Archive for the “Advice for partners” Category

Specific advice, support and answers for anyone affected by their partner’s porn addiction

Soon after they married, K began to discover the true extent of her husband’s porn habit. She explains how his obsessional behaviour makes her feel:

I’m 32, just got married 3 months ago, we love each other.  Before we got married, my husband told me that he like to open porn website and I accepted him and I thought that it’s normal for a guy.  After we married, I found a lot of his porn download video collection in his computer.  When I asked him, he said that video could make more intimacy between us.  Once again, I accepted his reason.

I love my husband, he is faithful and never cheating, I trust him. What make me pity of him, his sleeptime is changed now, he’s easy to get tired because he spent a lot of time in front of his computer by watching or downloading porn video or some politic news. He awoke in very early morning and again he downloaded porn video.  It made me unhappy that when we watched tv show together, he seem that he was concerned about his download porn video, made him not concentrate for our tv show, he was back to his computer.

After we hang out together, he always said ‘Can we go home now?’ and after that he’s back to his computer and enjoying his porn video.  I feel like that I’m his #2 and porn video his #1.  I never doubt that my husband never cheated to somebody, he is lovely husband. I don’t want to change him but I do want him to change his addiction.  Can you give me advice?  thank you

When a new boyfriend or husband is initially open about their fondness for pornography, it’s easy to accept that this is just something that guys do. And that’s certainly true - many men and couples do look at porn, without damaging their relationships or intimacy. Unfortunately, his interest in porn might already be out of control.

Your husband may have been compulsively collecting porn for a long time. When he tried to justify his habit by talking about the benefits to your relationship, he may have been trying to convince himself too. Addicts continually try to explain and justify their habits in their own minds. When a relationship or marriage comes along, they might try to sell the delusion to their partners.

At first, their justifications can be very convincing; he might feel desperate to somehow balance the new married lifestyle with his solitary behaviours of the past. As you have found, this becomes an impossible situation and the partner becomes a casualty of the bizarre conflict.

Addicts do find themselves living in a state of almost constant tiredness. As well as the late night porn surfing sessions, their energies are drained by the permanent state of anticipation for getting back to the computer. As you have found, guys can be at work, watching TV, playing sport or even out socialising - as long as there is porn downloading at home, they are distracted by the buzz of anticipation.

In recovery, guys are usually staggered at how much mental energy they wasted on the empty pursuit of pornography. It’s embarrassing for them. The fact that they could have continued living in the addiction bubble whilst their relationships and careers fell around them is ultimately a very scary one.

As you say, this painful situation is different to traditional ‘cheating’ because he is still around the house. Partners of porn addicts experience the emotional neglect, disappointment and sometimes the self-blame of a cheating husband, but retain the small security of knowing there is nobody else involved. Either way, you are entitled to a better relationship and lifestyle with your husband than this.

The first step in addressing this problem is to honestly tell him exactly how his behaviour makes you feel. Explain that you feel like you come second to porn in his life, and this is definitely not the relationship you chose. He really needs to understand this.

If he responds with the ‘intimacy benefits’ argument or tries to discount the problem with ‘but all guys are the same’, simply refuse to play the justification game. Explain that this is a very real problem in living with the man that you love.

If he acknowledges the problem, this is definite progress. If you are both able to openly discuss your feelings, you will be able to explore possible reasons for his habit. It may be an old coping or escape mechanism that really is not needed any more, but has become too ingrained to recognise and let go.

Ideally, he will take responsibility for this problem and agree to take some positive steps in facing up to it. It may be useful for him to make a counselling appointment, or research the many helpful resources available online.

Recovery is often a step-by-step process, and there can be frustration and some painful realities along the way. It certainly is achievable though, and loving relationships can be rebuilt. Thank you for sharing your story with such openness, and I wish you every success in taking these important steps now.

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FF describes her struggle with a porn addicted husband, and the painful dilemma that she faces:

My husband is addicted to pornography and our relationship is breaking down. We’ve been locked in the “emotional games” cycle for so long with him denying and being defiant and me becoming more and more controlling.

Our marriage is no longer a marriage — it’s been taken over by this sick cycle. I love him very much and I want to be able to repair our relationship, but I think we’re on the verge of a divorce. He blames me a lot for all our problems and has told me he’s very angry at women in general because of his issues with his mother.

How do I tap into this clinical detachment you keep mentioning? It’s so difficult to let go when I feel like I’m losing my husband to this horrible addiction. I want to hold on tighter, but it’s making him pull away.

Thank you FF for sharing your situation. It’s a sad fact that many partners will recognise the heart-wrenching set of circumstances that you describe.

As instinctive and natural as it is, your controlling reaction is pandering to his addiction-warped vision of your relationship. As you suggest, he is leading you into ongoing games of persecutor and victim. By desperately clinging to the victim role, he tries to justify his habit and build further resentment towards you and your relationship. It’s a cruel, blaming game called ‘Just try and stop me’.

I’ve recently blogged about the ‘clinical detachment’ approach for partners. It is a short-term strategy for breaking up these games, and I certainly hope that you could find it helpful.

However, it would appear that there are other issues driving your husband’s attitudes and compulsive behaviour. I encourage partners to offer support in facing porn addiction problems, but his historical issues concerning his mother require help that you cannot, and shouldn’t be expected to, try to resolve. He may well be using porn to indulge deep-rooted feelings of misogyny, and this should be addressed in professional therapy.

It pains me to say it, but until he accepts and gets help for these issues, little progress can be made. Unless something triggers a significant shift in his outlook, you are just going to continue receiving the same.

I wish you the very best, even if it means moving on from this impossible relationship.

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stethoscope

What’s the best way to approach the husband or boyfriend who introduced porn addiction into your relationship, and turned things into a horrible mess?

‘Clinical detachment’ is an essential skill for people working in the medical or therapy professions, and it’s certainly useful for partners of porn addicts too.

Wives and girlfriends experience a barrage of emotions and hurt. There’s intense anger, fear, disgust, feelings of betrayal and neglect. A partner’s destructive porn addiction can explode relationships, or gradually erode intimacy and trust over a course of years.

So how can wives and girlfriends even begin to address the problem?

Let’s take our cue from the professionals who assist with tough personal issues every day. They demonstrate some valuable tips for taking a position of clinical objectivity, and really finding a way to move forward.

Here are four useful parallels with the therapist/client relationship:

1 - Don’t pass judgement on the client

In any working or personal relationship, we all have our own values and opinions about the behaviour of others. It’s our natural instinct. But therapists keep their emotional reactions in check. This is an essential part of the relationship, and progress can’t really be made without it.

It’s not about being cold or emotionally neutral though. In a counselling relationship, therapists are now encouraged to interact, and explain how they feel and interpret what the client is saying. The aloof, robotic analyst who only looks up from his notes to say ‘ok… carry on’ or ‘and how was your relationship with your mother..?’ is hopefully a thing of the past.

Therapists don’t accuse or explode. It’s tempting at times, believe me, but reprimanding the client has little effect in the long-term. Therapists keep in mind that destructive behaviours develop for a reason, and their objective is helping the client to discover that reason.

Of course, this is more than a challenge for the angry or desperate partner. So you’ve exploded and berated him. Now if the relationship is worth saving, it’s time to pull together and explore, rather than go to war.

2 - Give permission

A client needs to talk. The answers might be staring them in the face, but something stops them from changing their ways. They might crave assurance and support in facing up to hard realities, having put up so many barriers of denial. They are trapped in a self-made cycle of compulsive routines and delusions.

We don’t make excuses for the client. They need to become fully accountable for their behaviour. A client needs ‘permission’ to face reality and move forward, and the therapist grants it. But the therapist expects work and commitment in return. Along with talking and exploring, ‘homework’ is agreed and the therapist requires the client to co-operate.

Recovering partners should agree on ‘homework’ too. Words are not enough. Just like a client, your husband needs to demonstrate that he is actively on the case. If he’s talking the right talk but still neglects you for porn, you’ll see right through it just as a therapist does, and no progress can be made together.

3 - Set realistic targets

Both client and therapist need to agree on change, and a realistic, achievable way to go about it. This is a joint effort - in some cases the therapist needs to dictate the way forward, but unless the client accepts and agrees, it’s going nowhere.

Partners should aim to agree targets for change, and set clear dates for when progress is expected. Just like a therapist, partners can’t demand recovery by a set date, but should expect to see real steps forward in lifestyle, getting help and getting honest about the problem. Recovery is a long-term project.

If deadlines are missed, the relationship isn’t working. A therapist will offer to help explore why, but will withdraw support and drop the client if targets are repeatedly ignored. Partners should take the same approach, and refuse to be strung along.

4 - Don’t get into games

Honesty and openness are essential. Unfortunately, some clients lie to their therapists or try to involve them in their addicted routines. ‘Serial’ patients spend a fortune on therapy yet seem determined to ignore it. Some husbands try to placate wives with lies and continue their compulsive porn habits. In a similar way, they are wasting their own lives in relationship games, often oblivious to the misery inflicted on their wives and families.

Therapists won’t put up with games, and neither should partners. Games can take many forms, but an addict usually seeks to play the role of victim, in order to justify or explain their habit to themselves. Games force partners to take the role of persecutor or rescuer, and just like the therapist, partners should avoid being drawn in. When you spot a game, simply explain that you refuse to play.

A classic porn addiction game is the desperate tactic of ‘blame the wife’. It’s a cruel game that’s emotionally difficult to avoid getting drawn into, but partners are advised to treat it with the same clinical objectivity. Make it clear that you will not accept or play along with this offensive game.

Porn addiction realities

By staying clinically detached, the therapist maintains clear focus on the problem, and the client knows exactly where they stand. Of course, a therapist doesn’t need to hold the family together or share a bed with an addicted husband. But if you are facing this issue, adopting a similar objectivity can help you begin a recovery journey together.

Just as some clients refuse to be helped, some relationships sadly aren’t worth saving. The therapist pulls out when this is clearly apparent, and so should you. He’s on his own with the problem now. You are entitled to make your own recovery from this neglectful and demoralising situation.

But from my working experience, the majority of relationships impacted by porn addiction can be rescued. It can be a painful and frustrating process, but the long-term life benefits for both parties are immense.

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EM has been living with a porn-obsessed husband for an agonizingly long time. She kindly shares her story here:

i have been with my husband for 30 years, we have been married for 25. when we started to live together i noticed some magazines under the bathroom cabnets and i thought “o well all men have a book or two”. then the video tapes begin to come in, i didn’t mind because some of my girlfriends liked to look at them when they came over.

the more tapes that came in the house the less we had sex. my husband always had an excuse of why we were not having sex, weeks turned into months, and months turned into years. two years had passed, and i had just turned 25 years and i was not going to take it anymore. We would have very bad argument, and he would begin to make me feel bad about myself, he would tell me that no one wanted me, and i was fat, and if i wanted sex, i should go and get it.

This hurt me so bad, no one knew what i was going through because it was important for my husband to make people think we had the perfect marriage, and i would go along with him. After about two more years of this I had affair just for the sex and to feel like a woman again. I told my husband what i had done and he said he didn’t want to know about it.

now 25 years have passed and I am still living in this Hell but worse. Many nights I lay in my bed wanting to be with my husband and he would wait until I was asleep and go into the room and look at porn and masturbate, we would have sex about once of twice a year, once this year so far.

Last week I have had enough, I gather 5 large garbage bags full of DVD’s which cost around $25 to$30 dollars each. Their must have been at least $8,000 worth of DVD’s not counting the books and video tapes. i hid them in the truck of my car because I am to put them in the dumpster because my husband name is on them. I don’t know what to do, I feel like I am trapped in a sick place that I can’t get out of. Please help me.

We can only guess what drives your husband’s obsession with collecting and watching porn. Intimacy problems, self-resentment, low self-esteem… the possibilities are many. His neglectful behaviour is certainly a reaction to some ongoing pain or issue.

Whatever the reason for his compulsive habit may be, you are not the cause. It is not a reaction to your attractiveness or appeal. Yes he may well have had things too easy for far too long. By putting up with a husband’s neglect and selfishness for such a long time, partners do inadvertently help him get away with it. He feels justified, he feels like he’s winning a game. It’s an easy trap for couples to fall into, and rapidly becomes the living norm. The essential fact remains though - you are not the cause.

By his deluded logic, your affair is further justification for his habit. He gets to play the neglected victim; that’s very appealing to the addict. Just an opportunity for him to retreat further into his self-centered obsession. Removing his collection may, unfortunately, have the same effect; all part of his ridiculous routine.

We can see his desperate defence mechanisms at work; the accusations and refusal to accept the reality of how he lives. Husbands do attempt to shift blame by criticising and abusing their wives. It is one of the cruellest parts of the porn addiction ‘game’.

You also mention another common ‘game’ element; the ‘keeping up appearances’ routine. He wants his marriage to appear happy and successful to the outside world, and of course, you certainly don’t want to advertise this horrible mess either. So you find yourself dragged along with his deluded priorities, with no end in sight.

My simple advice would be to get out. You deserve more than year after year of neglect, disrespect and the torment of his games. He has abused your time, your intimacy, your money and your relationship for too long.

Now of course, the situation is rarely so straightforward. There clearly are reasons why you haven’t walked in 25 years. The second option is to set a clear, firm deadline. Tell him that you will leave him if he doesn’t wake up and seek help for his problem. Set a date for this. Make it clear that you don’t expect him to be fully recovered by this date, but he must have sought help. This must be evidenced by his actions as well as his words.

If he refuses to face the situation or responds with more games, it really is time to get out. I’m convinced that it is never too late to take this stand and, if need be, move on with your life.

Thank you EM for sharing your story, and I wish you every success.

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why husbands view gay porn

He says he isn’t gay. He says he can’t imagine getting it on with another man. So how did those gay porn or chatroom sites get into his internet history?

It’s not uncommon for wives or girlfriends to discover that their partner has been exploring the homoerotic side of the internet. And whatever your attitude towards pornography may be, it’s going to throw up some piercing questions. So what’s really going on with his little sideline?

Firstly, it’s not necessarily a signal that he’s about to disappear into the sunset with the guy next door.

Homosexuality, bisexuality, fetish… it’s natural for guys to view these realms with some curiosity, regardless of their sexual orientation. In the realms of fantasy, I don’t believe in any set boundary of ’straightness’ or ‘normality’. That’s a good thing too - the sexual imagination would be a boring place otherwise.

There is cause for concern if his online adventures suggest an escalating porn habit. When we spend too much time seeking out porn, the straight, vanilla stuff can become humdrum. When porn is relied upon to deliver a reality-numbing thrill, we find ourselves exploring the once unthinkable. For many guys, gay porn delivers. It feels intriguing and out-there.

In the case of porn addiction, the consequences for him and his partner can be troubling. Obsessive, porn-fuelled fantasy can blur with real-world expectation. He may question his sexuality. He may neglect his partner in preference for exotic online stimulation. Porn addiction has a deluding effect. He might get into regrettable situations with contact sites, webcams and the contemplation of real-life meets with male strangers. I don’t need to detail the potential risks of those encounters.

So if you’ve uncovered a partner’s penchant for gay sites, are we talking harmless, healthy curiosity or potentially damaging porn habit? From my understanding of the majority of guys who harbour some curiosity, compared to the minority who fall into the porn addiction trap, there really may not be such a cause for concern.

For partners facing this confusing discovery, the evidence in your relationship can reveal more than the evidence on the computer. What do his levels of intimacy and physical desire for you suggest? Does he seem distracted or distant? Are there indications of relationship neglect?

If the signs suggest an out-of-control relationship with porn, there are ways that couples can work together to address the problem. I don’t understate the considerable challenges that this presents, but it is an issue of addiction rather than sexuality. For worried partners, this can offer some small yet precious focus for moving forward.

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HT has submitted her story of living with a porn-addicted partner, and the ongoing despair that it has caused:

I am a 23 year old mother of two beautifully wonderful children. I have a wonderful husband of 3 years. When it all started 6 years ago we would watch porn everyday. When things got serious between us I started having issues with him looking at it. (I have self esteem and repressed anger issues of my own) it started after we moved in together and got cable. our cable bill skyrocketed he would rent movies while i was asleep next to him, buy magazines, read erotica, surf the web every chance he got (I even started talking to an ex again with him in the other room and he was too engulfed in his search - he didn’t even know i was on the phone, and i made sure i talked loud enough he could hear me).

When i got pregnant with our son i put my foot down and we split up. we remained apart for 9 months. I never thought he was really a porn addict, so after we got back together i would joke about him being an addict to friends and family. I was hurting him and didn’t know it. i thought things were OK it had been 3 years since he had looked at it or so i thought.

Two days ago it started again, I came home and found out he had not hid his “evidence” very well. So of course i blew up. got divorce papers, tried to kick him out and he would not go. he admitted that all my joking was real and that he really was a porn addict. i was devastated. I know an addict has no idea how it feels from the other side. I felt betrayed, hurt, unworthy, and unloved and unappealing. i felt like i was not good enough to look at so why should I stay. Then he reassured me that he loved me with all his heart and asked me to help him with his addiction so now here i am asking for someone to help me help him because i don’t know what to do. I have never dealt with this before. This is my cry for help because he thinks everything will be OK if we just talk about it every so often but i think it will take more then that.

Thanks HT for sharing your situation and feelings with such openness. It’s certainly not unusual for a partner’s porn habit to cause a series of unhappy rifts in a relationship, often over the course of years. All the time, he’s trying to both protect and avoid his compulsive behaviour, and his partner tries to hold things together in the face of all this conflict, neglect and hurt. This can become a horribly prolonged experience.

Your story higlights two of the factors which are so often present in this situation: blowing up and ridicule. Unfortunately, both are factors that generally serve to compound the problem rather than resolve it. Of course, this is absolutely no criticism of your reactions to your husband’s behaviour. These are a partner’s instinctive reactions to a desperate problem. Every couple who has been through this emotional rollercoaster will recognise them well.

With the devastation of discovering a husband’s secret habit, or his continuing obsession after promising to quit, it’s completely natural to hit out at him with rage and accusation. There’s logic to it too; perhaps he will begin to understand the pain that his habit has caused, and an opportunity for change will open up. Sadly, the addiction is usually too strong; his barriers of denial will come up and he’ll return to his habit for consolation. It’s the only place where he really feels in control - this is the bizarre nature of porn addiction.

Making light of the problem with friends and family is a common reaction too. For the partner, it is an attempt to find some support outside of the relationship. Let’s not forget how lonely and hopeless an addict’s partner can feel. It can also be an attempt to humiliate him into facing reality and changing his ways. Again, this inevitably has the opposite effect. He will return to the oblivion of porn, feeling even more wronged and tormented.

In essence, these reactions are all part of the horrible ‘porn addiction game’. You are forced to be persecutor and he gets to be victim, which is the favourite role of any addict. Through rows, emotional distance and solemn promises to really quit this time, couples become locked into a cycle of despair and hopelessness.

The very hopeful news comes towards the end of your account. Painful as it is for you both, his honest acceptance that he has an addiction is a positive step. By requesting your help and offering real discussion, I would suggest that there is definite potential for you both to move forward. However, you are completely correct - open dialogue between you both is essential, but there is a lot more to be done.

Lasting recovery requires genuine motivation on his part and a clear action plan over the coming weeks and months. For both of you, it is a step-by-step process of rebuilding confidence and intimacy. My recovery plan can certainly help provide these steps, along with clear options for him to understand the drives behind his compulsive behaviour. Also, there are some excellent resources recommended on this site. It’s easier said than done, but my key advice at this stage would be to recognise any sign of ‘persecutor’, and try to channel your frustration into a more supportive role. My guide also expands on the options for partners to achieve this.

I wish you both every success in rebuilding your future together.

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R explains her despair and frustration at living with a pornography addicted partner:

It is really so hard. My partner is completely addicted to porn. I really just want out of the relationship but financially it is impossible right now. So I feel totally trapped. I have tried to reason with him about his problem but he just blames me. saying that he has to feel good somehow. He also has an anger problem. It all started when I discovered his porn use early in the relationship. I was heartbroken because I felt I had given myself to him heart and soul only to discover that he prefered a computer image to me. But i forgave him as he promised to stop.

But he didn’t. the evidence was continually on the computer. He doesn’t seem to have any regard at all for the pain he has caused me. In fact he doesn’t even think it is a problem. I have lost total respect for him and just see him as weak and selfish.

I have felt compared to pornstars and have gone from feeling sexually vibrant and free to feeling unnatractive and repressed. I have well and truly had enough. I look at him and all i see is sleaze. We share a child together though which makes it so much harder.

For a long time I thought I was the problem and now I know the truth. having a relationship with a porn addict is like having a relationship with half a person. They are not mentally or emotionlly available at all. I often felt like he was sleeping with another woman because his focus was so distracted all the time but it was just the porn. it’s almost like he’s in a relationship with it. I KNOW it’s not my fault but the pain is really hard to deal with. and being angry is not fun either. I am angry because his selfishness has caused me so much pain and it’s even impossible to speak my truth because he turns it into a mind game argument twisting and turning everything. He disempowers me. any advice on dealing with these emotions would be great.

I’m sure that many partners will be able to relate to the emotional pain and disempowerment that you so clearly describe here. Thank you for sharing your story.

You are aware that you are not the cause of your partner’s destructive habit, and I’d like to completely agree with you in this respect. From my own experience of working with addicts and their partners, the causes of the habit always lie elsewhere. Unfortunately, the addict very often seeks his own justification by blaming his partner, only adding to the deception and cruelty that porn addiction brings to a relationship.

‘Half a person’ is a very apt description of the porn addicted husband or boyfriend. He’s still around the house, but emotionally living on automatic pilot. He’s numbed and distracted; just going through the motions until he can get back in front of the computer. The one sure way to get him fired up is any attempt to intervene between him and his solitary routines on the internet; the resulting rage and sulks can seem completely out of character. Partners so often find themselves questioning what happened to the guy they fell in love with.

The addicted state has its own set of coping mechanisms, and all of them wreak havok with relationships. We’ve already touched on the delusion of shifting blame onto the partner. There are all those promises to quit too; these may be well-intentioned, or empty words just to get you off his back. Either way, the lack of any real action or conviction just makes them hollow, desperate ploys.

Compulsive addictions thrive on mind games, and the unfortunate partner will come to recognise three repeating roles. Self-pitying promises to quit arise when the addict plays victim. Blame shifting happens when he shifts from victim to persecutor, and tries to gain advantage by fighting back. This is when the anger blows up. With sufficient damage done, he can even shift again to rescuer, explaining that everything would be ok if you just gave him space, let him do as he pleases, etc. He’s now the victim again.

For partners, it is indeed difficult to avoid playing along with the porn addiction games. His addicted logic will be expecting you to shift between these three roles too, in endless rounds of tit-for-tat and despair. The alternative to these games feels like giving in; blinding yourself to the problem so that he can pursue his fantasies and routines at leisure.

To break out of these games, I advise a stance of almost-clinical detachment from the problem, with a clearly set deadline for change. It’s a delicate balance; my Porn Game Over recovery guide explores this topic further, and the links section on this site recommends other useful resources for partners. There’s a place for offering support too, but this will only benefit once he breaks out of denial and honestly accepts the problem; otherwise, he’ll just play victim.

I hope that this brief summary gives some perspective to a horrible situation, and I wish you every success.

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K submitted this personal story of long-term living with a porn addicted husband:

Where do I begin? 9 years ago I first discovered that my husband was looking at porn and checking out personals on the Internet.

Since our first child was only 5 months old, I was outraged, hurt and shocked. I never in a million years imagined my husband doing this. He blamed it on the popularity of Internet porn and how easy it was and that “all men do it”. He told me he wouldn’t do it again, and when I caught him again, we started going to marriage counseling. 2 months later I caught him on the computer again, but this time with 3some porn magazines, and letters he had written to other women—about being in a bad relationship with his girlfriend and talking about sex. After threatening to leave him, he promised that he would get help. Again, we went to marriage counseling and he started seeing a “sex addiction” professional. But things never really got better.

One night while I was away at a conference, he didn’t get home till 3 am. He made up some stupid lie and defended it until his therapist finally convinced him to tell me the truth months later—he went and met another woman. He said they never had sex, but I have my doubts. At one point I did think he stopped and all of this counseling worked. But I caught him writing some girl again and we separated for a few months. He again begged me to come home, with promises that he wouldn’t do it again and that he had a problem. It seemed we were doing well for a while, but then it happened again. I caught him chatting online and with pictures of the girls. Again we separated. He found a new “sex addiction” counselor and we again went to marriage counseling. I did NOT want to get back together, but now we had 2 children together.

After months of counseling and the pain of our children wanting us back together, I moved back in. After all of this, I had a lot of anger and really couldn’t forgive or trust him. He seemed to really try to get his addiction under control, so I thought I would try by going to a forgiveness class. I told him that if I ever caught him again, it would mean divorce. I watched him walk out of this house twice a week for SAA meetings. He told me he didn’t need his therapist anymore because he was strong. It’s been almost 3 years since we last broke up and I just found out that the longest he stopped was about 8 months out of the 3 years.

He was going to Kinko’s to chat, the library, then finally on his own laptop which I agreed he could have for his work. He was lying, skipping meetings, chatting again, going to singles/dating sites, and even gave someone his phone number. I found that number on his cell phone bill and called the number to confirm it was one on the women he was chatting with. We’ve been to marriage counselors, sex-addiction specialist, SAA meetings, and still he begs me it’s an addiction and that he loves me. But he had the tools, knew the consequence and still did it again! Lying so well to my face, over and over again, the thought of him being intimate physically with another woman, and the hurt it is causing to my kids is unbearable.

To the outside we are a perfect family, and so did I until a few weeks ago. I don’t think I can ever trust him again, and after asking him so many times if he was “ok”, he never gave me a chance to tell me the truth, that he was weak and needed my help to keep us strong. So you say it’s not about the sex, but self esteem and stress. But it’s still cheating and lying and the only way I see an end to this madness is if I leave him. Tell me, where do you go from here?

I’d like to thank K for sharing such a poignant account. After nine years of suffering this situation, and countless attempts to rectify things, it must feel almost impossible to envisage any way forward for your relationship. I would simply like to underline a few truths that you will no doubt have heard before, and hopefully suggest an alternative outlook towards this problem.

Many porn or sex addicts justify their behaviour to themselves by blaming the abundance of internet porn and saying that “all men do it”. Indeed, there is a load of porn out there and many millions of men consume it, but for the addict, this becomes a deep, deluded rationale that blinds them to the realities of their behaviour. They feel somehow entitled to the private escapism of porn, even when the habit leads to real-world sexual infidelity and risks. Unfortunately, addicts certainly can navigate through recovery programmes, 12-step meetings and counselling sessions without ever overriding this deep-seated delusion. Genuine recovery depends on their essential motivation to change, along with honest recognition of the reasons why they rely so much upon porn stimulation.

Addicts play destructive games with themselves and their partners, and it would sound like your husband has never really broken out of the cyclic behaviour of his porn addiction game. Without genuine motivation to change, the experience of therapy, groups and counselling can sadly support his game further. If his main motivation for accepting treatment is to pacify his partner, for example, the addict will often play a ‘just see if you can stop me’ game, or ‘therapy can’t save me’. The ‘I’ve been to therapy and still do porn’ outlook only strengthens his sexual obsessions.

There is a lot that can be said about addiction games, and I really can’t fully cover the subject here. Suffice to say that your husband may also be playing the victim games of ‘porn is too available’, ‘I have an addictive personality’ or ‘my wife doesn’t like it’. Even if he fully recognises the pain that his behaviour causes you, and the potential losses that he could suffer, playing any of these games makes him reliant on the expectation of others to make him change. Of course, this is never going to happen.

Casting aside all of the lies, excuses and games, an addict needs to realise that the potential to change is fully within them. Understanding partners, support groups and counsellors are all resources available to the addict, but they all require his absolute motivation. Recovery really does require some painful self-discovery, and facing up to the contributing factors that I talk about so frequently: low self-esteem, intimacy issues, deep-rooted boredom, childhood fears, stress. Through all the therapies that have been attempted, your husband may well have unearthed some of these factors already, but he been unable/unwilling to substitute the escapism of porn for more positive ways of managing these issues.

Sadly, some addicts require a rock-bottom wake-up call before they can really generate the motivation to change. To say that addicts take their partners for granted is an understatement. As you have experienced, porn addicts become numb to the lies and hurt that they inflict, and can even resort to blaming you or your relationship for their addictions. This is a horrible and deeply hurtful side-effect of addiction, but it is still part of his ‘game’. You are not the cause of his sex addiction. As his partner, you have clearly been exceptionally tolerant and supportive. In the ongoing state of addicted delusion, your husband may no longer perceive the threat of losing you as real. It cannot be denied that finally leaving him for good could be the only wake-up call that can work. That’s a bleak conclusion, but a painful reality for some partners.

So where do you go from here? You are, of course, fully entitled to your own recovery from this painful mess, along with your children. For any hope of salvaging your relationship, your husband’s addiction needs a new approach; a step-by-step recovery plan that begins with him taking full responsibility for himself. The counselling and 12-step methods have been unsuccessful so far, possibly for the reasons mentioned above, but that is not to say that they can’t be of benefit in the future. First, though, your husband needs the essential motivation and determination that has so far eluded him. He may never have really believed that he has the capability to take control of himself - now is the time for that realisation, and my recovery guide may certainly help him with this.

It’s time to set a deadline, and begin to measure the situation by his actions and not his words. Assure him that he will have your support through this period, but the deadline is for real. He needs to be fully conscious that if his game continues, he will lose you from his life.

I wish you every success.

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Karri kindly submitted this summary of her porn-addicted boyfriend experience:

My boyfriend prefers porn and online sex to any form of physical contact with me. We’ve been together for 6 years and have only had sex 5 times in the last 3 years. I am worried because I think his addiction has moved to more and more shocking images, bestiality etc. It’s only a short jump to paedophilia and worse.

As for me, I’ve had enough. I just cant cope anymore in a sexless relationship where my body is an object of disgust. I am frightened that there are many, many men out there like him so not sure whether to even bother looking for another boyfriend. Internet porn has turned my whole world to shit.

Firstly, thank you Karri for sharing your situation and fears with this site. It’s clear that your relationship is in deep distress, and falls terminally short of the respect and appreciation you deserve.

As a starting point, it should be clear that your boyfriend’s attitude towards you is extremely unlikely to be the cause of his fixation with porn. His disinterest in sexual contact with you is a horrible consequence of his addiction. It is not a reaction to you, your sexual appeal or appearance.

There are so many factors that can lie beneath porn addiction - your boyfriend may even be aware of what drives him to obsess over porn, or it may currently be hidden in his subconscious. This is no excuse for his behaviour, of course, but it’s quite likely that the origin of the problem is unrelated to sex. For the addict, internet porn can feel like compensation for some very obscure emotional pain or frustration.

In order to envisage any way forward with this relationship, you may need to read up a little on the nature of porn addiction. Partners can often channel their natural anger and disgust into a clear descision for proactive change, and a recovery process begins in small steps. In time, you and your boyfriend will need to be able to honestly communicate about all of this. It will require his genuine acceptance of a problem and a willingness to change. He may learn to appreciate this opportunity to open up his own fears and confusion. At some point, you should make it clear that you expect to see some specific improvements in his behaviour and his interaction with you as his partner. Set a definite deadline for this, and assure him that he has your support throughout this time of adjustment. Patiently remind him of all the available resources that could be explored: self-help guides, recovery plans, counselling and couple therapy.

Essentially, the dealine should be very real, and his actions rather than his words should determine whether he’s prepared to embrace real change. If he choses to deny, bury his head in the sand or play games, you may be able to help no further. In that unfortunate event, your best efforts cannot be stimulus enough for him to change, and hopefully the experience of being dumped will deliver the wake up call that he needs. It’s up to him to deal with that - your focus should be on your own future by that point, and your new life starts.

After enduring the acute distress of a relationship impacted by porn addiction, it is quite easy to build a picture of living in a world of shallow, selfish, porn-obsessed men. Media coverage, survey statistics and even support websites like this can help support such a picture. It’s important to see the issue in context. Yes porn addiction is a reportedly growing problem, but it remains a fact that male casualties are firmly in the minority.

Most men, even those who look at porn sometimes, are perfectly capable of keeping it in perspective and holding down fulfilling and loving relationships. I wish you every success, either in aiding your boyfriend to face up and regain this position, or in finding a new partner who shows the respect and love you are entitled to.

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Red Pepper magazine coverAsha Anderson wrote an extremely frank account of her experiences with a porn addicted partner in the politics magazine Red Pepper.

At night he would switch it on again before joining me in bed. The unpalatable truth was he needed virtual hardcore stimulation before he did it with me.

I found myself wondering whether he preferred the porno plastic lip and tit dolls to me. Was I not enough? A thought that I’d never had before.

I found myself comparing my beauty to theirs, but luckily it hadn’t affected my self-esteem or so I thought. There was an increasing insecurity about my sexuality…having been a late starter was I a non-starter?

Soon after I confronted him and expecting remorse, apologies, a sensitive response, I got annoyed denial. After telling him I had evidence, I got sarcasm ‘Well haven’t I seen a website with your name on it?’, ‘It’s for ‘stress release’ and ‘All men do it.’ But he did promise to stop. Only he didn’t.

Asha’s whole article highlights a number of issues faced by partners of internet sex addicts. Especially poignant are the descriptions of insecurity, self-doubt and the all-too-common partner’s response of indignation and denial. She ends the piece with her ongoing dilemma: try to ignore and live with it, fight it or ultimately… walk away from him. These options face increasing numbers of partners, and they are desperately painful choices indeed.

Red Pepper features some great articles about porn, written from diverse and thought-provoking perspectives. I certainly recommend a visit.

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