs, would see right through me
any second now. Even though I was staring down at the floor, I could
feel their eyes burning in to me.
These people had real addictions… my problems felt so entry-level by comparison. They had serious problems, not me.
I mean, sure, I’d slept with countless women who I felt no emotional connection to.
Sure, I’ve felt a deeply permeating sense of shame at the core of my being after compulsively acting out sexually.
And, if I’m being honest with myself, I’ve probably
cumulatively spent weeks of my life watching porn, scanning sex ads, and
frequenting massage parlours and sex workers in multiple countries.
Fuck. Who am I kidding?The more I listened to the stories of the people around me, the more I realized that I was in the right place.
Don’t Trust Your Thoughts
As human beings we have a brilliant capacity for bullshitting ourselves.
It can take years of spinning our wheels in the mud before
we realize that we aren’t making any progress in a certain area of our
lives.
Some people think that sex addiction isn’t a ‘real’
addiction. Some people say dismissive things like, “Well, if that’s what
sex addiction is, then every guy I know is a sex addict.” As with many
process addictions, sexual addiction is a commonly misunderstood one.
So what is sex addiction, and why is it so frequently misunderstood?
What Is Sexual Addiction?
I’d say the biggest thing that most people don’t understand about sexual addiction is thatsex addiction isn’t about sex. The way that I see it, sexual addiction is more about shame, isolation, and unworthiness than it is about chasing after sexual experiences.
Or, as one SAA (Sex Addicts Anonymous) member once so
eloquently put it in a meeting that I attended, “When I act out with sex
workers, I’m not thinking to myself ‘Oh boy, this is going to be super
fun!’. But rather, I’m thinking ‘I have such a tornado of pain inside of
myself that I either have to kill myself or compulsively act out to numb the pain.’”
Compulsive sexual behaviour is what sex addicts use to
numb out their emotions, just like alcoholics often use staying drunk to
avoid feeling their underlying difficult emotions.
Sexual addiction, just like any drug addiction, can have a
sliding scale of symptoms – ranging in severity. For some people, sex
addiction looks like chronic masturbation to porn, where they don’t feel
like they can function in society without climaxing at least seven
times a day. For others, sex addiction could look like occasional flare
ups of wanting to ‘use’ or ‘act out’ with sex workers only when they’re
going through emotionally trying times (breakups, divorces, losing their
jobs, death of a friend or family member, etc.).
The consequences can be fatal. I know sex addicts who have
knowingly had unprotected sex with people who had life threatening
STI’s. I’ve met other addicts who have spent hundreds of thousands of
dollars on sex workers, going further and further into debt to fund
their compulsive behavior.
I’ve met hundreds of sex addicts (as clients and in Sex
Addicts Anonymous group meetings) and there is no singular unifying
theme that connects all addicts – at least not in terms of how they like
to act out sexually.
With sex addiction, each addict defines what their acting
out looks like and what sexual sobriety means to them. If a person
masturbates a few times per week to porn and they have no moral
obligations with it and it doesn’t interfere with their lives, then
they’re fine. It’s only when the addict admits that their lives had
become unmanageable that they will commit to making a real lasting
change in their habits.
In fact, any addictive or compulsive behaviour could be easily categorized with one simple litmus test… do you find yourself consistently doing something that you do not want to do?
As in, you don’t want to gamble anymore but you find
yourself at a slot machine yet again. You decided to give up drinking
and here you are, alone in your bedroom, half way through a bottle of
vodka. You decided to give up having anonymous sex and here you are
putting on your pants after a quickie with a total stranger.
If the behavior has control over you, then it has likely become a problem in your life.
Why Is Sexual Addiction So Difficult To Overcome
Sexual addiction is one of the most challenging addictions to overcome.
With substance addictions, like alcoholism or drug
addiction, it is possible (and often recommended) to simply discontinue
the use of the substance entirely. But with process addictions like
sexual addiction and eating disorders, it’s impossible to just give up
food or sex for life. They are interwoven into the fabric of our being
and so the goal is to integrate them into our lives in a healthier way.
But because sexual addiction and compulsive sexual behavior is just the mechanism that numbs out the difficult emotions
that addicts are unwilling to face and heal their way through, the
most sustainable way that a sex addict can overcome their addiction is
to work through their underlying emotional turmoil that keeps them stuck.
Deciding To Face My Past And Feel My Feelings
After a certain amount of feeling out of control of my behaviour, I knew that the only way out of this pattern was to feel my underlying emotional wounds.
And, as fate would have it, as soon as I set the intention
of wanting to dig into my past wounds, my answers were revealed to me
in the form of a dream.
I woke up sobbing in the middle of the night, lying next to my girlfriend at the time, and the memories of how isolated and unwanted I felt in my childhood came flooding back to me.
It took months of journalling, therapy, and other deep
healing modalities to come to terms with the pain that I felt. As cliche
as it sounds, I had to learn to fully love and accept my wounded inner
child.
The behavioural antidote, for me, was to reach out to people for help and allow them to be there for me. And, once again, as soon as I set the intention to do so, a rush of newfriendship and community came pouring into my life.
Obviously, healing past emotional wounds is something that
must be done on an individual basis. There is no one-size-fits-all
model.
.
The 3 Biggest Things That Helped Me Overcome My Sexual Addiction
I recognize that I am still relatively early on in my
process (having only been going to SAA meetings for just over two years,
on and off), but I feel like I’ve gained some valuable insights that I
wish someone had passed on to me at the beginning of my journey. Here
are those insights.
1. Tell the full truth to a trusted person
“You are only as sick as your secrets” goes the saying that originated in Alcoholics Anonymous.
The more we keep ourselves away from others, the more we
suffer. The more we suffer, the more we downward spiral in a pattern of
shame and isolation.
One of the best things that addicts can do for themselves
is find a trusted person (friend, family member, significant other,
fellow addict in a 12 step program, etc.) to tell
their secrets to. The more you can verbalize the thoughts, fears, and
desires in your head that keep you feeling stuck, the more free you can
be of them.
2. Go to meetings and get support
If picking one person to share with seems too scary, you
might want to try going to a few 12-step meetings. You can hear other
people’s stories (that will help you feel less alone in your addiction),
and you can share your own experiences with the intention of freeing
yourself from ruminating on how seemingly strange your
thoughts/behaviours are (again, see point #1).
There’s also an added layer of accountability that comes
with going to meetings. Once you’ve told a group of strangers about the
ways in which you act out, you will be less likely to repeat those same
behaviours because they won’t hold the same level of power over you. By
externalizing your fears, you neutralize them to a large degree.
3. Cultivate new habits when you’re about to act out
One of the core components of personal growth is coming to
the fork in the road when you’ve always done one thing, and doing
something different.
If, whenever you feel stressed/anxious/depressed/isolated
you start to go into your psychological acting out bubble, instead of
loading up porn/cruising ads/searching for anonymous sex, pick up the
phone and call a trusted friend instead. If you understand that feelings
of unworthiness and isolation are at the root of your desire to act
out, then the best thing you can do is connect with someone who cares about you.
This point ties in elements of the first two points. Have
two or three trusted friends on speed dial for when you’re going into
the rabbit hole of your suffering. As you’re approaching the moment of
truth, simply reach out to one of those people instead of acting out.
If reaching out for support is too challenging for you
when you feel like acting out, another thing that you can do is induce
crying.
Emotional stress, ultimately, is just a culmination of
compounded unfelt feelings. If you feel those unfelt feelings (by
releasing your sadness, anger, grief, or whatever else is present for
you) then there won’t be any underlying emotional turmoil for you to try
to numb out. Feel your feelings, and set yourself free from the pattern.
How I Will Manage My Sexual Addiction Going Forwards
It is well understood that addiction is a brain disease.
Therefore, I don’t think that recovery means that you will never have
addictive/compulsive thoughts for the rest of your life, but rather that
you know how to manage them and not adhere to their unhealthy desires.
This is the same reason that alcoholics will still identify as being
alcoholics years after they last had a drink… they know that the
substance has a power over them and that it affects them differently
than it affects most other people.
I went through an emotionally trying time
this year and, during a phase when I would have historically acted out
the most frequently, I refrained entirely from my most compulsive
behaviours… which was a huge turning point for me. I no longer felt like
I was at the mercy of my addiction. Does this mean that I think I’m
‘cured’ forever? No. Just like any addiction, I believe it is something
that I’ll have to be aware of and continue to manage for a long time to
come (just like alcoholics are alcoholics for life, they’re just wired a
bit differently and can’t indulge in a casual drink).
For me personally, the biggest tools I have available to
me are self-awareness, self-compassion, and the courage that it takes to
reach out to a friend for help (aka embracing community).
Self-awareness to realize when my mind is leading me in an unhealthy
direction, and self-compassion for being able to be gentle with myself when I find myself feeling stressed, anxious, or any other negative feeling that I would historically want to numb out.
For most sex addicts, the goal of recovery is to be sexual
when they’re feeling sexual feelings with a committed partner, as
opposed to acting out sexually as a means to numb out their difficult
emotions.
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