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The Gift of Gratitude in Sex Addiction Recovery

"Feeling gratitude and not expressing it is like wrapping a present and not giving it."   – William Arthur Ward

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The marriage impacted by sex addiction is in turmoil for quite some time post-discovery of the addiction.  The betrayal of sex addiction is like no other.  The marriage impacted by addiction is filled with resentment, bitterness, and reactivity.  The addict holds resentment, and even perhaps used those resentments, to fuel the acting-out in the addiction cycle.  In beginning recovery, the partner holds resentments and often feels justified to emotionally brow-beat their sex-addicted partners with reminders of how horrible their actions were.  There is fear their hurts will remain unacknowledged.

In recovery, there are many paradoxes.  Part of recovery includes the process of gratitude.  John Gottman, a prolific researcher of relationship dynamics, notes marriages have certain tolerance limits in the ratio of positive to negative strokes that a marriage can endure.  The climate of a marriage is created by these positive strokes and negative strokes, e.g.  criticisms and compliments.   Twelve-step programs advocate a process of amends and affirmations.  I talk with couples about how they unknowingly place bricks on the emotional wall of hurt between them.  Bricks become placed, and walls built, by criticisms aimed at their partner.  Similarly, those bricks can be removed by amends of apology or affirming the spouse.

When a marriage is in the darkest hours of sex addiction impact, the risk is to stay protected and walled-off.  I am asked in the treatment room by addict and spouse alike “how should I act towards my spouse during this difficult time?”  Expressions of gratitude in early stages of marital repair, are very difficult.  Expressing gratitude is not forgiveness nor is it absolution of behaviors.  Feelings need to be expressed.

Those bricks which keep emotional distance active need to be replaced.  I advocate boundaries to build appropriate walls of emotional safety instead. Gratitude is one tool of many needed in the recovery tool belt to address the systemic dynamics of addiction.  Gratitude is a tool that can serve to keep a couple engaged and help facilitate healing and growth in the marriage.  Expressions of gratitude have the potential to shift the healing process from a vision of fault-finding to a vision of healing.  Focus on gratitude leaves less focus for resentment.  This focus has the potential to make three gifts.  Gratitude is a gift that happens in one’s heart first by letting go of resentments, and when expressed, is a gift to their spouse. This ultimately is a gift to the relationship. 

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Miracle of Recovery

Did you ever see the movie “Evan Almighty”?  Evan was tasked with building an ark in modern times because the flood was coming.  He kept praying for patience, but patience never came.  The situations that allowed him to develop patience kept coming, not the skill or attribute of patience.  Recovery is like that.  The people I sit with in early addiction recovery sometimes sit waiting in abstinence of the acting out for recovery to come….waiting for it to arrive.  It takes some time and “program development” to understand that their consistent work, building the muscle of recovery, if you will, over time to live in the life of recovery.

"Do not pray for easy lives. Pray to be stronger men. Do not pray for tasks equal to your powers. Pray for powers equal to your tasks. Then the doing of your work shall be no miracle, but you shall be the miracle."

–  Phillips Brooks

Did you ever see the movie “Evan Almighty”?  Evan was tasked with building an ark in modern times because the flood was coming.  He kept praying for patience, but patience never came.  The situations that allowed him to develop patience kept coming, not the skill or attribute of patience.  Recovery is like that.  The people I sit with in early addiction recovery sometimes sit waiting in abstinence of the acting out for recovery to come….waiting for it to arrive.  It takes some time and “program development” to understand that their consistent work, building the muscle of recovery, if you will, over time to live in the life of recovery.

Recovery is an inside job of small acts developed over time.  Phillips Brooks quote struck a cord with me.  Sometimes in early recovery we hope for easier situations to deal with and wonder when the collateral damage of our addictive actions and acting out will cease.  Do not pray for easy lives, pray to be stronger within to meet the external tasks.  The miracle is not the work…the miracle is you!

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Sex Addiction, Marriage and The Doghouse

A friend sent me this commercial over the holidays.

As I watched, I was struck by the similarities of the couple in the commercial to the couple that struggles with sex addiction as part of their marriage.  There is the hope and anticipation of the marital relationship.  As the wife is presented the vacuum cleaner for her anniversary gift, shock, anger, and the need to do something with the offending spouse who “tarnishes the hope”, ensues.  What wife, who feels the betrayals of sex addiction, can’t relate to the wish to physically place her husband somewhere for punishment?  The commercial shows her marching him into the doghouse. 

As the scene changes the man finds himself among other “offenders”.  Men who have been sentenced to a shameful place, some with no hope of EVER getting out!  Some have gone mad or given up in the process of hope for ever getting it right.  Some leave or are released from the banal place of punishment, and relapse, only to find themselves relegated again.  The cycle ensues…  What sex addict in the initial throws of crisis doesn’t feel misunderstood or justified as highlighted in the commercial with the statement “Every man feels innocent”.  Addicts often feel miffed by the power of their disease or justified in their resentments to support the acting out. 

What man can’t relate to the man in the commercial “with a file for review” who feels judged or even tricked into leading answers? What man can't relate to the man in the commercial judged by a panel of female energy that sits ready to deny freedom and punish with continued sentencing?  What woman can’t relate the state of anger and delirium:  “Wow, I am married to you”!  What “offended spouse” doesn’t wish for the strength of a panel to sit in judgment of their offending spouse, (man or woman) who has felt the sting of the betrayed feelings of sex addiction?  What man who has struggled with sex addiction can’t relate to that feeling of being punished, relegated, or banished in shame for “the offenses”?  What man who struggles with sex addiction feels like they will never get it right in terms of their relationship?

The man in the commercial states "I don't know what I was thinking, I was stupid”.  Addiction is like a dark passenger that takes over actions and judgment. Actions in an addicted state make no sense to the rational mind.  One man did get out.  The icon of proof was sent back to the other men. The key to get out is elusive, shrouded in mystery, to those who are left to try to understand their offenses and the key for getting out of prison.

As a marriage and family therapist with sex addiction credentials I “fantasize” about the commercial of hope, strength, and recovery for couples affected by the disease of sex addiction.  I wish for a commercial that would highlight the path and resources necessary for full recovery from the condition of sex addiction for addicts and their partners.   Perhaps the video would open with a scene of both spouses looking at the replay of their marriage, working through the hard feelings of hurt and betrayal.  There would be a scene highlighting the importance of recovery groups for the process of healing:  Sexaholics Anonymous (SA.org) or Sex Addicts Anonymous (SexAA.org) for the addict’s recovery; S-Anon (sanon.org) or Al-Anon (al-anon.alateen.org)for spouses.  A scene would play showing Sex and Love Addicts Anonymous (SLAAFWS.org) for appropriate consideration of either party in the marriage and there would definitely be a scene in the commercial offering the hope of Recovering Couples Anonymous (Recovering-couples.org) meetings. The video would include education about addiction processes and the part all family members play in the family struck by addiction.  Yes, I know this is hard to hear for the long-suffering spouse feeling the initial sting of betrayal. Scenes might play from each partner’s families of origin to discover how they ended up in this marriage for clues of predisposition and healing (not blame).  There would be flashes to play the episodes of individual therapy for each spouse, the flashes of scenes to marital therapy with appropriately-credentialed therapists and family therapy if children are in the marriage. 

When one initially discovers sex addiction or comes to terms with their addiction, one need not feel like they can’t escape the hell.  There is a way out.  There is proof of those who have made it out individually and with their marriages intact.  It isn’t easy, but it is possible.  The key need not remain a mystery hidden to covet or wish for in secrecy. One need not go it alone in continued puzzled isolation or with feelings of hopelessness for ever getting it right.  There are fellowships and specially-credentialed therapists (SASH.net) to help one reach and stay in the light of day!