Please contact
Oxbow Academy at
(435) 436-9460
or email us
Gregg Lott, LCSW
Admissions Director
Educational Consultants
please call Steve
at 801-380-8820
Please contact
Oxbow Academy at
(435) 436-9460
or email us
Gregg Lott, LCSW
Admissions Director
Educational Consultants
please call Steve
at 801-380-8820
Adapted from The National Council on Sexual Addiction and Compulsivity
Sexual addiction is a persistent and escalating pattern or patterns of sexual behaviors acted out despite increasingly negative consequences to self or others.
Some out of control repetitive behaviors, which may reflect sexual addiction include:
Here are some consequences, which may result from sexual addiction and indicate the existence of sexual addiction:
Social
Addicts become lost in sexual preoccupation, which results in emotional distance from loved ones. Loss of friendship and family relationships may result.
Emotional
Anxiety or extreme stress are common in sex addicts who live with constant fear of discovery. Shame and guilt increase, as the addict's lifestyle is often inconsistent with the personal values, beliefs and spirituality. Boredom, pronounced fatigue, despair are inevitable as addiction progresses. The ultimate consequence may be suicide.
Physical
Some of the diseases which may occur due to sexual addiction are genital injury, cervical cancer, HIV/AIDS, herpes, genital warts and other sexually transmitted diseases. Sex addicts may place themselves in situations of potential harm, resulting in serious physical wounding or even death.
Legal
Many types of sexual addiction result in violation of the law, such as sexual harassment, obscene phone calls, exhibitionism, voyeurism, prostitution, rape, incest and child molestation, and other illegal activities. Loss of professional status and professional licensure may result from sexual addiction.
Financial/Occupational
Indebtedness may arise directly from the cost of prostitutes, cyber-sex, phone sex and multiple affairs. Indirectly indebtedness can occur from legal fees, the cost of divorce or separation, decrease productivity or job loss.
Spiritual
Loneliness, resentment, self-pity, self blame.
These consequences are progressive and predictable. The addict tends to minimize the consequences and tends to blame others for them. Family and friends minimize consequences by believing the addict's promise that the behavior will change. When blaming and minimizing stops, recovery begins. The consequences can become the instruments for change if they can be truly recognized and accepted instead of denied.
How sexual addiction resembles other addictions.
The treatment focus is the same involving counseling. Twelve Step spiritual recovery programs and medical intervention.
Is recovery possible?
Yes. Thousands of recovering addicts know that recovery is a process that works when these principles are followed.
Is recovery possible for families and friends?
Yes. Certainly. [Recovery for family and friends is possible when they follow these principles:]
"When I first came into the program I was angry that I had to be here for my inappropriate behaviors. I didn't care about all of the people that I hurt from my actions. Then about two months into the program, I started to realize how much I took my family for granted and I wish I wouldn't have ever hurt my family in the many ways that I did."
- Oxbow Academy Student