For
this particular lesson, you are the expert. Each of you have experienced
your partner's compulsive sexual and/or romantic behavior in unique
ways. You may have been completely baffled by the revelation that
your partner struggled with such sexual issues. You may have had
a gut-feeling that something was wrong--but never able to put
your finger on exactly what it was. You may have suspected something
was wrong, but struggled to gather proof; or, you may have known
of these behaviors early in the relationship, but found them to
be one of your partner's strengths. The purpose of this lesson
is to allow you to explore behaviors that are often associated
with sexual addiction, but not often identified in a relationship
until after that addiction has become known. Behaviors that you
may have felt uneasy about, but lacked any concrete reason for
such uncertainty.
Many
of the behaviors associated with sexual addiction can be very
endearing. The TV show "Friends" aired an episode several
years ago where one of the main characters--I think it was Monica--began
dating an alcoholic who was initially portrayed as charming, enthusiastic,
attentive, fun-loving, full of energy. But as the relationship
progressed, the man was stopped drinking and quickly became a
morose, depressing, bland, bore. There are some truths to this
phenomenon. As a sad fact, sexual addiction can produce some of
the most attractive qualities in your partner. That is not to
insinuate that they are not genuine qualities, or that they are
not sincere in displaying them...only that such charm and courtship
skills have often been honed over many years to help perpetuate
their addiction. It is highly likely that many of you were courted
through the very same behaviors that were related to that addiction.
Of
course, this is not necessarily a bad thing, once the blow to
your esteem is resolved, as these same charming qualities can
resurface even after the addiction has been resolved. And for
those of you who look at your husband and think, "Charming?
Him. No way." You'd be surprised at how adept they can be
in developing a platform for obtaining what they desire--be it
sex, companionship, attention, etc.
Your
Goals for Today (and quite possibly, tomorrow)
Your
goal for this lesson is to share with the community your own perception
of your partner's behavior through different stages of the relationship
(those stages will be identified below). This should have three
main affects on your own healing process:
1)
It should help you to organize the hundreds upon hundreds of doubts,
uncertainties and frustrations that you may have running around
inside your head regarding specific times in your relationship
where you may wonder how genuine the moments really were. It should
help you to identify unnecessary struggles and conflicts that
you assumed blame for (or were assigned blame for). Conflicts
that were actually a result of your partner's addiction. It should
assist you in reviewing the entirety of your relationship as it
was, rather than how it was perceived at the time.
2)
It should help you to see that your own insecurities, trustworthiness,
clouded judgments, willingness to give your partners the benefit
of the doubt, and other such traits that may have skewed your
reality are not weaknesses on your part. But rather, they are
proof of your ability to commit yourself to another human being
in a healthy way. That this commitment was taken advantage of
is another matter, but it in no way should translate into you
punishing yourself for not "seeing things clearly".
As you proceed through the workshop, if you ever begin to doubt
your abilities to commit to a relationship, take some time to
return to the posts in Day Nine. You did things right. And now,
as you progress, you will hopefully make the same type of commitment
again--except this time, you will be much wiser and much more
aware of your own needs and values.
3)
While each of you have experienced your relationships uniquely,
this exercise (and your reviewing of other's posts) should allow
you to see how similar many of these "unique" experiences
really are.