Path: Home > Heartbeats Main Page > Heartbeats, March, 2001
 

                             

 

 

 
The Official Newsletter of  Heart t’ Heart-- 
A Twelve Step Support Group for the LDS Community
 
March 2001                                           Volume 10 — Issue 3
 
Special Focus Article: Sexual Addiction
 
MY STORY OF RECOVERY
 
The most important thing I have learned about my addiction is that I resorted to it for a reason. Something was lacking in my life, and I thought that sex was the solution. It wasn’t. What was really missing in my life was Jesus. I needed Him. I missed Him and was lonely for Him. When I started letting Him into my life, my real needs started to be satisfied, and I found the "need" for my drug start to dwindle away.

Sexual addiction is a difficult topic to write about. By its very nature, it fills one with shame and isolation. The individual suffering from this addiction tends to isolate himself/herself, and secrecy is universal. My sexual addiction began with puberty, and continued unchecked (interrupted by short-lived attempts at repentance) for the next 35 years. I was the youngest child in our family, and as a teenager I was left home alone a lot. I suffered from poor self- esteem, and learned to comfort myself with masturbation. Pornography added an interesting dimension, although it wasn’t really that available back then. I repented enough to go on a mission, and got married soon after I returned home.

My adjustment to sex in marriage was difficult, made more so by my developing addiction. Soon after I was married, I began to seek out more pornography. Over the next few decades I struggled frequently to give up the habit. I talked with my bishops and stake presidents and "cleared things up" from time to time, but I always reverted back to my addiction. For a long time I used pornography without masturbating, and comforted myself with the rationalization that I wasn’t as bad as some other people. But eventually that barrier fell as well.

On several occasions I went to the Lord and asked Him to relieve me of this addiction–to take it away, so I just didn’t even have the desire anymore. I read the account of King Benjamin’s people in Mosiah 5:2 whose hearts were changed, and who had "no more desire to commit sin." I longed for that blessing in my life, but doubted it would ever come. On those occasions when I asked to have the desire removed, I found it was removed for a time, but I always invited it back, and it was happy to oblige me.

About three years ago I found Heart t’ Heart. I had gotten so discouraged with my failed attempts at repentance that I was becoming reconciled to the prospect of having this addiction control me for the rest of my life. I assumed that must be what the Lord had in mind for me, since He hadn’t healed me. I knew there was an organization called Sexaholics Anonymous, but I had never had the courage to go. Heart t’ Heart sounded a little more friendly.

The experiences I had as I first started attending meetings were something I look back on as nothing short of monumental, life-changing. One of the most significant changes that happened in me was my understanding of God and Jesus. I had pictured them as loving people, but they surely must have been disappointed in me, even disgusted with me. I had to come to realize that all of those judging, blaming thoughts I had had over the years were coming from my own mind, and from the taunts of the adversary, not, as I had earlier supposed, as the promptings of the Spirit. I learned that the Lord is forgiving, and that He doesn’t ever turn away from us. It is we who turn away from Him.

I started writing in my journal again, and trying to hear the Lord’s inspiration to me. I had had some experiences years before with receiving promptings from the Lord that I had written down and had regarded as inspired. But I assumed that gift had been taken away from me years before because of my mistakes and sins. When I started writing again, I found that the Lord was just waiting for me, and was happy to communicate with me once more.

As I learned the 12 Steps, I had to learn humility as well. I came into the program admitting that I had a problem, and even that it was unmanageable, but I still thought that "just a little bit of help" would do it, and I would be on my way again. But recovery didn’t come that easily. I had to learn about the "depths of humility," not just skim along the surface. After a few relapses I had to admit that I needed the full dose.

The Third Step was a real turning point. When I came to the decision that I would turn over "my whole life" to the Savior, and not just try to give Him my addiction, I found that things began to change. I learned the phrase "be willing to be willing." I found that at times when I was invited by the Spirit to let go of some cherished form of acting out that I really wanted to keep, that I could agree at least to letting the Lord change my desires, and bring me around to the point where I became willing to give up whatever it was. To take the next step. The Spirit reasoned with me: "If the Lord can make you so you don’t mind giving it up, then you wouldn’t mind, would you?" That was pretty hard to argue with. And so act by act, trigger by trigger, one by one, things started to fall out of my life. With the Lord’s grace, I was able to stop renting R-rated videos (and worse). Then I sorted through my own videos and got rid of the R-rated ones. Then the PG-13 ones that had nudity in them. And so on. I found that if I was willing, He would take it from me. And if I kept in contact with Him, on a daily basis, the compulsion stayed gone. I began spending time each morning reading from the scriptures and capturing from a few pertinent verses. I found that the scriptures were easily adaptable to my own situation, and it was easy to see myself in them, and to apply the counsel in them to the task of overcoming my own addiction.

But I also found that I had to keep going back to the Lord for help, sometimes on a minute-by-minute basis. I started reading the SA literature, and found a lot of inspiration there. I read about men who learned to surrender each temptation to the Lord, with the prayer: "Lord, I can’t handle this. I am powerless over this temptation. Please take it from me." I read in D&C 36:6 that the Lord invites me to "look unto [him] in every thought," even my unclean ones. And as I surrendered the thoughts I had trained myself to indulge in over the years, gradually, they left.

As I eliminated the triggering materials from my life that were under my control (in my possession), Satan turned to my memories, to remind me of my past sins, and the many images and other materials I had let into my mind. I thought at first that I would never get these things out of my mind, but as I surrendered each memory to the Lord, I found that it lost power to tempt me. I learned that lust was the habit that had to be surrendered and let go of, not just the more obvious forms of acting out.

Today I have a pretty good recovery, thanks to the goodness and grace of my Savior. I know that what I have is a gift from Him. I tried to do it on my own for 35 years, and failed miserably. He has done for me what I could not do for myself. And that is what grace is. I still have temptations, but they are ‘way up the slope from where they used to be. The internet doesn’t tempt me anymore like it used to. Things I can’t avoid are more of a problem. 

A magazine cover at the grocery store may give me occasion to turn to the Lord again, in the moment, and say: "Lord please take away from me this impulse to look and to lust. And please bless the girl who posed for that picture, that she will find happiness and security and real love in her life." I may have to turn to the Lord several times a day, sometimes several times an hour, to keep the freedom from my addiction, but it is worth it. I think of my addiction as a huge pit with sloping sides, and there are dozens of doorways all around it that lead to it. And if I shut each of those doors as I come to them, by giving them up to the Lord, He keeps me safe.
 
 
Newsletter Focus Topics
 

Although our focus in Heart t’ Heart is always first and foremost on Jesus Christ, this year we are focusing each issue of Heartbeats on the various addictions and compulsions from which some of us suffer. That which any of us suffer, makes us all suffer, if we are one in heart (Zion). Each month we will consider one addiction, and we invite anyone who would like to submit their thoughts on recovery from that particular addiction to please send them to the Heartbeats editor. If your particular concern is not listed, please send us your thoughts on that addiction as well.

We will also feature a tool and step each month. Please send thoughts on these topics at least one month in advance.  Following is a tentative schedule for the rest of the year:

 
Month Step Addiction    Tool
April 4 food    literature
May 5 work music
June 6 overspending/debt meetings
July 7 recovery from childhood abuse prayer
August 8 codependency/ perfectionism meditation
September 9 smoking service
October 10 anger abstinence
November 11 caffeine telephone
December 12 gambling writing
 
 
Special Focus Article: Sexual Addiction
 

WHAT I AM LEARNING ABOUT ME
AND ABOUT LOVE AND ABOUT CHRIST
AS I RECOVER FROM SEXUAL ADDICTION

 
To my young friend,

Out of your pain, your frustration, your anger, your despair, your tiny, fragile desire, you have asked if change is possible. You have asked for support.  Not even sure that any is available, resenting it even ask you request it. You have asked for light.  From the darkness of your struggle, from the loneliness of your spiritual isolation, through the clouds of disbelief. You have wondered:  Can I be trustworthy ever again?  Can I be a covenant keeper?  Does God care about me?  Why has my path been strewn with failed dreams, disappointing responses from those who should have led and loved me, hurt and pain and hopelessness?

My answers may not satisfy you.  I acknowledge my weakness, my failings, my absolute powerlessness over the chains of hell that have entrapped me, the utter impossibility for me to arise on my own against the onslaught of the evil one, who desires that all men should be miserable like unto him.

Nevertheless, I bear testimony that God is real, God is good, help is available, things can be different, change is possible, prayers will be answered, habits can be overcome, Satan can be cast out (even by one without the Holy Priesthood), hope can be felt, peace in small but growing measure can be experienced, and you do not have to remain a victim.  In fact, as long as you define yourself as a victim, you will never get better.

I wish there were a simple formula, a recipe for succeeding where you have failed. There is not. Repentance (literally turning from something destructive toward something life giving and life sustaining) is not easy. It is possible. It is not simple.  It is straightforward.  It is not beyond our reach.  Satan would tell you that you have gone too far, for too long, in too many circumstances.  He lies.  He always lies.  He has a hundred, a thousand lies. 

I have heard the ones that play on my vulnerabilities.  He has lied to me for years, telling me it is too late, it is not possible, that even if the atonement is real, it can’t apply to me because I am defective, that I will never be good enough to merit the love and approval and approbation of a loving, eternal Father.  Satan lies.  I am loved.  I always have been.  And so are you. 

You may argue for your worthlessness.  I did.  You may "make a case" for why you are too bad, and the gospel of repentance cannot apply to you.  I did.  You may even try, from time to time, to have a foot in both camps, be "righteous" whenever you can, but the rest of the time, do what is necessary to numb the ever present pain, the shame, the discouragement of failing.  No matter that such numbing invariably requires you to cross the lines and boundaries the Lord has set.  Satan says that it is no one’s business but your own.  Never mind that dozens, hundreds of times you have tried, sincerely tried, to stop the habits and patterns of indulgence that seem to provide the only comfort, the only break from the anguish and agony of self-disappointment.  That described my life, too, for years, for nearly four decades of deceit and hypocrisy, deception and duplicity, double mindedness and spiritual thrashing.  There is a way out.

I used to feel that what the Lord asked of me was like an impossible task, like constructing a personal bridge from one side of the Grand Canyon, arching up and over the gaping divide to the other side.  Only I had to build it alone, with materials I carried myself, starting on one side, being self supporting.  I couldn’t do it.  I didn’t have the materials.  And I could never must the courage or faith to get farther than a few feet from the edge, because Satan told me I would surely fall, crashing in disaster, humiliation and destruction on the rocks far below.  In other words, I would build a few feet. I would pray a little, read scriptures a little, be active where and when convenient, even try with sincere purpose of heart (a little) to repent or to be honest in worthiness interviews, or at least not blatantly lie, just manipulate or shade the truth for appearance sake, because underneath the appearance was a desperate desire to actually be OK.  But three or four feet from the edge, I would begin the inevitable painful stretch, leaning out to add the next plank in the bridge, yet still keeping one foot safely and securely on the ground.  It was truly an impossible task, trying to leave the edge yet cling to the edge, to change my ways yet hang on to my ways, to the beliefs that kept me trapped. 

I wondered continually if recovery was possible, or was I really worse than all the others I met at meetings and in the many books I had read. I believed that I would never be OK; that I was alone; that the truth of my life, if thoroughly known by anyone, would cause them to fully reject me for the worthless, weak, filthy, unworthy thing I was; that no one would ever be there for me. I believed that my greatest need, the only need that ultimately mattered because it was the one that consistently and reliably gave me relief and numbed, even temporarily, the reality of my awful circumstance, was some kind of sexual indulgence, whatever it cost in time and money and secrecy and loss of esteem.. It wasn’t an option for me, it was a necessity that I had learned to live with, it was a last resort I had come to accept without question, it was the only predictable thing in my life that I, ultimately, could control. 

Do elements of this sound familiar to you?  The specific indulgences, the actual patterns of acting out, may differ somewhat.  But the repetitive, familiar cycles of determination, disappointment, white-knuckling, resisting, indulging when the wave becomes too intense, the momentary relief, the predictable remorse, self loathing, even suicidal tendencies. Then a gradually dawning awareness that life goes on, until the cycle starts again– perhaps that is all too familiar.  I have seen it over and over and over.  I have lived it.  Over and over and over.  I was in despair perpetually.

I had essentially given up.  Satan on the sidelines was cheering with his minions, "take others down with you, it doesn’t matter any more, it will never change, you are defective, it cannot work."

And then the miracle.  An explosion, emotionally, that resulted in an assault on my wife.  A visit to a caring bishop.  The operation of the Spirit.  A decision to finally, once and for all, deal with everything– the long years of deception and duplicity, the details of a lifetime of sin and pain and anguish.  Ten pages of handwritten notes, reviewed item by item, pored over by a leader guided by the Spirit.  Searching, fearless questions as the muck and mire of addiction were sifted through.  Is there anything else?  What have you left out?  More writing.  More reflection.  More recalled memories, going back to childhood experiences, temptations, wrong choices, sometimes innocent mistakes, sometimes terrible depredations.  In the end, the list was run through a shredder.  Then probation.  Then a disciplinary council.  Then excommunication.  Then separation from wife and family.  Then the wilderness.

What is a year in the wilderness like?  Horrible.  I thought I would surely die.  I could not see an end.  I was utterly alone, I felt.  I lived away from home.  I struggled to work and to go, somehow, from day to day, living a solitary life.  Some elements of the experience remain.  But the truth is that after all I had done, all my acting out, all my sin and tears and the hurt in the lives of wife and children and friends, after the arrests and the disappointment and the emotional and professional and financial costs, God was still there.

Revelations came, here and there.  "I never left you. I was always there with you. I could not let you succeed because you would have learned a lie, that you could do it alone, on your own, using your skill and brain and determination, and that is a lie. No one can do it alone.  But I have paid the price for you, and if you will, finally, come to Me, I will heal you."  "Liken the scriptures to yourself today, now, in your wilderness– I will teach you."  "Stop blaming others, your parents, your wife, your employer, your brothers and sisters, your deceased father, Me. Not until you take responsibility will you be able to change.  I can give you a new heart.  Submit.  Stop trying to do it yourself.  Set your pride aside and come to me."  The words and the feelings were real.  And they were enough, just barely, to keep me going, to keep me trying. 

The daily despair was horrible.  The daily assaults experienced as buffetings of Satan, as the protecting, comforting gifts of the Holy Ghost were gone, the blessings and privileges of the priesthood were gone, the opportunities of church membership were gone, the companionship and association of family was largely gone.  I wondered if, indeed, I would be destroyed in the flesh.  It was awful.  For a time, I considered, with resentment and vindictiveness, the possibility of joining another church, since the LDS church "didn’t want me." Flashbacks still occur, and they are still horrible.  But gradually, as I read and attended Heart t’ Heart and other fellowship and 12 step meetings with a new perspective and a humbler attitude, I begin to feel stirrings of hope. The patterns of indulgence lessened. I sought therapy from a wise, caring therapist.  I read and re-read the Book of Mormon, learning to liken the scriptures to me.  Every verse, nearly, came alive with meaning for me, for now, for right now. I was often in tears as the temporary effect of the Spirit cleansed me and gave me hope in Christ. I read other literature. I read about the addiction. I learned about my family patterns, inter-generational patterns, which had predisposed me to be susceptible to this terribly destructive pattern. I learned why patterns of sexual indulgence were self-inflicted bonds that Satan gladly helped with. I corresponded with others on an LDS chat line for recovering addicts.

I studied He Did Deliver Me, trying to listen to what the Spirit would teach me about each step of repentance, each step of transformation, each step broken down into manageable bites that I could take and that others would assist me with. I shared with others who did not judge. I had the chance to bear testimony in those settings since I could no longer bear testimony at church. I cannot honestly say there was a day when despair turned to hope, when hopelessness turned to desire fueled by belief. I do not know the hour nor the setting when the tide began to turn. I know of my impatience (still) and my wanting to know what was going to happen next, when the next event or next confession or next revelation might be.  But something happened; something has changed.  Perhaps it was many small victories, many small steps forward, gradually untangling the chains, gradually unwrapping the threads one by one. I do recall the stark awareness, when I decided once to give it one last try, to step out onto that bridge partially sticking out from the side of the canyon, and discovering as I took that literal, spiritual leap of faith, much to my amazement, that I did not fall, that I did not crash, that the whole metaphor, the whole ethereal construction was an illusion. 

Satan had lied to me, and kept me so terrified that I could not let loose of the edge, representing my lifestyle of sexual acting out.  What a revelation!  It was actually exhilarating.  If Satan had lied about this, what about other things he had whispered to me?  I gradually came to know that I had lost the capacity to tell truth from error.  I could no longer tell what were my ideas and ideas placed cleverly in my mind by Satan.  Very scary realization.  I read books by Cramer, learning how to battle Satan, learning that the battle is real, and that my soul was at stake.  I learned that I would eventually be sealed to someone, either God or the devil.  After a number of wonderful, encouraging priesthood blessings, and many months, I finally was instructed that Satan would keep coming back until I cast him out, and that even without the priesthood, I could cast out Satan, in the name of Jesus Christ, who had died for me.  I read an exhaustive new book on the infinite atonement.  I read Don’t Call it Love.  Then I set aside all books for nearly a year, just concentrating on the scriptures.  I made a commitment to arise at 5:00 am daily, and study His word.  Early mornings were a battle, but I can testify that after a year of early rising, missing only a few days, that I have been richly rewarded, sometimes immediately but usually later, in blessings and sustaining I felt when times were especially difficult.

Where am I today?  Still fighting the fight.  But feeling much hope.  Feeling much desire.  Wanting to go forward.  Another disciplinary council, to consider rebaptism, is awaiting.  Later, there may be a possibility of having blessings restored, even the sealing of a wife and children in an eternal family unit.  I visit regularly with church leaders.  I participate with my own family in prayer and daily life, trying to serve, to learn and to grow.  I still see a therapist periodically.  I sleep separately from my wife.  Neither of us knows what kind of relationship may be possible, through the healing power of Christ.  We hope that reconciliation is possible, for our sake and our children’s sake.  None of this is easy.  But days are filled with hope now. 

I feel more worthy, even though I am not qualified to be a member of the church, than I remember feeling since I was ordained a deacon.  I am calmer and more full of faith when on my knees.  Daily my heart is broken as I go to the only source we can ultimately trust, the Lord Jesus Christ.  I know the atonement applies to me.  I did not believe that for many, many years.  I believe it now. Change is possible.  Transformation is possible.  God loves you and me and wants us home, and His arm is stretched out all the day long.  When we despair, we are putting faith in Satan.  It can be different.  It requires a kind of submission that I never knew before.  It requires constant effort, and then the results come through our beloved Savior, not our own efforts.  Who needs the atonement?  All have sinned and come short of the glory of God.  One day at a time, I know recovery is possible.  It is the path I am on.                                                           ! ! !

 
 
STEP STUDY–Step Three
 
A week or so ago I was driving down old highway 89 coming from my son’s house in Springville. I was headed back to Provo when I passed a sign in front of a car restoration garage. The sign said "Life is tough. It is even tougher when you are stupid." I thought that this sure related to me, and then I wondered how he knew that I would be driving by.

I thought about how every time that I was stupid my life got harder. I thought about it for a few minutes and wondered what it was that made me stupid. "Ah," I thought, "It is when I don’t let Christ into my life." After a few more minutes I thought that the saying really should say "Life is tough, but it is much easier when you do let Christ into your life." This is really just another example of Step 3, turning your life over to Christ.                              ! ! !                  CJS

 
 
Upcoming Events
 
(Send notification of events pertinent to Heart t’ Heart to the Heartbeats editor– address below.)

Mar 27 Utah Valley Intergroup Business Meeting (held 4th Tues of every month after Tues group)

Apr 21 General Service Board

August 17-18 Annual Heart t’ Heart Conference!

 
 
From the Toolbox
 
"There was nothing left for us but to pick up the simple kit of spiritual tools laid at our feet." (AA Big Book, p. 25)

Anonymity

The tool of anonymity is also part of Traditions 11 and 12. Like the principles contained in all the traditions, anonymity is closely tied with unity. Breaking anonymity damages the spirit of love and fellowship that we treasure in Heart t’ Heart when that break places the importance of one person above another.

Anonymity is a way of emphasizing our similarities, that is our common weakness, rather than our differences. Our recovery is tied together. When one person does not feel safe, is worrying about what others will think or say, then the meeting is not a safe place for any of us. When we honor the anonymity of others, we do not cross talk. I can then share honestly about my own life without worrying about your response to my sharing, and vice versa. As "needy" compulsive people, we may be tempted to try to be impressive, to inspire others, to fix them, or to top their stories. All of these behaviors break anonymity.

The unconditional love found in Heart t’ Heart teaches us that everybody is allowed to be human, that we all need freedom to speak our truth, no matter if anyone else agrees or not. In this way we can share with real honesty. I can tell you what’s really going on with me and you can tell me what’s really going on with you. We don’t reject each other because our outside lives are separate from the group. Even our last names are not used. Instead, we talk about the tools and the steps, the principles of the program, and how they have healed our lives. In this way we show love for others by not trying to "show others up." Leading with our weaknesses and giving full credit for recovery to whom it belongs, our Savior Jesus Christ, makes a meeting safe. It is practicing the tool of anonymity.                                                                              ! ! !

 
 
Program from the Prophets
 
"Sometimes we say that no other success can compensate for our failures in the home. And while it is true that no other success of ours can fully compensate, there is a success that compensates for all our failures, after all we can do in good faith. That success is the Atonement of Jesus Christ. By its power, we may arise from the ashes of life filled with incomprehensible beauty and joy."

(Elder Bruce C. Hafen, The Broken Heart: Applying the Atonement to Life’s Experiences [1989], 22, quoted in "Breaking the Chains of Pornography" February 2001 Ensign , 57)

 
No matter what your past has been– you have a spotless future."     --President Hugh B. Brown
 
 
Notices
 
Notice: Due to increased costs of production, the Heartbeats newsletter price will be increased to $10 per year, effective April 1st. If you are currently receiving a complimentary copy of this newsletter, please consider paying for your subscription. Remember that all money received by Heart t’ Heart goes back into the work of recovery from compulsive/addictive behaviors.

! ! !

The opinions expressed in this newsletter are those of the individuals who expressed them and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Heart t’ Heart as a whole.

! ! !

 

© 1999-2001 Heart t' Heart. All rights reserved. General Terms and Conditions.