Mourning
the Losses
Early
in the workshop, you identified many consequences that you have
endured as a result of your partner's addiction. These consequences
have forever altered the course of your life. Deeply, compassionately
understand this. It is a helpless reality. You have but one life
to live and yours will forever be marred by the intrusion of sexual
addiction.
These
lingering consequences--the career you could never achieve, the
intimate partnership you were not able to experience, the pregnancy
you didn't plan, the friendships you were not able to develop, the
life you never had the chance to lead--these are very real losses.
Opportunities to experience a lifestyle that you will never have
again (in the context of the years already lost), and this is a
painful reality to accept. But accept it you must, as your ongoing
resentment towards your partner, towards the opposite sex, towards
life in general or even towards yourself will destroy the only aspects
of your life you have remaining: your present and your future.
Recognize
that, by holding on to the resentment of what you have lost, you
are simultaneously expanding the consequences that that addiction
has had on your life.
So
take this time to mourn. To consciously recognize the finality of
these losses. To accept that they were neither fair, nor deserved.
Purge yourself of the hold that sexual addiction has had on your
life so that you are free to pursue a values-based, goal-oriented
life. So that you are free to move forward. How? There is no set
way. The only necessary element to this process is to consciously
validate the losses that you have endured and then, as we will see
in the next lesson, to make the choice to let go. To move on.
Some
guidelines to mourning: