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| The Most Personal Addiction | Provides a sensible approach to overcoming sexual addiction. | |
| Things to know | If you or your partner are dealing with sexual addiction these insights will help. | |
| Sex Addiction Articles | Discussions on motivation and other issues about overcoming sexual addiction | |
| Symptoms Of Addiction | Use this chapter along with the interviews in The Most Personal Addiction to discover if someone is addicted. | |
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Chapter 13 Symptoms Of Addiction
A person begins addiction by using a substance or activity to escape dealing with the difficulties of life. The escape fails because escape never works - and it always worsens life's problems. Then - and this is the big mistake - the person decides to flee further into addiction rather than face the problem. This cycle of escape-failure-more escape is what causes addictive behavior to increase over time. It has nothing to do with a chemical imbalance or the environment. The person chooses to escalate escape even though escape attempts always fail. However, after a while, most addicted people reach an abusive level of addictive behavior and don't increase it; they maintain it. How To Get Through To An Addicted Person 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 question: "Did your behavior escalate in the first few years?" Virtually any addicted person will answer "Yes." 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. Some addictive behaviors decrease naturally over time. An addicted masturbator, like Bill was, will not masturbate as frequently at the age of 35 as he did when he was 19. Most overeaters decrease their eating as they get older, but they still use food addictively. In the final stages, many alcoholics drink less but still drink abusively. Increasing behavior over time is a symptom. It's not final proof. It's a strong indicator if combined with other factors.
Addiction relies on the misuse of a substance or an activity. Consistent misuse of a substance or an activity leads to harmful consequences. How To Get Through To An Addicted Person 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.
Some of these case histories may sound familiar:
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 question could have two interpretations because the person might mean:
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 question 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.
Addiction begins with a decision to avoid facing an uncomfortable feeling. Since escape always fails, the uncomfortable feeling is not relieved. But addiction also causes an anxiety of its own because life's problems get worse when they are not dealt with. As the anxiety caused by addiction increases, it overwhelms any feeling of satisfaction the addicted person may have gotten from the behavior. In a nutshell, addicted people are never satisfied, because nature designed evasion of reality to always be unsatisfying. 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." Here are a few effective replies:
Depression, guilt, anxiety, fear, shame, apathy and frustration accompany addiction because they are nature's way of telling the addicted person, "Face your problems or continue to feel miserable until you do." In the final stage of addiction, the stage when it's clear that the addiction was an awful mistake, many addicted people spend the better part of their lives:
The Twelve Step Program and conventional, licensed therapy say, "If you can't stop, it means you're addicted." I disagree. It means you probably didn't use a correct approach. The indication of addiction is the *attempt* to stop, not the failure to stop. My clients like Carlos prove it. He had never attempted to stop. 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. Failure to stop does not indicate addiction. Failure indicates your approach is flawed. If you approach it correctly, your chances of success on your first try are excellent. 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.
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Copyright 2002 by Joe Zychik All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission from the publisher, except that portions may be used in broadcast or printed commentary or review when fully attributed to the author and publication by names. |