By Kevin Leapley, MA, LPC, CSAT on Monday, January 12th, 2015 in Sexual Addiction. No Comments
In our past acting out we have established relationships with people that encouraged our destructive lifestyle. Sex addicts will often make connections with other sex addicts and sex addiction group recovery may require that you give up those relationships (at least for the first year of recovery). You may even look at your group of friends and say, “All my friends are sex addicts. Do I need to stay away from all my friends?” Unfortunately the answer to that question may be “yes”.
Recovery is a change of life direction. Similar to an alcoholic having to eliminate former drinking buddies, the sex addict will need to eliminate former “lusting” buddies or partners. Hopefully, not all your friends are unhealthy sexually. If any friends are unhealthy, then it will be better to lose them then to continue living a life full of shame, despair, broken relationships, false intimacy, and addicted to sex.
To determine boundaries around people, the following questions may help you decide whether a person should be on your list or not:
In the lines below, make a list of all people that you answered “yes” to the above eight questions. Share this list with your spouse, partner, group, sponsor, and therapist.
People I will avoid during my first year of recovery:
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________