You’re Addicted to What?

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Periodically, some famous politician, athlete, or entertainer gets caught with his or her pants down, damaging or even destroying their reputation, livelihood, and marriage. Within hours, my email starts buzzing, as media vultures circle the fresh carcass and want my expert opinion: Is Tiger Woods a sex addict? Was Katharine Hepburn? How about Eliot Spitzer, David Duchovny, Charlie Sheen, John Edwards?

The twenty-four-hour cable/Internet news cycle doesn’t want experts to talk seriously about this—they simply want people (Maury! Tyra! The ladies on The View!) who will announce, with just the right mix of scorn, smirk, gravity, and total confidence that so-and-so is a sex addict.

The schadenfreude is so thick you can cut it with a knife. Moralism stands in for sympathy. High dudgeon stands in for nuanced understanding. From all corners, we hear a Greek chorus of voices linking someone’s extramarital affairs to feminism, testosterone, the Internet, sadomasochism, consumerism, or even 9/11. And then they inevitably wheel in the heavy gun: “sex addiction.”

Most importantly, these public thrashings are a chance for the audience to condemn sexual acting out while vicariously enjoying it. America loves an excuse to sneakily enjoy unauthorized sex. The fall of the rich and famous is a bonus.

So when USA Today calls about Eliot Spitzer’s high-end escorts, or CNN emails about Anthony Weiner’s sexting, I’m usually pretty slow to respond to the ghoulish invitation.

I don’t diagnose people I haven’t met. More importantly, I don’t use the diagnosis of sex addiction. In thirty-one years as a sex therapist, marriage counselor, and psychotherapist, I’ve never seen sex addiction. I’ve heard about virtually every sexual variation, obsession, fantasy, trauma, and involvement with sex workers, but I’ve never seen sex addiction.

New patients tell me all the time how they can’t keep from doing self-destructive sexual things; still, I see no sex addiction. Instead, I see people regretting the sexual choices they make, often denying that these are decisions. I see people wanting to change, but not wanting to give up what makes them feel alive or young or loved or adequate; wanting the advantages of changing, but not wanting to give up what makes them feel they’re better or sexier or naughtier than other people. Most importantly, I see people wanting to stop doing what makes them feel powerful, attractive, or loved, but since they don’t want to stop feeling powerful, attractive or loved, they can’t seem to stop the repetitive sex clumsily designed to create those feelings.

The conflict over sex addiction is important to humanists for several reasons. “Sex addiction” is a special weapon now used by the religious right to combat perceived liberalism, to ignore science, and to ignite fear. It also helps legitimize anti-sex moralism and bigotry. And psychologists, judges, legislators, and the media are buying it.

When people refer to themselves or others as “sex addicts,” what are they actually talking about? More than anything, simple narcissistic character structure: the familiar “I guess I thought I could get away with it,” “Deep down, I don’t really believe the rules apply to me,” or “When I hurt, I want relief, and I don’t care so much about breaking promises or hurting others.”

If that sounds like normal people—if that sounds like you—it’s not surprising. Narcissism is a common human condition. So here’s my evaluation of almost everyone who is diagnosed as a sex addict—by themselves, their loved ones, or an addictionologist: it’s someone who is unhappy with the consequences of their sexual choices, but who finds it too emotionally painful to make different choices. You know, the way some of us are with cookies, new sweaters, or watching the Kardashians on TV.

Which is to say, it’s not about the sex. It’s about the immature decision-making.

The rest of the people who are in pain about their sexual decision-making are generally struggling with one or more of the following: compulsivity, impulsivity, obsessive-compulsive disorder, bipolar disorder, borderline personality disorder, or post-traumatic stress disorder. An idiosyncratic response to medication can even be a factor.

So when people talk about sex addiction, they’re really talking about all of these, and more. When someone says, “sexually, I’m out of control,” that doesn’t tell us very much. When we know someone has affair after affair; or that someone regularly masturbates to the point of pain; or that someone constantly pressures his wife for sex regardless of how unrealistic it is (she’s post-partum, she has the flu, his parents are in the next room, they had a big fight just a few hours ago); or that someone is pursuing anonymous sex in public parks in a way that’s begging for jail time and loss of career; or that someone watches three hours of porn per night, we simply don’t know very much about the person.

On the other hand, anyone who says “sexually, I’m out of control” is automatically welcomed into the fellowship of sex addicts—without any attempt to evaluate that person’s mental state. Sex therapists generally don’t get distracted by the sexual part of patients’ stories. Those without training in sexuality—like so-called sex addiction counselors—often do.

Let’s examine this cultural phenomenon in more detail.

The origin of “sex addiction”: NOT in sex therapy

Perhaps the most interesting thing about the sex addiction movement—and certainly the most telling—is that it did not arise from the field of sex therapy or any other sexuality-related field. Rather, it was started in 1983 by Patrick Carnes, whose background is in counselor education and organizational development. He claims no training in human sexuality.

“Sex addiction” has been adopted enthusiastically by the addiction community, and to a lesser extent by the marriage and family profession—the latter historically undertrained and uncomfortable with sexuality. You can, for example, become a licensed marriage counselor without ever hearing the words vibrator, clitoris, spanking, tongue-kissing, or panties during your education.

Almost thirty years after its invention by Carnes, “sex addiction” is still not a popular concept in the fields of sex therapy, sex education, or sex research. Of course, the media loves it, decency groups love it, and those who identify as some other kind of addict (alcohol, food, drugs) love it, especially if they’re fans of the Twelve Steps.

The SAST

So, again, what is “sex addiction”? The key evaluation tool (and just about everything you need to know about the concept) is the Sexual Addiction Screening Test (SAST). I encourage everyone to take the SAST (it’s easy to find online at www.sexhelp.com—just click on the “Am I a sex addict?” link). Most non-sex addicts are quite surprised at how high they rate on this instrument.

An enormous percentage of the test asks about non-normative behavior, as well as ambivalence about or rejection of one’s sexuality—feelings like guilt, shame, and remorse. Sample questions inquire if:

  • You regularly purchase porn or romance novels
  • You have multiple romantic involvements
  • You use sex or romantic fantasies for escape
  • You’re a regular participant in S/M behavior
  • You’re worried your sexual behavior will be discovered
  • You feel preoccupied with sexual or romantic thoughts
  • You’re concerned that your sexual behavior isn’t normal
  • Your partner complains about your sexual behavior

For most Americans, the answer to at least some of these questions is, “sure—isn’t this normal?” And this is part of the problem with diagnosing “sex addiction”—too much common sexual behavior and experience gets pathologized.

So what the SAST really measures is:

  • Did you grow up in a sex-negative culture?
  • Does your sexuality have any dark side to it?
  • Do you have questions about sex or your sexuality?
  • Do you feel 100% comfortable with your sexuality?

If people are being honest their answer to the first three is “of course” and the answer to the last is “of course not.” But when someone is anxious about questions that basically ask, “am I normal?” or has an angry spouse, or an interest in non-normative eroticism, and has the sex-negativity of religion or family whispering in their ear, it’s easy to interpret their SAST answers (“yes, I’ve sometimes wondered if my sexuality is stronger than I am”; “yes, I’ve hidden aspects of my sexuality from others,” and so on) as reflecting mental illness.

So the diagnosis of sex addiction is in many ways a diagnosis of discomfort with one’s own sexuality, or of being at odds with cultural definitions of normal sex, and struggling with that contrast. A sex-negative culture like America breeds that discomfort and contrast. Calling these symptoms of sex addiction entirely omits the role that sex-negative culture plays in shaping people’s distress with their sexuality, which they often channel into repetitive behavior (in some cases unsatisfying, in others highly satisfying) that can be hard to fathom.

No actual diagnostic criteria

So other than a high SAST score, how does a professional decide that someone is a sex addict?

Three decades after the term’s introduction, there’s still no consensus on a definition. Not surprisingly, however, nonprofessionals are increasingly using the term. The phrase anal retentive is analogous; saying someone is “anal” used to have specific, technical meaning, and is now used casually to suggest anything from being well-organized to anxious to controlling. Similarly, the expression “sex addict” is now thrown around by counselors, fictional characters, prosecutors, and everyone else to mean practically anything, from high desire to obnoxiously aggressive to trapped with a fetish to kinky to ashamed to anxious. It simply has no real meaning.

And so therapists are willing to diagnose people they’ve never met (like Tiger Woods). Similarly, angry or frightened women are diagnosing their husbands and sending them to therapy, often saying “either get yourself diagnosed and treated for sex addiction, or don’t come home, because it means you’re just a selfish bastard.”

Exactly how sophisticated can a psychiatric diagnosis be if (1) a professional can diagnose someone without ever meeting them, and (2) lay people with no training whatsoever can use the diagnosis?

Lacking empirical studies or an understanding of the complexity of (and cross-cultural variations in) human sexuality, addiction counselors have attempted to define a sexual “disorder” based on the chemical dependency model. And so they talk about things like:

  • Being preoccupied with or persistently craving sex; wanting to cut down and unsuccessfully attempting to limit sexual activity.
  • Continually engaging in the sexual behavior despite negative consequences, such as broken relationships or potential health risks.
  • Feeling irritable when unable to engage in the desired behavior.

Non-criteria like these resemble the SAST itself—ambiguous, rooted in assumptions about what’s “normal,” and substituting subjective judgments for rigorous assessment.

Another way to conceptualize sex addiction is as a violation of society’s moral standards, along with someone’s distress about that violation. One should not masturbate too much, according to common norms; one should not have too much indiscriminate sex; cheat on one’s spouse; be too sexually involved with porn, objects, or those with whom there’s no romantic love to redeem the sex (such as casual pickups or sex workers). The sex addiction concept helps patrol these arbitrary moral boundaries.

How do you treat the thing?

Heroin addiction treatment programs never suggest that the addict cut down to 3 or 4 injections per week. “You’re an addict, so you can never use heroin—or alcohol—ever again” is far closer to what we’d expect.

Then how about using the same model for treating sex addicts: “You’ll just have to give up sex altogether,” or “You can never masturbate again.” No? If the model works for other “addictions,” why not for sex? Two answers come to mind: (1) the whole sex addiction model doesn’t have nearly that much theoretical rigor, and (2) the market for a treatment plan that aims toward complete sexual abstinence is, well, rather limited.

It’s bad enough that the vague model of sexual health or sobriety encouraged by Sex Addicts Anonymous (SAA) and Sexaholics Anonymous (SA) is relentlessly heterosexual, monogamous, and intercourse-focused. It doesn’t make theoretical sense, but it’s obviously a more marketable product than abstinence. And both programs adapt the Alcoholics Anonymous model of asking participants to acknowledge their powerlessness over their addiction, and to ask God to remove their shortcomings.

Without question, there are many helpful things about twelve-step groups for some people. The advantage of these features is amplified in the case of sex, where there’s so much shame, cultural judgment, and self-imposed isolation. When you go to SA or SAA, they welcome you no matter what. Of course people love going there—imagine that you’re struggling, you have secrets or your spouse is angry or you feel bad about yourself or you wonder if you’re normal. Suddenly, here’s a group that says, “We’re so glad to see you! We’ve been waiting just for YOU!” It must feel like such a relief; one almost feels like a scrooge critiquing it.

But the charm of the twelve-step experience doesn’t mean that these groups actually cure (or even treat) an actual problem.

Obviously, there are legitimate problems out there regarding sexual behavior. There are people having affair after affair, seemingly unable to keep from hurting those they love. There are people for whom sex without danger has no excitement whatsoever. There are people spending hours every night on the Internet, typing with one hand, clicking on one exciting babe after another. And there are people who can’t seem to keep away from massage parlors, escorts, strip clubs, and lap dances. They try, but they can’t.

As a psychotherapist, sex therapist, and couples counselor, I see it first-hand. I pick up the pieces and help people put their lives back together.

I just don’t find the sex addict label clinically valuable, nor do I find it helpful to lump sexually troubled people together in this way. I also resent the repeated statement that if I don’t conceptualize these people as sex addicts, I’m either ignorant or I lack compassion. When some progressive Colonial physicians refused to diagnose patients as possessed by the devil, that didn’t mean they lacked compassion. They just didn’t believe in the diagnosis.

By the way, it’s fair to ask how I treat these people clinically. I do it with psychotherapy and occasionally with sex therapy; medication can also play a valuable role with some patients. Generally, my approach works pretty well.

New junk science

You may have observed that this is the decade of the brain, involving attempts to find neurological explanations for every facet of human emotion, motivation, and behavior.

Fortunately, “sex addiction” is not going to be in the upcoming fifth edition of the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, which describes mental illnesses for clinicians, the criminal justice system, the insurance industry, and graduate students. The primary reason for the exclusion is that there’s no consensus on what this “disease” is, and there are no rigorous scientific studies that determine the features or trajectory of its pathology.

But sure enough, various clinicians and researchers are trying to establish the scientific basis for sex addiction—by referring to neurology and hormones, as measured by brain scans. Such researchers have discovered that when so-called sex addicts are involved in sex (for example, when watching pornography), the part of their brain that lights up (the mesolimbic pathway) is the same part that lights up when a heroin addict has injected heroin.

Compelling proof of sex addiction? Not even close. That’s the same part of the brain that lights up when we see a sunset, the Golden Gate Bridge, the perfect donut, a gorgeous touchdown pass, or our grandchild’s smile. Our brain, our blood, and our hormones always react to pleasure—including sexual pleasure. The last 150,000 years of evolution at least accomplished that much with us poor humans.

The latest entry into the sex addiction/brain chemistry sweepstakes is the new junk science of “porn addiction.” One primary proponent, Judith Reisman (who also claims that Alfred Kinsey was a pedophilic fraud), refers to poisonous “erototoxins” released into the bloodstream during the viewing of pornographic material. Another proponent, Marnia Robinson, claims that teens’ brains are so plastic that boys easily become addicted to porn, which then damages their ability to function sexually with actual partners. Not a shred of evidence clouds Reisman’s or Robinson’s judgment about how people become addicted to their own body chemicals when those chemicals are related to sex rather than, say, a walk through the park or a production of King Lear.

Sex addiction and porn addiction crusaders complain that porn is terrible sex education. I agree, just as watching a car chase in an action movie is a terrible way to learn to drive.

Why it matters what you call it

In response to questions such as “Is there such a thing as sex addiction?” and “How should we conceptualize sexual behavior that appears or feels like it’s out of control?” I’m astounded by the number of professionals who collapse into responding, “What does it matter what we call it? The goal is to help these poor people.”

When homosexuality was called a mental illness, it mattered. When women were called frigid or nymphomaniacs or hysterics, it mattered. When a patient is diagnosed as possessed by the devil instead of schizophrenic it clearly matters: it determines the treatment to be used, and who is qualified to administer the treatment. How can people who make their living using words say that it doesn’t matter what you call it?

It also matters what you call it because the model of sexuality is built into the model of disease. In obsessive-compulsive disorder, we don’t say the problem is hand washing, and we don’t send people to hand-washing clinics. But in sex addiction, the problem is sex, and people are sent to sex addiction clinics.

Finally, it matters because calling this behavior an “addiction” validates the idea that these people are out of control. Instead, we need to say that feeling out of control isn’t the same as being out of control. Most “sex addicts” don’t like the consequences of their sexual choices, but they keep making those choices. We have a word for this behavioral pattern—neurosis; and we have a treatment for it—psychotherapy (sometimes supported by pharmaceuticals). The addiction model starts with “we admitted we were powerless.” The therapy model starts with “you’re responsible for your choices; I wonder why you keep doing what gives you what you say you don’t want?”

What this means for humanists

  • The sex addiction movement exploits people’s fear of their own sexuality. As humanists we oppose anything that exploits fear.
  • Recalling that sex addiction is a fairly new concept, we can observe the historical and cultural context from which the movement emerged—not a sexological context as much as a narrative about fear, danger, powerlessness, and victimization.
  • The sex addiction model inevitably tells us that eroticism needs to be controlled, and that erotica and commercial sex are dangerous and problematic. This means that the sex addiction movement, with the help of the religious right, supports public policy focused on controlling sexuality. Unfortunately it has been very successful in that regard.
  • The sex addiction model tells us that imagination has no healthy role to play in sexuality. This fundamental misunderstanding of human nature is very much our business.

The issue of what to call sexual behavior that is described as out of control is important not just for society in general, but for humanists in particular. To the extent that the sex addiction movement trivializes science as just one of many different perspectives, it affects us. To the extent that it tries to squeeze people into a small normative box of sexual behavior, it’s relevant to our cause. And to the extent that it pathologizes behavior that doesn’t hurt other people, it’s a prime example of what a humanist public policy would replace.

Dr. Marty Klein is a licensed marriage and family therapist and certified sex therapist in Palo Alto, California. He is on the editorial advisory board of the Humanist, and he recently spoke at the AHA annual conference.



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  • Anonymous

    Sex addiction seems to be an oxymoron considering that one of the reason we are even the dominate species on the planet. Personally I think that any issue with sex seems to bring the retarded fanatics out to spout their crazy again and again.

  • DownUnderRationalist

    I used the Rational Recovery book, plus four months of psychotherapy in an inpatient setting in New Zealand, to stop using heroin.
    This article gels very closely with the addiction model proposed in Rational Recovery, refuting the ‘powerless to a disease’ ideas espoused by Twelve Step programmes, and really saying drug or alcohol abuse is not an addiction – it is a choice to fulfill a very strong urge. Once you choose not to fulfill it, your life may still be shitty but, you’ll be in a better position to deal with that! Whether that’s through mental health treatment you didn’t access properly because you were self-medicating, or taking up exercise, studying toward a new career – whatever – but, you’ll have eliminated one set of behaviours you’ve realised isn’t working for you. This doesn’t help with sex though, because as you’ve mentioned, abstinence is not a viable long term option.Eating disorder treatment has the same problem: you can’t make patients abstain from food, they have to learn new behaviours. Perhaps there’s some interesting and useful research to be done comparing eating disorder patients to ‘sex addiction’ patients, particularly the co-morbidity profiles. (Eg, incidence of BPD, OCD etc, across the two groups.)

  • http://www.facebook.com/billherringlcsw Bill Herring Lcsw

    As a therapist focusing almost exclusively on these kinds of issues, and as a self-identified “sex addict”, I agree with a lot of Marty’s points, and I try to kindly skip over the parts that I think are contradictory or based on misinformation. But I just have to address the profound misconception that the goal of sex addiction recovery is to stop having sex — I’m not sure where this idea comes from. Here’s the official Sex Addicts Anonymous position: “(U)nlike programs for recovering alcoholics or drug addicts, Sex Addicts Anonymous does not have a universal definition of abstinence………..Most of us have no desire to stop being sexual altogether. It is not sex in and of itself that causes us problems……(T)he fellowship does not dictate to its members what is and isn’t addictive sexual behavior. Instead we have found that it is necessary for each member to define his or her own abstinence.”

    I’m glad to have an opportunity to set the record straight.

    • Ralph

      He didn’t say that the goal of sex addiction “therapy” is to stop having sex, he said that is the goal of other addiction therapies. You obviously have a filter on when reading this to justify your “profession.”

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002752274934 Um Ah

        Nope. The goal of Overeaters Anonymous is obviously not to stop eating. I guess it really isn’t an addiction, either.

        • FemmeVerde

          Actually, to me it isn’t. Neither is gambling, overspending. If your body doesn’t develop a tolerance, then dependence and an ongoing need for more, it’s isn’t an addiction. A deep DEEP compulsive urge, yes. But having been addicted to a drug, myself, for me that’s a huge difference.

          The goal is to learn to manage your feelings, not get rid of them. To manage how you do sex, mange how you eat, manage money, manage your feelings, cravings, and thoughts.

        • http://twitter.com/TheNuszAbides TheNuszAbides

          that merely illustrates a logical extrapolation from one of his points – it isn’t clinically or linguistically responsible to use a word that has established value in terms of ~substance~ abuse to label disorders of unhealthy levels of ~behavior~ (eating, gambling, sex, etc.).
          of course even these can be separated from each other since only one of them has an unquestionably essential foundation: eating is required for survival. there are strong arguments that sex is also (though this is less provable as an absolute, since some people choose celibacy for one reason or another), but either ‘essential’ activity brought to the level of destructive behavior has clinical terms, worth being discovered and addressed by responsible sufferers, responsible health professionals and responsible support networks alike.

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  • Tisha

    I believe your comment about the use of “sex addiction” by the right was totally unnecessary comment and cheapened the value of your article. Please try to remain politically unbiased when you are speaking of a social disorder. It is the “right” thing to do.

    • Anonymous

      So people can’t tell the truth if it might offend Tisha to find out that right wing politics depends on negative, anti-woman, anti-sex stereotypes as part of its ideal system of social control? Why not tell the truth?

      • Undo

        If you look at the use of sexual addiction terminology in the news you will notice that it is more likely to be used by the left. The right, especially the social conservatives look at all addiction terminology as a cop out.

        • Tisha

          Thank you! The more conservative (kindly note that I did not say asexual) element of our population believes in personal responsibility. We prefer not to proclaim a name for everything and thereby, assign powerlessness and forgive the behavior.
          And before you ask, I like sex very much and am divorced from a man who claimed sexual addiction.

          • KM

            Tisha, But you can’t universally deny that control of sexual behavior is indeed a hallmark of uber conservative elements of “the right.” It is absolutely used to regard someone as a deviant, and a person of lesser moral standing. To be of the mindset to embrace personal responsibility also means law should stay out of a couple’s bedroom. If they want to engage in BDSM, anal sex, role play, or subscribe to the Playboy channel, what right does anyone on earth have to speak evil about that consensual activity. Yet they do, frequently.

      • Tisha

        Let me guess, you are an uber liberal?

        • Jeph

          Don’t hesitate to resort to proclaim a name for someone whose politics you neither respect or understand, Darlin’. Backed into a corner, a dog will bare its teeth out of fear. A conservative uses names to accomplish the same thing. Well done, and it was quite expected of you.

        • cl

          Uber? Are you trying to bring in a Third Reich connection here? *That’s* not very constructive.

  • Sunset Shazz

    The South Park folks skewered the “sex addiction” diagnosis last year, in a brilliant satirical trope. The conceit was essentially “you mean successful, powerful men want to have sex with multiple available partners? How strange!”

    • Salsa Chick

      You don’t get it.

      • alsmo

        obviously you don’t either

        • alsmo

          wait, nevermind misread post

  • Alexander

    Well argued. Do you think a similar critique could be applied to the media’s fascination with “child sex abuse”? Why not call it what it really is, which is “child abuse”? What does adding the word “sex” do to clarify the crime? What it seems to imply is a bit of moral ambivalence, that the motive of the abuser is somewhat primal, somewhat instinctual and (“wink-wink”) we can all relate to that, right? As opposed to “child abuse” which makes it clear that this is an unequivocal crime.

    • V

      Sexual abuse is traumatizing in a very different way from physical abuse. It is a different crime, and while some people will say that spanking is abusive, everyone can say that forcing an 8 year old to perform sex acts is abusive. If you drop the specifying “sex” from child sex abuse, you ignore the severity of the crime and lump it in with ill-defined and opinionated physical abuse. (note: I am not in favor of spanking as a behavior-altering method, but I do not think it is abusive).

    • DownThereOnAVisit

      Of course the media say “child sex abuse” rather than simply “child abuse” whenever possible. The word “sex” sells papers and draws viewers. But that does not mean that sexual abuse is not different from other kinds of physical abuse and emotional abuse.

    • http://www.facebook.com/spidermedicine Darita-Rose Alden

      Child sexual abuse is different. Alexander, how much research have you done, what is your experience, and whose stories have you heard? Sexual abuse is much more destructive because it opens a child’s sexuality too soon, or in ways that are not appropriate to their emotional development. It is often used as a means of control, and it works very well because it’s terrifying in ways that other abuse is not. I’ve experienced both kinds of abuse, I speak from my experience, others’ experience, and considerable study. Please do not minimize this. The media did not invent it, nor did the media invent prurience.

      • Alexander

        Very aware of what you and V talking about, but most people are not and for exactly that reason I think that “child abuse” sounds more direct and unqualified than “child sex abuse”. You are looking at it from the victim’s perspective, and if it is a victim, I agree, say, “victim of sex abuse” if that conveys the severity of it. But when talking about a perpetrator, “sex abuse” sounds less bad because the sexual drive (per se) is normal, as opposed to “child abuse” because any kind of abuse is perverted.

        • http://twitter.com/TheNuszAbides TheNuszAbides

          but (and i suspect ‘the media’ recognizes this for the most part) there are plenty of people out there who DON’T think that ‘”child abuse” sounds more direct and unqualified’ – who question the simple phrase ‘child abuse’ from ‘the media’ because they are convinced that it is overused and/or applied too “liberally”. “child sex abuse” is far less equivocal to far more people.

  • Chris Farmer

    I have no experience with what anyone would likely describe as sex addiction and so am willing defer to the findings and opinions of people who actually work in related fields. However, the entirety of this essay commits the fallacy of begging the question; the conclusion is assumed as the outset and itself props up the premises which would appear to support it. Consider for example the following section:

    <>

    In what way are these non-criteria? Only if we assume from the beginning that addiction is not an appropriate model to describe the sexual behavior in question.

    If on the other hand, we ask if such behavior *might* be considered an addiction, these would be appropriate to ask. Does the patient engage in the activity EVEN WHEN HE DOESN’T WANT TO. If this is the case, and and the person’s sexual behavior is governed by compulsion, it would be reasonable to explore whether addiction is an appropriate description, rather than throwing it out in advance.
    This question, whether the subject engages in such activity even when it harms himself, even when it interferes with other goals that he, when considering them rationally, places above the sexual activity, trumps the implied hidden premise that there are no norms when it comes to sexuality. (It is important to see how the author uses this – first suggesting that there are no norms and then that, okay if there are norms, they are the product of a repressed society. He moreover presents his position as if not only is there no empirical evidence, but that empirical evidence is not possible, both of which arecop outs.) Let the so called addicted person decide the norms himself; perhaps he will say that I thinks it perfectly good to masturbate frequently, to have multiple partners, to engage in what some may consider “perverse” activities and yet, he finds that he does these things compulsively, that he is unable to stop even when they are causing him emotional grief and that THAT is what is problematic, not the activities themselves.
    It’s interesting that the first person to comment on this article is a participant in “rational recovery”, which, he says, is founded on the idea that “drug or alcohol abuse is not an addiction – it is a choice to fulfill a very strong urge”. This is absolute nonsense. If heroin “addiction” is not really addiction at all, then addiction itself is a meaningless term. Heroin makes for a difficult case study because there’s really no one who uses the drug in a way that could be considered “normal”. But in the case of alcohol, there is a clear and indisputable distinction between the vast majority of people who can enjoy drinking and those people for whom alcohol sets in motion a craving and an obsession that is entirelybeyond their rational control. Watch an alcoholic trying some controlled drinking and then come back and tell us whether it really makes sense to describe him as facing a choice in his consumption. A “very strong urge”, so strong indeed that it appears in every sense to be a compulsion, is in all practical senses indistinguishable from compulsion.
    Certainly, the fact that a person has multiple sexual partners, engages in some risky behavior in order to fulfill his desires, or posesses some desires that society as a whole may deem unacceptable or inappropriate is inadequate to determine that the person is a “sex addict”. And there is no doubt that many perfectly unqualified people use the term without any support for its validity. But the argument presented here against the validity of the term is not an argument at all; it is rather a series of statements all of which assumethe conclusion from the outset.

    • la_som

      Fantastic and well thought out rebuttal. I would assume this author doesn’t believe in any kind of “addiction” from this extremely one sided essay. You could take all his points and just rephrase them into explaining whyalcoholism doesn’t exist. Actually you could take his points to show that mental illness in general doesn’t exist since as of now people are diagnosed by a “checklist” of criteria rather than a clear physical test. The author confuses conservative dislike of unconventional sex with the sex addiction movement. They are not the same thing.

      • http://twitter.com/TheNuszAbides TheNuszAbides

        no, there’s simply an overlap, and i agree that Klein acknowledged no distinction between the two Anonymous groups he mentioned, but his points are certainly not easily applied to ‘disprove’ substance addiction. addictive substances invariably have inherently toxic effects when used irresponsibly (or at all, in many cases); sex, in and of itself, does not.
        actual neuroses are worth identifying and treating. the Anon groups, while i have no doubt they have been enough for some people, could be likened to cheap treatment (free, if the subject never contributes financially); and sadly not everyone can both afford and be assured of reliable therapy (especially as budgets for public health get more and more shat upon in the U.S.); but is either SA or SAA required to involve mental health professionals? one of the main points of Klein’s entire career is to diminish sex-negative culture – and one of the main reasons that these two groups are Anonymous is… a sex-negative culture!

    • http://twitter.com/socontrariwise socontrariwise

      I think what you are missing is that simple Psychotherapy to solve the underlying problem does not help with alcoholism or other true addictions. A “sex addict” can learn to solve his problems and still have sex – and enjoy it. As the author clearly states: if it was an addiction, abstaining would be the only thing for “cure”.

      An alcoholic or such is always risking to jump right back into it, no matter if originally psychological trigger that made them drink are overcome. They remain what they were.

      In the case of an addiction (and using that term properly) the addiction behavior/drug can never be used without any risks.

      But sex “addicts” are not addicts, they are simply not willing to decide differently – until they do, then they are healed while able to have sex without problems.

      Plus, as the author points out nicely, in a sex negative culture the “non-criteria” are usually full-filled. Thus a criteria that does not test for something but just confirms cultural bias is … a non criteria. I can support that especially because I am
      not from the U.S. culture myself but from Europe and … the term “sex addiction” pretty much does not exist there. Because the people do not have that ashamed and restricted stance to sexuality to begin with and just because someone shows destructive sexual behavior does not mean people just stop and say “sex addict!” but instead ask “So … why do you do that, what drives you, what is your underlying problem?”.

      Which is exactly what the author is talking about.

      • http://twitter.com/TheNuszAbides TheNuszAbides

        i cannot fathom why you have been downvoted at all, when others with far more ~shocking~ things to say haven’t been. perhaps people who think Europeans don’t deserve to be part of this conversation?

    • sex addict

      I went to Sex Addicts Anonymous in 2000 for the first time. I came because I had a history of porn and masturbation binges.I had also had (felt like I) lost control of my ogling of women and had alienated several people as a result of my I attended regularly for 2 years and I reduced my masturbation to a single time daily and stopped doing embarrassing things at parties (e.g. touching someone’s ass). Then I left the country and “fell of the wagon”. Things got worse and worse for about 10 years culminating in my having a secret promiscuous sex life outside my marriage – involving unprotected sex, lots of dishonesty to my loved ones and the women I had sex with.

      I just got sober again about 45 days ago.

      Narcissism? Yes.
      Neurosis? Sure.
      whatever

      If you want to argue about whether it’s legitimate (e,g, the DSM etc.) then compare it to eating disorders. My sex addiction was extremely similar to bulimia. I would binge on sex in secret and then feel awful after. (of course no “vomiting” was necessary because of functional differences from eating)

      Bulimia is not just eating divorced from its function of sustenance, but goes beyond mere pleasure-eating to the point of something that causes distress and shame to the person doing it. That’s what happened with my sexual behaviour.

      Sure – it can be explained without the title of “addiction” and bulimia could be described without the title of “eating disorder” but to describe my problem, “sex addiction” is the most parsimonious description.

      A final note about sex recovery programs:
      Sexaholics Anonymous is a very conservative, or right-wing fellowship that forbids anything outside of a marriage (masturbation for example is not allowed).

      Sex Addicts Anonymous is more moderate program that allows the addict to define their own addiction. For example, I have defined my bad behaviour as sex outside my marriage, but have allowed myself to masturbate and view porn – my wife is ok with both of these. I monitor these behaviours as a way of determining if I am at risk of slipping into old behaviour patterns.

      Check out the book “Sex Addicts Anonymous” – especially the section “our addiction”

      It is a very real problem for some people.

      Wishing everyone a sexually healthy and enjoyable 2013

      • http://yourswithbutter.com Tammi L. Coles

        This is for those who believe they may be suffering. I have a different story:

        I have sex outside of my marriage … regularly … pleasurably … And with the full knowledge of my husband! What I no longer suffer from is the false belief that anyone’s interest in being sexual with others is a sickness or a moral failure. Boo to slut-shaming! I also no longer believe that monogamy is the true barometer of a healthy relationship and that someone not in my body (a spouse, a priest, etc.) has the right to determine what is sexually right for my body and when.

        I read some great books on the matter: The Ethical Slut and, more recently, Sex At Dawn.

        Bottom line: there’s another path! Touch other asses at parties and don’t lie about it (swinging!) or date other people while married (polyamory!) or enjoy masturbating to porn more often (sex play with a partner!).

        Being sexually interested in more than one person is not only okay it is fundamentally human. If we were monogamous beings we would have mated just once at 13 or 14 years old and still be with that person. That said, being sexually exclusive is also okay. It just doesn’t mean it’s healthier than the alternative.

        Leading a sexually pleasurable and honest life is great. I recommend it to everyone. :)

        • Alsmo

          thank you!

      • http://twitter.com/TheNuszAbides TheNuszAbides

        thank you for distinguishing between the two Anon groups in a way the article failed to.

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  • http://www.facebook.com/billherringlcsw Bill Herring Lcsw

    I also wanted to point out that many therapists who specialize in treating this kind of behavior recognize narcissism as either driving, being a consequence of, or co-occurring with this disorder. I can’t include links here, but its simple to find, for example, the recent article titled (note: I initially mistyped this word as “entitled”, which is funny since this is a discussion of narcissism) “The Narcissism of Sex Addicts and Some Strategies for Therapists”, as well as the curated site “Partners of Sex Addicts-NPDs” on ScoopIt.

    I’m just sayin’…..

    • Salsa Chick

      I really agree with the point about narcissism. How about some articles on “the narcissism of sex addicts and some strategies for their victims’ recovery”

      • janarchy96

        you volunteered to be a victim- it’s time you let go of it. and while you’re at it, let go of the whole sex accident model- it’s not helping you at all.

        • janarchy96

          that’s “sex addict”. whatever could i have been thinking?

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  • Me

    I think his point is valid. He’s saying it’s more important to group methods of helping/understanding/researching/etc. by underlying causes instead of symptoms. People showing the same symptoms may have VERY different causes, so treating them as similar may be invalid.

    • Houndentenor

      And many people with those “symptoms” have no problem at all. Enjoying sex is not a pathology. Most of this is just slut-shaming. It also diminishes the very real problems of people whose sexually compulsions truly negatively affect their lives. Regularly purchasing porn or romance novels is hardly a problem requiring professional help. Professional organizations need to crack down on this psychobabble and focus on helping people who have real problems.

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  • Mane

    I am curious as to how this perspective would relate to something like gambling addiction, which has less of a physiological/chemical component than do drug and alcohol abuse, and seems, to me, like a closer comparison.

    I quite like the point about grouping a very heterogeneous group of people under one umbrella term of sex addiction, when there are likely far more varying reasons and causes for the behaviors and thoughts than there are for those struggling with drug and alcohol dependency. Someone who has repeated affairs despite their dislike of the consequences and feelings surrounding the behaviors is likely dealing with something quite different from someone whose days are so filled with browsing for porn that it interferes with daily functioning. While alcohol and drug dependency can manifest themselves in different ways, by definition, they all involve dependence on a substance.

    • CH

      I have read a few accounts of how people on dopamine agonists have become gambling addicts. The latest research apparently shows that dopamine causes “seeking behavior”. I can see how being on the prowl for sex might be related.

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  • Salsa Chick

    I don’t think this author is very smart. He refers to the “behavior that doesn’t hurt other people,” Is he f-ing crazy? Has he been emotionally stalked and manipulated by an obssessive, sexually compulsive narcissist before that everyone thinks is a good guy? Morality has nothing to do with it. It’s guys who are paranoid of intimacy and fixate and obssess and fantasize and oh yeah, jack off alot. Call it hypersexuality if you prefer but the ” sex addiction” movement has nothing to do with the religious right and their agenda.

    • PB

      The religious right does play a very large role in the sex addiction movement. The term is used to pathologize sexual behavior that they see as immoral. Are there real problems with compulsive and destructive sexual behavior? Certainly, but the proliferation of the sex addict label has a lot to do with demonizing behavior that doesn’t necessarily hurt other people.

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1491403617 Michael Salas

        I agree that the right has used this as a weapon, but reparative therapy and sex addiction therapy are two different things. Even though many of the people who provide claim to be able to successfully convert someone’s sexual orientation are using this as a weapon.

    • janarchy96

      if , in fact, this man was an “obsessive, ……compulsive, narcissist”, you have your diagnosis- there’s a lot to work with right there. that some of his behavior had a sexual component is neither surprising nor proof of an “addiction”. “hyper-sexuality” is a subjective judgement, but, even if accurate, it’s a symptom of the narcissism, not a separate and distinct disease.

  • Jim

    I would agree with some of what Marty has to say no doubt. However, what is ignored, or downplayed is that the very term “sex addiction” has given thousands upon thousands of people a place to start. This “discussion” is unnecessarily polarizing. I have met many, many addicts who have gotten their “start” back in life in 12 steps and with “sex addiction” terminology. Are there underlying features? Of course.

    I do believe Marty is flat out wrong about many of his pejorative ideas about addictions groups and 12 steps.
    1. The “sex addiction model” absolutely does not tell us all eroticism need be controlled.
    2. The “sex addition model” absolutely does not tell us that imagination has no role in healthy sexuality.

    3. The “sex addiction model” absolutely does not “exploit peoples fear”.

    Where in heaven do these ideas come from. They are completely contrary to all I have known and worked with for over 20 years.

    I think the biggest problem in this very limited conversation is the uninformed, black and white, absolutist thinking – that says all good or all bad.

    Are there things we need to think about, yes! Are there things we need revise, yes!

    But wholly throw out something that has been so utterly positive for so many because the
    “experts” say it’s no good. Real experts add to the greater good rather than abolish progress.

    • http://twitter.com/TheNuszAbides TheNuszAbides

      do you really think he expects the organizations to be ~abolished~? isn’t the whole point to question… people who have 12-stepped out of destructive behavior that centered around sex quite obviously, blatantly, questioned their OWN BEHAVIOR to begin with. clearly those with firsthand experience understand that his understanding of the process is not firsthand; do they have nothing to say about armchair diagnoses and public shaming and media opportunism? oh, wait – that’s why the groups are Anonymous…

  • guest

    People self-soothe and self-medicate their psychological pain in many different ways. Alchohol, heroin, cocaine, are some ways. So are eating, shopping and gambling. So are anger, victim consciousness, etc. There are substance addictions, process addictions and thought addictions. An addiction is a self-soothing mechanism that you do not have control over and cannot stop. There are many activities that are not “wrong” by themselves, but can be abused. Like eating or shopping. Obviously we cannot stop eating. But that doesn’t mean that eating cannot become a self-soothing addiction. You are correct that this is not about “sex,” but it absolutely can be about addiction. Having a lot of sex or a sexual lifestyle that society frowns on does not mean you are self-medicating, of course. So you make a good point that we should be vigilant not to slap that label on anyone who engages in sexual behavior we may judge as unhealthy by our own prejudicial standards. I agree. But I think this article is full of intellectual defensiveness and not too much compassion for finding solutions for those who do truly suffer from a self-soothing addiction to sex that can be self-destructive, and not because it’s morally “wrong,” but because it’s part of a deeper problem. If a vet with combat PTSD drinks to numb his pain to the point where he can’t stop, we would have no problem calling that an addiction. When the same vet engages in sex to numb his pain and can’t stop, we call in the ACLU and defend his right to practice whatever sexuality he chooses without labeling it. That does not serve the vet, does it? You are a therapist. Be a healer, not a lawyer.

    • http://yourswithbutter.com Tammi L. Coles

      Except that alcohol has a physically addictive component. If you can point to the research that shows sex addiction has the same effect, okay, but the better equivalent would be a vet who decides he wants to deal with his pain by going to the opera every day, reading opera news, and chatting with fellow opera fans in chat rooms.

      Addicted to opera? Not in any medical sense, and you’re hardly going to rush in to tell him to stop with the (awesome, amazing, fantastic) pleasures of opera.

    • http://twitter.com/TheNuszAbides TheNuszAbides

      the article is far more nuanced than polarizing. this is a healer taking some time to articulate the case that a certain ‘movement’ is significantly uninformed.

      “Obviously, there are legitimate problems out there regarding sexual behavior…
      “As a psychotherapist, sex therapist, and couples counselor, I see it first-hand. I pick up the pieces and help people put their lives back together.
      “I just don’t find the sex addict label clinically valuable, nor do I find it helpful to lump sexually troubled people together in this way. I also resent the repeated statement that if I don’t conceptualize these people as sex addicts, I’m either ignorant or I lack compassion. When some progressive Colonial physicians refused to diagnose patients as possessed by the devil, that didn’t mean they lacked compassion. They just didn’t believe in the diagnosis.”

      do you seriously believe that if he just keeps quietly to his practice and only helps the people who come to him, and doesn’t get all ~polarizey~ by making statements such as this article contains, he’ll do more good than if he does both?

  • modalitas

    Wow, what a load of narcissistic poop, or maybe junk or drunk writing masquerading as analysis, but probably simply pejorative manipulation to hang on to old and closed thinking.

    “Choices” he writes, “You know, the way some of us are with cookies, new sweaters, or watching the Kardashians on TV.” Choices…like choosing a sweater. I’ve found enlightenment. I think we can now do away with all our mental health programs and criminal justice systems and legal systems. All you people please just make better decisions — choose not to pull that trigger, gamble away that paycheck, stick that needle, swallow those pills, or buy that sweater.

    I agree, brain science equals junk science. Neurotransmitters such as dopamine, serotonin, epinephrine, norepinephrine, etc. have ablolutely no effect on behavior or mental illness and thus compulsive and addictive thinking and acting — it’s just junk science in the same way industrialization and deforestation have no effect on climate. It wasn’t long ago air and water quality science was junk science. For example, those wanting to say “No” to limiting ocean dumping said, “It’s a vast ocean and human activity cannot possibly have any effect on it;” But if you’re pregnant don’t eat the fish, heavy metals and all can be harmful to the fetus…no, it’s just more junk science. Just say “No,”, then we can stop all this ridiculous brain science and just stop asking questions, researching, delving deeper, finding alternatives, modeling, testing, etc!

    And what kind of ignorant idiot are you to make up a concept like hand washing clinic and compare it to what goes on in an addiction and recovery rehab program for those suffering, and I mean suffering with sexually related obsessions and compulsions. You’re not only naive, fixated and ignorant, you’re dangerous.

    • .

      Why did you bother reading the whole article, if it made you so upset?

      • Verstrickt

        They clearly didn’t read (or at least comprehend) the whole article, as the author never claimed brain science was junk science but merely cast doubt on the conclusions of particular studies.

  • MH

    I think this author is very obviously biased in his research. It looks like he sought out only that which would support his already ignorant viewpoint. While I agree that the media likes to latch on to key terms–”sex” and “addiction” being two big ones out there–knocking out an entire area of research and treatment simply because some have misused the term is wrong. As others have pointed out, SA *is* a very conservative, heterosexual focused group. However, SAA is quite the opposite. The author could easily attend any number of SAA meetings in the SF Bay Area (even in Palo Alto) and see that what he’s said about the group is very inaccurate. Try reading the group’s literature. It seems, however, that the author doesn’t want to entertain a new idea for himself and keep only doing what he’s always done. No one says in SAA that you must stop all sexual activity, just like people in over-eaters anonymous are not supposed to stop eating food. People work out what is right for them and stay honest to that plan. That happens in the SAA program as well as with therapists. While I was in the group, at least 95% of meeting attendees were also in some sort of therapy as well. The two HAD to go together.

    It’s unfortunate that the author feels he has to be so black-and-white on such a complex issue. There are any number of psychological disorders and problems that do not have a specific and common way of diagnosis. Using that as an excuse is just wrong. I think it would be beneficial for this author to go to an SAA meeting and actually talk to sex addicts. And the next time a media figure comes around asking him to identify if “famous man A” or “famous man B” is a sex addict, his answer should simply be, “I do not treat people with Sex Addiction so I am unqualified to make such a diagnosis–especially without any contact with the subject.” That would be much better than dismissing the entire diagnosis out right.

  • JT

    A friend went for an HIV test and the ‘counselor’ asked him how many partners he had had, and when he responded with what she thought was a high number, she called it ‘getting his fix.’ He wasn’t troubled by his sexuality but she was a) judging his behavior and b) imposing an addiction model on it. It’s a form of violence that makes me angry as it assumes problematic (gay male) sexuality when there is just…no problem there.

  • fathomgreen

    I took the SAST test to see if I was a sex addict and it turns out I am. It’s really unexpected since I was a virgin until I was 27 and in my lifetime I’ve only fooled around with 4 different guys and had sex with one

  • lesley

    I’m gay and I’ve been attending sexaholics anon meetings once a week for the past year. No one at my meeting tells me that I can’t be a same-sex relationship. They all know I’m gay and they don’t care. So, Dr. Klein I don’t know what you’re talking about.

    • http://twitter.com/TheNuszAbides TheNuszAbides

      it appears he simply conflated SA and SAA. too bad there hasn’t been a correction in all this time…

  • Guest

    Great article! I have only one issue, and that is the choice of the term “massage parlor” to refer to a brothel. Members of the legitimate massage profession have been trying for decades to differentiate ourselves from sex workers, and calling establishments where prostitutes (not all of them willing participants) ply their trade “massage parlors” only perpetuates this unfortunate confusion. Language is important, and if we all make little changes, it will go a long way. Thanks for your good work!

    • http://yourswithbutter.com Tammi L. Coles

      Massage parlors offer massages too. Does the sexual component mean the massage is not legitimate? If someone is aroused by a legitimate massage professional, does that make the therapist a hooker? Does the fact that most massage therapists don’t attend medical school make them less legitimate professionals? Were massages provided before licensing not professional?

      How about just saying “some offer explicitly sexual services and some don’t” while also recognizing that all are legitimate forms of physical pleasure and release?

  • Daniel

    This guy really needs to look up the word addiction. I find this article to be patronizing and pretentious.

  • andy

    Addict: “One who is addicted, as to narcotics or a compulsive activity.” Can one quit having sex for the rest of their life? I couldn’t. Not without major withdrawal symptoms. Just because I’m not making destructive sexual decisions, doesn’t mean I’m not hooked. If someone beautiful, emitting pheromones, and tweaking my fantasy threw themselves at me, I’m not sure my best judgement would always win. Your article seems a little righteous.

  • Sesh

    I was very taken back by this article.

    I would like to offer a different perspective on 12 Step Recovery, especially that to which I can speak – the sex addict in Sex Addicts Anonymous (SAA). Admittedly, 12 Step Programs have traditionally been “God” oriented, however with the rise of agnostic, humanistic, and non-theistic (Buddhist, Daoist) outlooks in America, we are seeing a shift in attitudes towards what constitutes a “Higher Power” in the program. As a non-theist I have turned the care of my life and my will over to a more enlightened way, such as the Buddha outlined in the Eightfold Path.

    The guilt/shame based thinking that is the basis for the author’s argument exists culturally and not universally. In the rooms of SAA the “vague model of sexual health or sobriety” is one that is determined by the addict and their sponsor (what behaviors do you want to abstain from?). The program does NOT dictate a lifestyle, let alone one that is “relentlessly heterosexual, monogamous, and intercourse-focused”. Instead, the program is personal, flexible, and inclusive.

    Furthermore, the program of the 12 Steps asks each individual to take inventory of their lives, especially in four areas: Fear, Anger/Resentments, Dishonesty, and Selfishness. In this way, the SAA member who works a program works to remove the very fear-based-thinking the author claims “exploits people’s fear of their own sexuality.” Fear leads to shame, shame to guilt. The person desires to change this feeling of guilt (dis-ease of addiction) and the cycle continues. The inventory questions personal attachments to what others think and expect of them. We seek for fear to be identified and removed; not necessarily opposed or battled.

    I might also object to the points that “sex addiction model inevitably tells us that eroticism needs to be controlled, and that erotica and commercial sex are dangerous and problematic. This means that the sex addiction movement, with the help of the religious right, supports public policy focused on controlling sexuality.” The 12 Step model of SAA asks that each individual focus not on what can be changed in the world, but what needs changed in ourselves. Following the tenth tradition: Sex Addicts Anonymous has no opinion on outside issues; hence the S.A.A. name ought never be drawn into public controversy. If term “sex addiction” is co-opted by the religious right, to what fault is that of the person who suffers?

    Lastly, I would invite this author to read up on the growing amount of material related to agnostic and non-theistic recovery programs. These programs are a plan of action and not simply a plan of inaction – deciding to not partake in the activity which creates the consequences of suffering; a small alternative solution offered by the author. By offering the person who compulsively turns to sex a new plan of action they are substantially better equipped to deal with many situations. In SAA these actions are numbered 1 through 12. They seem best used by committed individuals who may also seek therapy, spiritual growth, exercise and/or employ other humanist strategies that focus on the self rather than society, culture, or fear of others.

  • Maxi

    Look, I like porn a lot but if I could simply go out my door and easily find a woman to have sex with without having to pay for it or enter into a relationship which I am not interested in doing right now then I would never look at porn again. As long as women, acting the age-old game of sexual gatekeeper and demanding some kind of emotional or monetary payment for sex, make it so hard just to get some kind of quick and easy sexual release then men will continue to use and enjoy porn. Already younger women, those who have not known a world without freely available internet porn, understand this and are changing their sexual attitudes and are becoming more like men when it comes to recreational sex. We see this in the new “hookup culture” we are now seeing. They know that they have to change their attitudes toward sexual availability (although many young women never did have that old attitude and so just did what came naturally) in order to compete with more sexual choices men now have. People will still enter into long term relationships but for those who simply want sexual release by way of skin to skin contact with another and are foiled my having to jump through numerous hoops and in the end simply masturbate to porn instead will do just that.

  • Me

    There is a population of us that are very sex positive, we don’t condemn pornography or non-monogamy. Yet we recognize some types of sexual behavior as destructive and compulsive. You say that the sex addiction label “pathologizes behavior that doesn’t hurt other people”… what I and others would call sex addiction does harm others and the behavior persists despite the damaging effects on relationships, the body, and bank accounts.

    What many of us call Sex Addiction does meet the DSM-IV criteria for addiction.

    Tolerance- the severity of stimulation needed ramps up over time. Sex with one stranger in a month isn’t as stimulating as multiple in a day.
    Continued use of drug despite harm- psychological and physical harm (I’ve had STIs, guilt, bleeding (internal and external), urinary complications)
    Loss of control- a single masturbatory session can go on for hours, leading to missed work, social events, etc, despite wanting to do those things.
    Salience- sneaking off at work or a from a relationship to masturbate, endless hours spent online seeking porn or new partners.
    Attempts to cut down- You want to cut down, but then you say “this time will be ok, I’ll cut down another day”
    Reduced involvement- I’ve missed work, dates, hang outs, meals, put off all sorts of responsibilities to masturbate or have sex with a stranger.

    Probably the only criteria that my own Sex Addiction does not meet is Withdrawal.

  • alsmo

    I went to The Meadows in 2005 when I was 19 for my ptsd and because I was getting bullied in the military. Those fucks quickly labeled me a sex addict because I told them I watch porn and was a victim of sexual abuse. They put me in all these fucking classes telling me I was a sex addict and an addict which I wasn’t. Its 2012 and I still feel guilty and conflicted everytime I watch porn or think about having sex with a woman, I even feel guilty if I want to have a threesome or experiment with different sexual positions. You telling me I can’t have casual sex or a couple of fuck buddies? I was better off not going to therapy and wasting my time with idiot therapists. Now I go to therapy mostly to undo the damage that other therapists did, not to mention ”well meaning” school teachers, religious figures and family members. Thanks America!

  • Chicago

    This person doesn’t know what he is talking about. How can he say “sex addicts” are NOT sex addicts when he doesn’t provide a definition of addiction, and then compare the behavior against it? Also: he is completely wrong that Sex Addicts Anonymous has “vague” ideas of sobriety and that it is “relentlessly heterosexual.” I am a gay man who is very comfortable in SAA, and I also define my own sobriety, which means I decide which behaviors are healthy for me, and which ones are not.