A Couple's Guide to Sexual Addiction (23 page)

BOOK: A Couple's Guide to Sexual Addiction
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The Vital Reflection from Your Partner
When you are willing and able to allow yourself to become undefended with your partner, it becomes more likely that you will experience moments of intimacy. It may come as a surprise that divulging what can seem to be your worst and weakest qualities to your partner creates intimacy. Revealing yourself to your partner, and allowing yourself to be impacted by his or her revelations to you, can help uncover the thought patterns, perceptions, and conclusions that you hold about the world that are actually self-defeating. Your normal way of looking at the world is incorporated so unconsciously into ordinary perceptions and conclusions that defenses can remain invisible and hidden. The viewpoint of your partner can help you see more clearly into your individual style of self-protection—a protection that actually keeps you away from intimacy.
The way you perceive your relationship, the way you see your partner, or hear what they have said, is colored by the way you view the world. We described this view of the world in the previous chapter as scaffolding. These perceptions are your filters. These filters can cause your interpreted view of the world, your projections—which could, in reality, be false—to be experienced as perceptions that you believe to be true. The process of becoming intimate with your partner, of allowing yourselves to intimately view the world and yourself through the eyes of your partner, can reveal unseen defenses. When you stretch your immediate view of the world to include your partner’s viewpoint, you are less likely to be blindsided by your unseen assumptions and conclusions, and you bring down your barriers of safety that prevent the experience of intimacy.
Building Safety Through Intimate Communication
Developing deeper intimacy in your relationship requires a sincere sense of safety. When trust has been broken, safety has been shattered. The collision of this crisis has certainly disrupted the experience of safety in your relationship. As trust is rebuilt, safety can also be rebuilt and can deepen. That quality of safety is generated partly internally, by trusting that you can bear any tsunami of your own strong feelings and emotions, and partly by the experience of baring yourself to your partner and being held in that nakedness. It is not a coincidence that we use the words bare and naked here when discussing emotional intimacy: Emotional intimacy fosters sexual intimacy.
Emotional intimacy requires that you put down your defenses. In previous chapters, we’ve looked at developing your capacity for greater vulnerability by working with tendencies toward blame and shame, by sorting out your strong feelings, by building your capacity for undefended honesty, and by looking at how you are being influenced in the present by your past. Now you are being called to bring all those elements into play so you can communicate in a more intimate way. Intimate conversation is built on two skills: reflecting and expressing compassionate understanding.
Reflecting
Reflecting is mirroring. As you know, the best mirror is smooth, clear, and free of distortion. It can be a tall order to be a clear mirror to your intimate partner, to simply repeat or reflect back without distortion exactly what is being said to you—especially when what your partner has to say creates an uncomfortable emotional response in you. As we mentioned earlier, your capacity to stay separate from your partner, to maintain your own inner integrity, is like being a fully rooted structure on the ground. This inner strength will allow you to let your partner’s experience remain your partner’s experience, and not become tangled up with your reaction. You need to be able to keep yourself safe from your partner’s feelings, to put aside your own emotional response, so you can really listen to and hear your partner’s feelings.
Reflecting is simply putting what your partner has said to you in your own words. It can also include asking your partner to explain further. The goal of great reflecting is to help your partner more fully understand what he or she is thinking and feeling. Your part in the investigation is to help your partner be a better detective about what is going on internally. Be interested. Reflect and compassionately understand. You do not have to agree or disagree. This is not the moment for a debate, a weighing of options, or an analysis of the merits of your partner’s conclusions.
It is important to not push or force. That can create defensiveness in your partner. The experience of really being heard by another person who is not trying to change you or defend against what you are saying creates a sense of safety and intimacy.
Reflecting skillfully can be difficult because it requires the partner who is doing the reflecting to—at least for a few moments—put aside his or her own personal defenses and reactions. Don’t expect to be able to reflect without reacting every time your partner speaks to you. Sometimes you will react internally, and can’t put the reaction on pause. In those instances, please remember to forgive yourself and gently admit the truth of your reaction.
Compassionate Understanding
The second step of intimate conversation, expressing compassionate understanding, builds on the skill of reflecting. Compassionate understanding does not require agreement with your partner; it simply requires awareness and comprehension. Try to understand what your partner is experiencing. Try to see the world through his or her eyes just for this moment and see how, from his or her point of view, what is being expressed might make sense.
For your partner to receive the fullness of your empathy, your understanding needs to be communicated in words. Express whatever understanding you can find about your partner’s experience, not to change it, fix it, or correct it, but simply to acknowledge that it exists. “I can see why you felt so hurt when I withdrew from you. I understand how that must have felt like I had abandoned you.” Note that the key to these words is, “I understand why you feel that way.” This is also a good moment to say, “I’m sorry.”
An intimate conversation involves give and take. As each of you finds that you are building your skills of reflecting and expressing compassionate understanding, you will discover that the safety needed for intimacy will naturally begin to flower.
Josh and Lisa
In
Chapter 3
, you met Josh and Lisa, who had been able to take concrete steps toward a more intimate relationship after Lisa discovered Josh’s secret life and compulsion with online porn. After the initial discovery, explosion, revelation, open sharing, and then the closeness he had felt with Lisa in those first few weeks, Josh felt that she had begun to grow somewhat cold and distant. She had been a bit sharp when he asked her questions. At night, she hadn’t been snuggling up to him as they slept. She was sleeping on her own side of the bed.
He felt those old familiar yearnings to go online. He was able to tell himself that he knew he wanted intimacy with Lisa more than he wanted the porn, but he also realized that he didn’t really know what to do next. So he asked her to go out to dinner with him. The following conversation that unfolded at that dinner was one of the steps Josh and Lisa took toward establishing greater intimacy in their relationship.
Josh waited to talk about what was on his mind until after they had finished eating and had ordered their after-dinner coffee. Although he felt tentative about telling Lisa what he was feeling, he decided to take the risk. He knew he could only start with what he knew in the moment, even though it might upset Lisa.
Josh also knew the alternative was that he was going to go back online and, if he did that, the consequences to his marriage would be severe. He had begun to recognize that the porn was a dead end. He was afraid that Lisa would think he was not a man if he shared with her how weak he felt. But he remembered how she had accepted the facts of his past—facts that he had previously been sure no one would ever accept.
He decided to be totally honest. “Lisa, I’ve been really wanting to go online for the last few days. I feel like maybe you are still mad at me about the porn—or maybe it’s something else. I can’t tell. I’d like to understand what’s going on.”
For a moment, Lisa felt a pang of anger. He was talking about the thing she was the most afraid of—that he would just keep going back to the porn. But here he was, talking to her about it. Then she thought, perhaps this might be a good sign. And since he’d asked the question, she had to stop herself for a moment to see if she might be angry. She realized that she was indeed feeling angry about the porn. She had been feeling angry that she had married someone who was attracted to porn. She hadn’t wanted to talk to Josh about it, because she was afraid it would hurt him or push him back online. Now she realized that since she wanted intimacy, it was important that she find some way to speak to Josh about this thing that was troubling her so much.
She remembered the analogy of what an intimate partnership is—not leaning on each other but still available to each other. She stopped just for a moment to feel her inner sense of strength. “Yes, I have been feeling angry. You’re right. I am angry that this problem is a part of our marriage. I don’t like it.”
Then she paused and realized there was more. “Really, I’m afraid that you will go back to the porn and I will have to go through the pain again that I felt in that moment of opening the spare bedroom door and seeing you in front of those awful images.”
Josh thought about the skill of reflecting. His first impulse was to defend himself, to let Lisa know how wrong she was, but he stopped himself, took a deep breath, and spoke with a skill that surprised him. He was able to reflect Lisa’s words back to her. “You’re angry that I was using porn, and you don’t like it. You’re afraid that I won’t be able to control myself, that I’ll just keep doing it and you’ll get hurt all over again.”
Josh’s reflection was so undefended that Lisa smiled. “Yes,” she said, “that is exactly what I’m feeling. Thank you.”
Josh, with the success of his reflecting, decided he might as well practice compassionate understanding as well. He told us later that when we had first explained these skills to them, he had thought this was something only a saint could do, not a regular guy like him. But we had assured him that it was possible. He had been thinking about how hard it would have been for him if the tables had been turned, and he had discovered Lisa looking at online porn. So that night in the restaurant, rather than defending himself, he decided he would share this understanding with Lisa.
“I can understand how you would feel hurt about what I was doing while I was looking at all those other women online. I can see why that hurt you. And I can understand why you would be afraid that I’d do it again. It makes perfect sense to me that you would feel that way. I’m sorry.”
Just for this moment, he stopped himself from explaining to her about all the effort he had put into converting his urges to go online into something more productive, and about how proud he felt about how he was learning to work with himself. He would save that for a conversation they would have later during which Lisa would reflect his words and offer her compassionate understanding about his struggle with porn and how aware she was of the changes he was making.
That night when they went home, the depth of the emotional intimacy of their conversation, the safety created by sharing and being heard and accepted, opened the doorway to physical intimacy. As they contentedly drifted off into dreamland, Lisa did not sleep on her side of the bed.
Intimate Sexuality
The experience of intimate, connected sex is based on a connection born of vulnerability, trust (built through honesty), and compassionate connection. Intimate, loving sex and compulsive or addictive sex are not the same thing. Engaging in compulsive or addictive sex is not a steppingstone toward intimate, connected sex. You have directly experienced how damaging compulsive sexual behaviors can be to the intimacy you would like to have in your relationship.
When the natural sexual connection you have with your partner is combined with your vulnerable loving connection, it becomes possible for each of you to surrender into giving and receiving the natural pleasure of your bodies. The pleasure and playfulness of connecting sexually inside of your committed relationship can promote the development of a sexual history with your partner that is unique to you as a couple. You both get to make it up as you go. Your bodies and the connection between your two bodies will be your guide.
Compulsive addictive sex can be thought of as simply remaining focused on the sex act itself. Intimate sex brings love, connection, compassion, and intimacy into the picture, that’s why it is called making love. Intimate sex takes your sexual energies and weds them with the forces of empathy, identification, and oneness that you experience in intimately surrendering with your partner. The dance of pleasing your partner and being pleased by your partner deepens as you are able to let go into the safety you experience in intimately revealing yourselves to each other. As your hearts open, the walls come down, and your bodies can respond like an uninhibited, passionate dancer responding to his or her favorite music. In the intimacy of meeting your partner in this way, sexual passion can actually continue to become more fulfilling over time as you mature your intimate connection with your partner.
Forgiveness

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