Dr. Victor Cline |
Then the eyes of the
blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped. (Isaiah 35:5)
Treatment & Healing
of Pornographic and Sexual Addictions by Dr.Victor B. Cline, PhD - April 1999
In over 25 years I have treated
approximately 350 males afflicted with sexual addictions (sometimes referred to
as: sexual compulsions). In about 94% of the cases I have found that
pornography was a contributor, facilitator or direct causal agent in the
acquiring of these sexual illnesses. Patrick Carnes, the leading U.S.
researcher in this area, also reports similar findings. In his research on
nearly 1000 sex addicts as reported in his "Dan 't Call it Love", he
stated: "Among all addicts surveyed 90% of the men and 77% of the women
reported pornography as significant to their addiction."
I found that nearly all
of my adult sexual addicts' problems started with porn exposure in childhood or
adolescence (often eight years and older). The typical pattern was exposure to
mild porn or sexual abuse (by friends, sibs, older individuals, or accidentally
discovering the father's porn) with increasing frequency of exposure over time
and eventual later addiction. This was nearly always sooner or later
accompanied by masturbation.
This addiction was
followed by an increasing desensitization to the materials' pathology,
escalation to increasingly varied, aberrant, and "rougher" kinds of
erotic materials, and eventually to acting out the sexual fantasies they were
exposed to. This might include exhibitionism, voyeurism, obscene phone calls,
soliciting prostitutes, brief affairs, and even on occasion child molest and
forced sex , most of the damage was through compulsive infidelity (sometimes
infecting the wife with venereal diseases) and a destruction of trust in the
marital bond which in many cases ultimately led to divorce and a breaking up of
the family.
Many wives found their
husband preferring fantasy sex (they would catch them masturbating to
pornography) rather than make love with them, their partner. This had devastating effects on the
marriage. One of my (patient) wives, in great pain, confronted her husband,
"What do you see in those two dimensional faceless women that I can't give
you as a loving wife--who is flesh and blood, a real person and committed to
you?" The men never had an answer. To some extent they enjoyed sexual
relations with their wives but most preferred the fantasy sex with masturbation
because "these women" could do anything and were perfect inform and
appearance! While some wives initially blamed themselves as possibly being
responsible for their husband's problem they soon found that being extra
affectionate with the husband in their intimate relations never solved the
problem or stopped the "acting out" behavior or the constant lies and
deception.
I found that once
addicted, whether to just the pornography or the later pattern of sexual acting
out--they really had lost their "free agency." It was like a drug
addiction. And in this case their drug was sex. They could not stop the pattern
of their behavior no matter how high risk it was for them or terrible the
potential consequences.
In one case I had my
patient give me a check for $1,000 which I put in a special bank account. Since
his sexual acting out was always preceded by pornography exposure I thought we
could possibly break the pattern by first stopping the pornography addiction.
So I made an agreement
with him that he could have his money back in 90 days if he could be 100% sober
with regards to exposure to any kind of pornography. Since he was extremely tight with money this appealed to him and
he agreed. He knew that he would do nothing foolish to lose that much money. If
he failed the test, however, the money would go to charity (not myself, I
didn't want to profit by his weakness nor have any reason to want him to fail).
Unfortunately on the 87th day he relapsed.
Since he had come so
close to getting his money back I agreed to give him a second chance. I figured
that if he could go 87 days sober, surely he could make 90. He was delighted to
get a second chance. However 14 days later he relapsed again and confessed to
me that even if he had given me $10,000 it wouldn't have made any
difference--he would still have relapsed. He could not control himself nor his
behavior no matter what the consequences. I never used that technique again to
break addictive behavior. It just didn't work. Promises, good intentions, will
power, threat of job loss, the possibility of divorce, frequent reading of the
scriptures or even imprisonment do not deter the behavior. None of these work.
Both from my 30 years
clinical work as well as frequent reviews of the literature convinces me that
at least one major avenue leading to the creation of these kinds of addictions
is through a process of masturbatory conditioning. The work of R. J. McGuire suggests that exposure to special
sexual experiences (which could include pornography), and then masturbating to
the fantasy of this exposure, can cultivate a desire to participate in these
deviant sexual acts. And it's just a
matter of time before this happens.
The best evidence to
date suggests that most or all sexual deviations are learned behaviors, usually
through inadvertent or accidental conditioning. There is no convincing evidence,
to date, suggesting the hereditary transmission of any pathological sexual
behavior pattern such as rape, incest, pedophilia, voyeurism. exhibitionism, or
promiscuity.
As one researcher in
this area, Dr. R. J. McGuire explains it, as a man repeatedly masturbates to a
vivid sexual fantasy as his exclusive outlet, the pleasurable experience endows
the deviant fantasy (rape, molesting children, exposing oneself, voyeurism,
promiscuity, etc.) with increasing erotic value. The orgasm experienced then provides the critical reinforcing
event for the conditioning of the fantasy preceding or accompanying the act.
McGuire indicates that any type of sexual deviation can be acquired in this
way, that it may include several unrelated deviations in one individual and that
it cannot be eliminated even by massive feelings of guilt. His paper cites many
case histories to illustrate this type of conditioning. Other related studies
by D. R. Evans and B. T. Jackson support his thesis. They found that deviant
masturbatory fantasy very significantly affected the habit strength of the
subject's sexual deviation.
In the treatment of
hundreds of primarily male patients with sexual pathology (paraphilias) it has
consistently been found that most men are vulnerable to the effects of
masturbatory conditioning to pornography with a consequence of sexual ill
health. We, especially males, are all subject to the laws of learning with few
or no exceptions. Any individual who does this is at risk of becoming, in time,
a sexual addict, as well as conditioning himself into having a sexual deviancy
and/or disturbing a bonded relationship with a spouse or girlfriend. Being more intelligent increases the risk
(in my judgement) because of the increased capacity to fantasize.
A frequent side effect
is that it also dramatically reduces their capacity to love (e.g. it results in
a marked dissociation of sex from friendship, affection, caring, and other
normal healthy emotions and traits which help marital and family relationships).
This sexual side becomes in a sense
dehumanized.
Most addicts develop an
"alien ego state" (or dark side), whose core is antisocial lust
devoid of most values. Raw id, in a sense. Or the "natural man." In
time, the "high" obtained from masturbating to pornography becomes
more important than real life relationships. It has been commonly thought by
health educators that masturbation has negligible consequences, other than
reducing sexual tension. Moral objections aside, there is at least one other
exception. This would appear to be in
the area of repeatedly masturbating to deviant pornographic imagery (either as
memories in the mind or with explicit external pornographic stimuli which risks
(via conditioning) the acquiring of sexual addictions and/or other sexual
pathology. It makes no difference if one is an eminent physician, attorney,
minister, athlete, corporate executive, college president, unskilled laborer,
or an average 15 year old boy or President of the U.S. All can be conditioned
into deviancy. The process of masturbatory conditioning is inexorable and does
not spontaneously remiss.
The course of this
illness may be slow and is nearly always hidden from view. It is usually a
secret part of the man's life, and like a cancer, it keeps growing and
spreading. It rarely ever reverses itself, and is also very difficult to treat
and heal. Denial on the part of the male addict and refusal to confront the
problem are typical and predictable, and this almost always leads to marital or
couple disharmony, sometimes divorce, and sometimes the breaking up of other
valued relationships.
One researcher, Stanley
Rachman, demonstrated in the laboratory how sexual deviations could be created
in adult male subjects. He was actually able to condition, in two separate
experiments, 100% of his male subjects into a sexual deviancy (fetishism). .
There are many
approaches to treatment which usually involve individual work with a
psychotherapist who has skills in successfully treating this kind of illness
plus being in a 12 step group/program such as Sexaholics Anonymous. There are no costs being in such a group
which is patterned after the original A. A. model. It has at its core a
spiritual dimension. I have found it very helpful with this condition.
I have personally found
the following approach to yield the most successful outcomes for at least the
type of patient population which I work with: males 15-75 from mainly middle
social class backgrounds, often religious, and motivated to change (because of
the threat of divorce, loss of job, family, prison, etc.).
1. If the patient is
married I attempt to have the wife participate in treatment. She has been
traumatized repeatedly by the husband's problem, broken promises, many lies,
and she usually has a huge trust issue with him and may be debating divorce. I
see them together so that the wife knows everything that goes on in treatment
and we address her fears, depression, the kids acting-out as well as their
stressed marriage.
2. In the first
interview I have the husband outline the problem and ask him what he wants me
to do. It is important that he take some initiative in his healing. Then I turn
to the wife and ask if she has anything to add or correct or give her point of
view of what her goals for therapy are. If on the verge of divorce-determine if
she wants out or wants to stay and help or to stay long enough to see if he can
change or start healing of his addiction. I talk about the importance of the
wife being a part of the healing team. It goes faster if both are involved.
Both are wounded. Both need help. However there is one unchangeable rule: NO
SECRETS. I tell them that secrets "kill you". They take away your
power." They create shame and guilt. And even though there might be some
relapses (usually minor) during treatment these need to be talked about openly
in therapy or they are wasting their time and money if these are not disclosed
and worked with. I tell them that most people I know who are kicking the
cigarette habit, quit 15 times before they finally really quit. Anything
hidden--the spouse always sooner or later finds out about. So right to begin
with: no secrets! The lies and deceptions have to stop or he won't get well.
3. I next take a history
of the man's exposure to pornography and masturbation to it and sexual acting
out in the wife's presence. This helps her understand more clearly that in some
ways her husband was a victim too starting at an early age. I next inquire
about possible sexual abuse or early seduction of the husband as a child or adolescent,
which may have eroticized him prematurely.
In taking this history I
start with his first memory of exposure to pornography, what its form was
(internet, magazine, video, phone sex, topless bars etc.) how old he was at the
time and if he masturbated to it--and continue up to today (day of interview).
Was there "other" acting out? I tell the husband that I don't want
all of the tiny nitty-gritty details. Only the main essentials. I do this to
protect the wife from being exposed to unnecessary sordid details. These may
needlessly torment or traumatize her. But she still needs to know what he did
generally so she can decided whether to ever forgive him. This also means that
the slate is clean. There's a "level playing field." There are no more
surprises. It also means that the husband can treat his wife as a confidant on
any matter in this area. She already knows it all. It takes a great burden off
of him. He no longer has to "hide out" and lie anymore.
4. Then I establish a
sobriety date (the date of last exposure) for all the different forms of p orn
or sexual acting out that he was involved with as well a the last time he
masturbated. At each succeeding visit I recheck these sobriety dates. If there
has been a relapse then I do relapse prevention work with him, identifying
triggers that set him off, and seek ways to circumvent these. And also fortify
him against the "wave" (of temptation).
5. I next explain to the
wife that her husband has lost his free agency. And that' s why promises don't
work. At this point he shouldn't make promises that he can't keep. Good
intentions mean nothing. Her husband may intend well and really want to quit
because of the terrible painful consequences but he literally cannot do this by
himself yet. He has to have highly specialized help. Unfortunately at the present time most therapists do not know how
to treat sexual addictions. Self control and self discipline or a rational
approach generally doesn't change anything. With most people I see who are
deeply addicted prayers and scripture reading are usually not enough to solve
the problem even though I believe that God could instantly cure the problem if
He so chose. In most cases He lets the individual work it through the long way
probably because he will in the future be more likely to voluntarily choose to
not repeat this very destructive behavior--of his own accord.
6. I tell both husband
and wife about the "wave" which periodically hits the patient and
overwhelms him with temptation. This is something most men cannot resist. One
of the goals of therapy is to prepare the man to face and defeat the wave.
These waves vary in intensity and frequency from several times a day to once a
year or even less. Between the waves--the man feels at peace and has the
mistaken notion that he has his power and can resist anything. But this is an
illusion and is only temporary until the next wave hits him. I explain to the couple that as a therapist
I'm like a guide to Mount Everest. I can show them how to get there but they
have to walk every step of the way. They have to do all the work. I assure them
there is a good possibility that they can heal. But like an alcoholic when
sober, in the future they have to be careful not to expose themselves to high
risk situations. I also explain that they are not mentally ill in the classical
sense but that have an addiction which powerfully controls their life--somewhat
like being on crack cocaine. And the journey to freedom will not be easy. It
will require an enormous commitment on their part to become whole again.
7. I assign both to read
Patrick Games book, "Out of the Shadows" (Compcare Publications) and
Stephen Kramer's "Worth of a Soul." (Randall Book Publ.) Then later:
Carnes’ newer book: "Don't call it love."
8. I assign the husband to
start attending S.A. (Sexaholics Anonymous) which is a 12 step program,
spiritually based. In these groups we petition the help of a Higher Power, or
God, or Jesus Christ to bless us and cleanse us of our addiction. There are
chapters in nearly every city in America. They are free. To find where and when
one meets call Alcoholics Anonymous (in all the phone books). They will know.
Your client may start with a newcomers group first, then graduate to the
step-study group after a few months. For wives that have been badly traumatized
by their husband's behavior they may wish to attend S-Anon (for the spouses of
offenders) or even later occasionally join with their husbands at their S.A.
meetings if allowed. They (the husbands) need to attend 90% of their weekly
meetings for this to work and be truly healing. If the individual is relapsing
at high rates they may need to attend up to three or four nights a week in
order to achieve sobriety and break the stranglehold of their addiction. Thus
the client regularly attends a no cost S.A. program. And he also has a private
therapist who works with both he and his wife. The therapist will tailor
treatment to the unique aspects of his addiction, hold him responsible for
doing the things that he can still do with his free will, assist the wife with
her doubts and concerns as well as anxiety and trauma which she has been
dealing with. And the therapist will also answer many questions, do relapse
prevention work, "fire drills", and do those many things which the
group cannot do for him.
9. At these S.A.
meetings they need, in time, to locate a "sponsor" which is someone
who has been sober (no relapses) for a lengthy period of time who they can call
(phone) in an emergency which are those occasions when the wave hits them and
they are strongly tempted to act out. Their sponsor can help them stay
sober--he's like a life guard.
10. Because the
compulsion to act out is so overpowering you give them a mental set to just
stay sober one day at a time. Think only of making it today. If you focus on a
longer time period you may be setting yourself up for failure. Just get through
today.
11. Through close
interviewing identify triggers which activate the wave (e.g. looking at porn,
seeing girls in skimpy clothes, after a fight with their spouse or the spouse
being out of town, driving by an adult bookstore, walking into any video store,
viewing hard-R or X films, looking at ladies bra and panty ads ) and then plan
strategies to avoid these or deal with them. Example: if going on a business
trip and being in a hotel with access to porn movies, when checking in the
hotel request the front desk to block out those channels. Call their wives at
9:00 P.M. each evening when away.
12. Thought-stopping:
When your client is stimulated or aroused by sexual fantasy which can lead to
masturbation and the acting out cycle tell them that they have only three
seconds to block or stop the thought or imagery. At the top of their voice they
should yell STOP (or scream it silently if thers are nearby) and visualize a
policeman with handcuffs approaching--holding a big sign with the words STOP on
it. This will kick the offending imagery off the mind screen briefly. But then
they have to bring to mind an event in their life that has very powerful
emotional significance (either positive or negative) which they ruminate about.
In other words they fight fire with fire, a strong sexual fantasy with an
equally powerful contrasting kind-- such as they time they helped their team
win the game, a surprise birthday party, or even the death of a very close
friend.. But it must be something powerful emotionally.
13. Practice"fire
drills." Present to them imaginary situations which they might have to
face in real life which would expose them to temptation. How would they handle
it? Process their responses in great detail so if something like this should
happen they would be mentally prepared to deal with it. Example: a friend at
work wants to show them his latest porn. How would they handle it? The wife, of
course, is listening to all of this and participating as she chooses.
14. No more
masturbation. Stop masturbating. That risks further conditioning into deviancy.
Recognize that this may be difficult and not even possible immediately. But
have them keep a record of those days where this occurs and strive for reducing
its frequency but especially--if they do it--refrain from fantasizing deviant
imagery. In contrast have them imagine loving their spouse at this time. Check
their calendar at each session. See if they can slow it down with the ultimate
goal of being free of this behavior. Our experience is that this is not an
impossible goal. Many addicts do quit.
15. Do marriage
counseling. Do those things that will help improve their marital
relationship. Give them assignments to
have fun together, improve intimacy, take marriage seminars, participate in
sports of their choice together, be friends, etc.
16. Do stress reduction
therapy. If they have financial problems work out solutions or refer them to
agencies that can help here. If they have out-of-control children give them
support in dealing with this. Or if the wife suffers greatly put her in a
non-S.A. 12 step program--just to provide her with a support group and place
where she can be nurtured.
17. When relapses occur
don't "beat them up" but point out the positives, what can be learned
that will protect them in the future, that this is just part of a growth
experience. Give them hope. Point out all the progress made in other areas and
all the good things done.
18. Have them keep a
daily journal recording fantasies and behaviors. Then review and process these
during therapy.
19. Give them further
books to read such as Patrick Carnes later books like "Contrary to
Love" and the more recent, "Don't Call It Love". Also the S.A.
Big Books (with lots of case histories and biographies of recovering addicts
stories).
20. Other techniques
used include: apology sessions, medications like depoprovera to temporarily
reduce the sex drive including eliminating sex fantasies, autobiography, covert
sensitization, family of origin work, developing a sobriety contract, healthy
sexuality education, social skills work, etc.
You may have to work with wounds from childhood where they may struggle
with shame, feelings of worthlessness, have needs to punish themselves, where
their self image is distorted and negative, or where they were emotionally
abandoned and unloved by their parents or caretakers. They need to be given
hope. They need to know that their counselor respects and cares about them as
human beings.
21. And lastly--if an
inappropriate image or tempting thought appears on your client's mind screen
have them close their eyes and say, "Thank you God!. I appreciate your
reminding me of my weakness. This will help me get well! !" Give them
support in their spiritual life. Encourage their reconciliation and
relationship with Deity.
Remember to tailor your
therapy to the special needs of the couple. You will never use all of these
techniques. Chose only those that best fit your client's special needs. A
skilled therapist familiar with treating sex addictions plus involvement with
S.A. are both needed to bring about change and healing. This is one illness
where you cannot get well on your own unless God grants you a miracle.
FOOTNOTES:
Carnes, Patrick, Don't
Call it Love: Recovery From Sexual Addictions. New York: Bantam Books, 1991.
Evans, D. R.
"Masturbatory Fantasy 6t Sexual Deviation." Behavioral Research &
Therapy, 1968, 6, p. 17.
McGuire, R. J. et al,
"Sexual Deviation as Conditioned Behavior", Behavior Research &
Therapy, 1965 2, p 185.
Rachman, S. "Experimentally induced sexual fetishism", The Psychological Record, 1968, 18, p. 25.