Tag: porn addiction

  • Kanye West Talks Porn & Sex Addiction

    Kanye West Talks Porn & Sex Addiction

    The Grammy winner has openly spoken about mental health, including publicly disclosing that he’s bipolar.

    Kanye West is back with his latest album, Jesus is King, and on the eve of its release, he candidly spoke with Beats 1 about being addicted to porn and sex.

    West started with a ritual many young boys go through, finding an issue of his dad’s Playboy, which he called a “gateway to a full on pornography addiction. It has impacted every choice I have made in my life from age five to now, having to kick the habit. And it just presents itself in the open like it’s okay and I stand up and say, ‘No, it’s not okay.’” 

    Drowning Himself In Sex — A Rock Star Cliché

    West saw himself living a cliché that many musicians fall into.

    “That was such a script out of a rock star’s life. You know that Playboy that I found when I was five years old was written all over the moment when I was at the MTV awards with the Timberlands, the Balmain jeans and the Hennessy bottle. My mom had passed a year before. And I said some people drown themselves in drugs, and I drown myself in sex.”

    West said that sex “fed the ego too. Money, clothes, paparazzi photos, going to Paris fashion week, all of that.” 

    Asking Employees To Abstain From Premarital Sex

    Coming to his realization about porn and sex addiction also affected how he crafted the Jesus is King album. “I was asking people to…this is gonna be radical what I’m about to say. There were times where I was asking people to not have premarital sex while they were working.” 

    West has openly spoken about his mental health issues, including publicly disclosing that he’s bipolar (he subsequently claimed he was misdiagnosed), and he’s used it as material for his lyrics as well.

    On the cover of his album Ye, “I hate being bipolar it’s awesome” is scrawled in neon green. And as he told radio personality Big Boy, “I am so blessed and so privileged because think about people that have issues that are not Kanye West, that can’t go and make that [music] and make you feel like it’s all good. I’d never been diagnosed and I was like 39 years old. That’s why I said on the album it’s not a disability, it’s a super power.” 

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Growing Up Gay, Muslim, and Addicted to Sex (and Drugs)

    Growing Up Gay, Muslim, and Addicted to Sex (and Drugs)

    I craved love and attention, and as I started to rebel against my religion, porn and sex became a hobby that distracted from my loneliness; later it evolved into an obsession, and eventually, an addiction.

    You sit comfortably in the cinema with an extra-large bucket of popcorn on your lap and a diet coke in the cup holder while the movie characters on the screen are trying to survive their ordeal.

    You can cry with them, yell at their stupid decisions, smile when they finally get their happy ending (or feel sorry for them when they don’t). In the end, it’s just a movie and you’re safe in your seat.

    Then suddenly, your seat begins to shake. At first you think it’s just a 4D effect until you see white tentacles ensnare your body and lift you up, pulling you into the movie. You are no longer safely in your seat at the local cinema.*

    Growing up as a gay man In Indonesia, a country with the world’s largest Muslim population, the first LGBT story I read was published in Hidayah, a magazine aimed at conservative Muslims.

    The feature article was about a gay flight attendant who ended up contracting HIV and later became terminally ill due to AIDS complications.

    I shuddered when I read the portrayal of that poor gay man. It seemed that the writer could not hide his or her own repulsion toward the idea of two men falling for each other. The words “unnatural” and “sinful” were used. The AIDS complications that the man suffered were described in specific detail—it was horrifying.

    The message of the article was clear: If you choose to be gay, no happy endings will ever come to you.

    That story flashed through my mind when the doctor told me that my HIV test came back positive. I was no longer comfortably seated watching a movie. And I had just became a cliché: an HIV-positive gay man.

    How did I get here?

    I had watched quite a few gay-themed movies before that point and I knew the rules of safe sex. There was also a TV series that was funded by the government that touched on HIV/AIDS. And when I was a teenager, my boyfriend at the time invited me to attend a workshop on HIV and AIDS.

    I knew all the rules yet there was something in me that got me here, something that took me a while to come to terms with: my addiction to sex (and later, drugs).

    To say that growing up gay in Indonesia was difficult is an understatement.

    I was around four when my mother caught me using her lipstick. Of course, at that age, it was perhaps deemed adorable. My mother even took a picture of us together: me, a toddler, smiling from ear to ear with a face full of lipstick, while she looked amused.

    I was probably around 10 or 11 the second time I was caught. My father found me looking in the mirror and trying on my mother’s earrings. He rarely got angry with me but I’ll never forget his reaction that day. He pointed at me and yelled that what I did was an abomination and I should never, ever do it again.

    “No one is f***ot in this family, period!” he screamed.

    I was scared. For the first time, I didn’t feel safe under their roof. I realized there was something about me that my parents would never approve of.

    As I entered 7th grade, things didn’t get any better. While I was never physically assaulted for being gay—mostly because I tended to avoid any altercations—I got verbally abused a lot, like the time I was waiting to be picked up and a kid yelled at me “Hey, f***ot! You got nothing to do?” out the window as his father was driving him home.

    I never felt like I truly belonged.

    Around this time, a childhood friend introduced me to porn, and it quickly became a welcome escape. I will never forget the first scene that I watched. Porn created a space in my brain that I could always visit whenever life got too hard. I also began to masturbate.

    As a gay man, my focus was on the guys. With their muscles, their appearance, and cocksure attitude, they represented the ideal man. I convinced myself that in order to become “a real man,” I should be like the men in the videos I was watching.

    When I watched porn and masturbated, I was in my own time and space. Everything was good, for a while.

    Later, I started to look for guys online (the Internet was finally here) but it was really, really difficult to find gay men who I could befriend.

    Was it because gay men in Indonesia could not truly express themselves unless it was behind closed doors? Was it because, for gay men in a country with strict cultural and religious conventions against homosexuality, sex arguably became the only way to connect with other gay men?

    I craved love and attention, and as I started to rebel against my religion, porn and sex became a hobby that distracted from my loneliness; later it evolved into an obsession, and eventually, an addiction.

    I tried to become a good Muslim to make my parents happy—I attempted to denounce homosexuality and started to pray more. But it never lasted very long. In fact, I became more and more rebellious toward my religious teachings.

    On the one hand, this rebellion served a good purpose: eventually I became who I was born to be. But on the other hand, rebelling against my religion also meant that I didn’t have any moral or spiritual structure that could help save me from my troubles.

    On the outside, I was motivated and ambitious. I knew that in order to be accepted, I had to do everything I could to be successful. So I became a diligent student in college, and eventually got my first job as a newspaper journalist.

    I was very determined, even cutthroat; I basically did everything I could to become the star in my office. I believed that as a gay man, I could not fuck things up. I needed to double my efforts in order to get half the recognition of my peers.

    Inside, none of this was enough. In my head, the addiction was still there, hungry and needing to be fed. After spending most of my daytime hours working, at night I would cruise. I became a regular at a local gay bath house where I had plenty of anonymous sex in those dark rooms.

    I also became addicted to food and it became so out of control that I became overweight and thus I felt unattractive. Being a fat gay man was, as much as I tried to deny it, not an easy task. At one point I started to get involved with male escorts because I did not feel worthy of genuine connections.

    From time to time, I discarded condoms. All I could think about was how to fill the void in my soul. I didn’t care about myself or my health. I just wanted more of everything.

    That’s when I found out I was HIV+.

    In response, I began experimenting with drugs, starting with poppers and moving on to crystal meth. It was a full-blown addiction. That “safe” space in my head expanded and I found myself released from any inhibitions. When I was under the influence of drugs, I was no longer insecure.

    But altered states are temporary and once the effects wore off, everything felt worse and I just had to mess things up again with porn, sex, or drugs. It was a never-ending pain.

    Eventually, I lost my job, my dream job. Being a journalist was something that I aspired to but I messed it up. During my full-blown addiction, I made some fatal mistakes and the newspaper had no choice but to let me go.

    I lived in Shanghai, China for a while and started to attend 12-step meetings. But it wasn’t until I moved to Chiang Mai, Thailand that I started to see the wrongs that I’d done and began to take recovery seriously.

    There were a lot of anonymous meetings in this town and several treatment centers (including an LGBT drug rehab). There were many recovering drug addicts who I could relate to. I began to find my community: people in recovery.

    For the first time in my life, I started to believe that I was worth it. I knew that while my addictions did a number on me, they did not define me. I lost things due to my addiction, but I could gain other things—as long as I wanted to recover.

    I met my sponsor in this town as well as my current therapist. I began to realize that I needed to get out of my chaotic mind if I wanted to live. I needed to leave that “safe space” in my brain and open myself up to a new life.

    For many years, I sat in that cinema seat with my denial. When I was finally pulled into the movie, I was still in denial. It took a while but I eventually realized that I, an HIV-positive, recovering addict, gay man from a Muslim world, still had choices.

    And I chose life.

    *Thanks to my favorite writer Dee Lestari who came up with this analogy.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Sex Addiction, Porn, and Online Dating: An Interview with Dr. Stefanie Carnes

    Sex Addiction, Porn, and Online Dating: An Interview with Dr. Stefanie Carnes

    More and more women are getting involved with porn, cybersex, hook-up apps and sexting. Given the technological advances, it’s not surprising that these behavioral addictions have blown up.

    Dr. Stefanie Carnes, Ph.D., CSAT-S is the President of the International Institute for Trauma and Addiction Professionals (IITAP) and a senior fellow for Meadows Behavioral Healthcare, where she works with people struggling with sex, love, and intimacy disorders and their families. As the daughter of Dr. Patrick Carnes, the nationally recognized expert credited with popularizing the term “sex addiction” in the early 90s, she grew up in the midst of the theoretical underpinnings of modern behavioral disorders like sex addiction, porn addiction, and love addiction.

    The Fix is honored to have the opportunity to speak with Dr. Stefanie Carnes about the rise of sex and porn addiction and how it’s tied to the increased availability of online pornography and hook-up apps, the necessity for a different paradigm in treating family members, and how stigma is causing harm to a growing and largely unrecognized population of sex addicts: women.

    The Fix: Can you explain why compulsive sexuality is similar to substance use disorders?

    Dr. Carnes: Although the treatment can be very different, the latest neuroscience research reveals very similar patterns in the reward center of the brain. In the latest edition of the journal World Psychiatry, the WHO recently released an article that said they are moving the behavioral addictions into a new category under the umbrella of addictive disorders. Thus, gaming, gambling, and substance use disorders are all going to be included in a single category. My hope is that they will move compulsive sexual behavior from the impulse control disorder category to this much broader addictive disorders category. It’s the same path that gambling took, and I hope we will follow that classification path as well. Although the WHO remains somewhat conservative by keeping compulsive sexual behavior as an impulse control disorder, it is possible that it will be moved over once more research is examined and evidence accumulated.

    The definition by the WHO in the World Psychiatry article is as follows:

    Compulsive sexual behaviour disorder is characterized by a persistent pattern of failure to control intense repetitive sexual impulses or urges, resulting in repetitive sexual behaviour over an extended period (e.g., six months or more) that causes marked distress or impairment in personal, family, social, educational, occupational or other important areas of functioning.

    The focus is on behaviors that are out of control, thus there are a lot of similarities with gambling and substance use disorder.

    Dr. Patrick Carnes believes that at least 40 percent of female Internet users engage in problematic cybersex. Do you agree with this statistic? If so, what percentage of those women are potentially sex addicts? What steps could be taken to help this massive population gain awareness and receive potential help?

    I’m not sure what specific study was being cited in that article, but I can tell you that we are seeing huge increases for women in terms of such behaviors online. It’s very underestimated how both sex addiction and porn addiction are impacting women. A big part of that gap is that the stigma is greater for women. It’s harder for them to come forward and ask for help. If you look at a recent study done by Dickenson and colleagues, the results proved surprising:

    In a nationally representative sample that asked how many people in the United States were struggling with some form of out of control sexual behavior, the percentage of the overall female population came back at about seven percent. It was much higher than what people in the field had anticipated. There are over 150 million adult women living in the United States, and 7% means that over 11 million women are struggling with this issue to one degree or another. Even if we cut that number in half, it’s still an enormous number of people.

    We are seeing that a lot with women struggling with pornography, for example. For example, Porn Hub designated 2017 as the “year of porn for women” because rates of women using porn almost doubled during that period according to their statistics. We are seeing more and more women getting involved with porn, cybersex, hook-up apps and sexting. We see really high rates in the college student population where porn is normalized. In that group, the use of porn has become normative behavior. Any time you have greater availability and accessibility of an addictive substance or behavior, you are going to have higher rates of addiction. There is a reason why there are more gambling addicts in Las Vegas than in any other part of the country.

    The higher rates for women mean the battle against destigmatization has become even more important. The stigma prevents women from accessing help and professional support. In terms of porn addiction for men, you have a lot of well-known men ranging from political leaders and athletes to movie stars and other public figures that have come out and said they were struggling with this problem and were getting help with it. In contrast, there still have been very few women that have done the same. Like with alcoholism, we need the Betty Ford moment where women stand up and say that we, too, are struggling with this. Such a moment had a tremendous impact on the process of the destigmatization of alcoholism and substance use disorder. We have seen a lot of men coming forward, but we haven’t seen that as much with women. This is a women’s problem too, and we need to open and expand that national discussion.

    How has the rise of the internet and online dating affected sex addiction?

    Availability and accessibility almost always is a key part of the development of any form of addiction. Given the technological advances, it’s not surprising that these behavioral addictions have blown up. Today, we have hook-up apps with location features on every smartphone and any kind of porn at the tip of your fingertips at any point in time. Thus, we are having much higher rates and much higher instances of sex and love addiction than we’ve ever had in the past.

    Can you help illuminate the relationship between sex addiction and porn addiction, particularly online porn addiction? Is there a widespread direct relationship or is it contextualized case by case?

    There is a widespread relationship. One study done recently showed that about 80% of people that identify as sex addicts also said that they had some form of problematic pornography use. Having made that point, there’s a difference in terms of treatment for people that just have porn addiction versus people that have both sex and porn addiction. The people who only identify as porn addicts, and it’s a large group, their behavior has not transitioned to being problematic in real life and offline. Although porn addiction affects their life, it tends to be very isolating and lacks interaction with other people. Thus, treatment looks very different for them. As a population in general, they look very different from sex addicts and have very different needs in terms of a recovery program.

    For example, a recent paper made a very interesting distinction between contemporary porn addicts and classic sex addicts. Most of the classic sex addicts have multiple addictions, high rates of trauma, attachment problems, and mood disorders. They are using sex and porn to self-medicate, and that’s the typical classic presentation. In contrast, the contemporary presentation of porn addicts tends to be young people that got exposed to pornography online at a very young age. They tend to have less trauma, fewer attachment problems, and fewer co-occurring disorders. Instead, they simply got hooked on internet porn at a very young age and it deeply affected their sexual interactions as they grew older. With someone like that, it’s a very different treatment process than with somebody that has the attachment wounding, the trauma history, and serious co-occurring substance use disorder.

    With porn addicts, we focus on healthy device management, content filters, social support, and managing triggers and cues. Those kind of treatment methods are very important when it comes to treating porn addiction. The goal is to foster a healthy way of living moving forward.

    On November 14, 2017, IITAP released a position statement about Harvey Weinstein and the sexual assault and abuse scandals that led to the #MeToo movement, which reads in part: “It is critical to understand that sex addiction and sex offending behavior are not the same things. A sex offense occurs when there is a non-consensual sexual behavior that has a victim…. most studies show that only about 10%-30% of sex addicts have behaviors that constitute sexual offenses. The majority of sex addicts struggle with issues like pornography addiction, prostitution, anonymous sexual behaviors, and sexual promiscuity and boundary failure.”

    How severe is the damage done by these misconceptions to the sex addiction treatment industry? How can the industry rehabilitate itself, shifting public opinion?

    The media and the public have a hard time making the distinction between a sex addict and a sex offender. Since they classify sex offenders like the Craigslist Killer as sex addicts, suddenly everyone with a problem with compulsive sexual behaviors becomes a sex offender. This is not right, and it prevents many people from admitting their problem and reaching out for treatment.

    For example, let’s take Bill Cosby and his crimes. Bill Cosby is a sex offender who was committing crimes, yet the media would refer to him as only a sex addict. His actions were coercive, exploitative, and criminal. The Craigslist Killer had anti-social personality disorder so it doesn’t make sense to define him as a sex addict. He was sociopathic and psychopathic. By defining him as a sex addict, you are making the implication that sex addicts are sociopathic and psychopathic, and this implication is grossly unfair. From a clinical standpoint, we understand the distinctions. However, the media conveys a wrong message to the general public by looking at extreme sex offenders and saying, “Oh, this person is just a sex addict.”

    We have to be better about teaching people the appropriate language. We have to help them understand the distinctions. Indeed, we need to educate them so they understand that sexual harassment, rape, and other criminal behavior are sex offenses. Sex offenses and sex addiction are two very different things, and people need to understand the difference.

    In the position statement, you also write, “There are many misconceptions about sex addiction treatment. The first is that it is a retreat or a way to escape problematic behavior. Nothing could be further from the truth.” Can you describe how sex addiction treatment works at your facilities?

    A lot of people have the mistaken perception that sex addiction is an excuse for bad behavior. They believe that sex addicts go to treatment only to escape the consequences of their actions. In my firsthand experience treating clients, such a perspective is just not the reality of what treatment is like. By the time you are going into inpatient treatment for sex addiction, you have done damage to yourself, and you truly need help. Many have destroyed their lives. Thus, there is no escape without doing the work.

    At our treatment center, we have both a men’s unit and a women’s unit. Gentle Path is our men’s unit and Willow House is our women’s unit. When both men and women enter treatment, we have very high rates of suicidality. To ensure their safety, many clients are put on one-to-one suicide watch at the beginning of their stay until the threat passes. In terms of the work being done, the clients are in group sessions for almost forty hours a week. Then, they have individual therapy sessions on top of it. They also have homework to complete as well as 12-step meetings at night. If you want a vacation to avoid consequences, the Meadows is not the right choice to make. Our program is about attaining sobriety from addiction and working a program that leads to long-term recovery.

    One of the aspects about my father’s treatment philosophy that I have always admired because it really works is the idea that you have to grab onto a client’s frontal lobes and hold on. What he means is that to enact positive change in a person’s core personality takes focus and determination. Thus, it’s a very intensive treatment program because the addictions we are treating are life-threatening. The stakes are high, and people come to us really needing to be helped and supported.

    From morning meditations and journal entries to a whole protocol of exercises and nutritional support, everything is designed to foster this process. Then, it’s also extremely emotional on account of the trauma work which pulls up the root causes behind the behaviors and all of the original pain points. The very deep experiential work around the root trauma is not easy for anyone.

    Beyond their own work, the process builds up to family week where they have to face the devastation caused by their addictions within their own families. Revealing the truth and facing your family for an entire week is heart-wrenching. As I mentioned, the men’s unit is called the Gentle Path, and that is also the name of the program. Our clients jokingly refer to it as the Brutal Path because the process is so difficult. They are grateful for the results of the work because they know by the end that they have done the work. It’s not easy by any stretch of the imagination. As you can see, there is a huge discrepancy between the public perception of sex addiction treatment and the reality of sex addiction treatment. The blatant falsehood of sex addiction treatment being an easy escape is an unfortunate perception because it puts treatment in a negative light. One of our goals is to change this perception.

    In contrast to your father’s focus on treating sex addicts, you also have become laser-focused on supporting their partners and loved ones. How does your work help the loved ones of people with sex addiction?

    Coming from a family with sex addiction and having been impacted by it as a family member, I feel it has often been overlooked. When I first entered the field, many therapists denied the existence of sex addiction. If you asked for help, you were sent along your merry way. Thus, many people looking for help were turned away, and many families were negatively impacted.

    Back in the 1980s and 90s, since the only therapists treating sex addiction in the beginning were addiction therapists, the same treatment principles used for substance use disorder were applied to sex addiction. However, when it comes to families, there are some big differences between chemical dependency and sex addiction. When I entered the field, there was so much that was misunderstood, and there simply were not a lot of resources for partners and family members. It seemed that what happened after treatment in the context of the family was more of an afterthought. The treatment of the sex addict was put first during treatment and helping the family was nothing more than an adjunct to the addict’s treatment.

    Another problem was that the codependency model was being applied to the majority of these families when most of them did not actually know that the addiction was going on. The families felt they were being pathologized by such an approach. I’ve tried to use a lot of my efforts in outreach and training to educate therapists about the traumatic nature of these kind of addictive behaviors for family members. Beyond being very difficult to even learn, it often becomes downright devastating for them. They really need a kind of help and support that is not the same as with families dealing with chemical dependency. For example, disclosure is a huge issue. How does a sex addict share information about the sexual betrayals with their partner without traumatizing the heck out of them?

    Moreover, think about the challenge of the children. What are you going to tell the children about this? It becomes very complex and very age specific as well. In our Certified Sex Addiction Training for therapists, I teach our second module which is all about how to work with the couples, how to handle the betrayal trauma, and how to talk to the kids about what is happening. It’s an incredibly important aspect of treatment. If it’s not handled well, it can really derail the addict’s recovery. When it comes to compulsive sexual behavior, you have to look at the family from a relational paradigm. You have to examine and address the whole system or treatment doesn’t work.

    Dr. Stefanie Carnes is the author of numerous publications including Mending a Shattered Heart: A Guide for Partners of Sex AddictsFacing Heartbreak: Steps to Recovery for Partners of Sex Addicts, and Facing Addiction: Starting Recovery from Alcohol and Drugs.

    View the original article at thefix.com