Darkness to Light

My name is Thomas, and I am a sex addict in recovery. My addiction started when I was 8 years old. Despite being raised by awesome parents who taught me that pornography was wrong, I still fell into its trap. At a young age, I participated in professional stage productions where I found and sought out pornographic images hidden around backstage. For the next several years, as I continued to be involved in these productions, I knew where all the images were hidden and would view them regularly. By age 12, I was acting out physically with others, which was directly related to the images seared in my mind. Before I even reached my teenage years, I was already treating girls and women as objects to satisfy my lustful, selfish desires.

In my youth, I began to master a Dr. Jekyll / Mr. Hyde lifestyle. A “good” son, brother, and “religious” boy by day — but a selfish, pleasure-seeker by night. I kept up this “good-man-bad-man” dynamic for 30 years, which included trying to keep a façade throughout my 16 years of marriage. The more I was rotting on the inside, the more I would attempt grand and showy outward behaviors to hide my true self.

One night in our 16th year of marriage, my wife finally got the courage to confront me. She said that she could feel that I didn’t love her, that my behaviors had ruined her, and that she was “done.” She said she was going to take the kids and move in with her parents. “You can have the house. I can’t live this lie anymore,” she said. In that desperate moment, I felt a strong inner voice tell me: “Tell her the truth now, or you will lose her.” My wife felt and saw many symptoms of my addiction, but she did not know that I, in fact, did have an addiction. There were so many secrets I had kept from her.

I didn’t want to lose her, so I decided to “come clean.” I started to tell her facts she had never heard before, going all the way back to the time when I was 8 years old. She was so hurt, betrayed, and devasted that she picked up the alarm clock off the bedside table and threw it against the wall. I was terrified. The truth was coming out, and I was on the verge of losing my wife, my children, my church standing, and even my career. This was my rock bottom. This is what rock bottom is – when “the pain of the solution is less than the pain of the problem” (White Book, pg. 27).

Within a few days, both of us met with our church leader. This wise man directed us to the Addiction Recovery 12-Step program offered by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. I had a lot of fear walking into my first meeting. But the second time I went, I felt strongly that this was exactly where I was supposed to be and that I truly belonged there. Each 12 Step principle hit me like a lightning bolt. I learned and progressed step by step and began to find true recovery. The recovery process for my addictive behaviors happened in phases, just like it does for drug or alcohol addicts. 

I am grateful for the true happiness and peace that I’ve found during my 5 years of sobriety and recovery. The journey has been difficult — but also wonderful — for my wife and me. We share our recovery process in our book Dark to Light: My Recovery from Pornography and Lust which explains specific ways that we have found healing, focusing on 12 Step principles.

My life has never been better than during the last 5 years of my recovery. I am a new man with a new heart. Change is real and possible. True connection with my God, my Savior, and my wife has replaced my old disconnection, discord, and disobedience. Light and truth have truly replaced the darkness of my past.  

Step 11

Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God as we understood God, praying only for knowledge of God’s will for us and the power to carry that out.

Step 3 is me letting go of my own will, and step 11 is seeking God’s will.  In step 3, I stop drowning myself with my own horrible ideas to where I’m just floating there.  Step 11 gives me a positive direction from God so I can start moving in a direction that’s aligned with His amazingly frightening will.

Of course God’s will scares me to death.  How could it be any other way?  I’ve already tackled all the easy stuff that I’m not afraid of.  All that’s left is the stuff that petrifies me with fear.  I am bound by that fear, and fear is not from God.  So it’s got to go.  And the only way to get rid of fear is to face it.  When I’m working my program well, I include steps 1, 2, 3 and 11 in my morning prayer.  I will add step 12 to that too some day.  I’m slow.  So I talk to God about the things I’m powerless over, then I express my faith in His ability to help me with these things, and then I give them all to Him to figure out and only then am I ready to follow His will.  My will is usually too noisy to hear anything from God.  So the steps are in order for a purpose.  I have to let go of the wheel and let Him guide me through my day, asking for the courage, power, and clarity to align my rebellious self with His will.

He loves me and wants me to get stronger and freer.  And I’m giving Him permission to do that, so I need to stick with it when He starts me down a path toward something I fear.  It’s like I’m working out a weak muscle and God’s my spotter and I’ve agreed to be here doing this and then the pain gets to be more than what I expected.  Then instead of working through it, I’m tempted to run out of the gym to avoid the pain.  But that just puts me back where I was before.  If I can build up a little more trust in Him each day, each week, it helps me to put up with the pain and fear, knowing that it will be better afterward.  Like going to the dentist.  If I thought the dentist was my enemy, I’d run as soon as I saw the needle.

My daughter came to me with a sliver in her finger.  She trusted me enough to help her get it out.  She knew it was going to hurt worse than what she was enduring right now, but she and I have built up a trust that I love her and will do what will give her peace and happiness in the long term.  So she comes to me when she needs relief from the pain – even if it means more pain for a time.  Afterward, the pain subsides and her faith and trust in me is increased a little bit more.  So it is with me and God.  He is my father after all.

Meditation (or pondering) has also helped me seek God’s will and get rid of my own defective parts of my will.  There are a few different methods I have used.

One method is to focus on breathing and nothing else. If my mind drifts, I don’t get frustrated, I just bring it back to my breath. That method quiets my mind down and gets rid of the noise.

Another kind is observational meditation where I simply observe my mind’s activity without holding on to any particular thought. That’s a lot more difficult for me because I grab the thoughts and run with them.  This helps me become more aware of my thoughts and decreases my self-condemnation, which allows more thoughts to come to the surface.  The more awareness I have, the more freedom I get to make choices about my thoughts and feelings instead of them silently running me.

Another kind of meditation is when I visualize a flame in front of me with a huge empty space around the flame.  I focus on the flame and my breathing.  As I breathe in through my nose, I imagine the air soaking into parts of myself physically (like into pain in my back or tension in my shoulders or neck) or emotionally (into lust, anger, stress, etc.).  I hold it in for a second and then let it out through my mouth and imagine the pain, tension, lust, anger, stress, etc. going into the flame and burning up. I repeat for a few minutes. I’m visual so this one works well for me and gives my mind something to imagine while I’m doing it. And it really helps a lot.  I have no idea why it helps, but I don’t really care.  I found this technique in the Wheel of Time book series, but I believe the author Robert Jordan might have gotten it from somewhere else.  I do it as described above, which is slightly different than what is described in the book. The lust and anger and stress tend to get visualized coming from my heart or entire body depending on how intense it is. And with each breath the emotion seems to get less and less until there isn’t anything left to feed the flame. It’s strange, but it has worked really well for me. More on this here.  Sometimes I can feed images into the flame (like I do with Christ in Step 3) and those might be coming from my brain. So breathe in through the nose and visualize the breath going up into my brain and soaking up the images, then breathing out of my mouth those images from my brain into the flame. And I do this with my eyes closed. It can even be just a couple of breaths at my desk.

Step 9

Made direct amends to such people wherever possible, except when to do so would injure them or others.

This is definitely one of the most rewarding steps.  It’s scary, but the more fear and shame I face, it seems the larger the treasure I find behind that fear.  This was also the first step that I saw God’s hand physically and objectively reaching down from Heaven and touching my world in ways that I can’t deny.

Continue reading “Step 9”

Step 8

Made a list of all persons we had harmed, and became willing to make amends to them all.

The first time I worked step 8, I did it alone.  Maybe because of my pride, fear, or shame.  It didn’t go well, because I bring all of my character defects with me into that list and I need another set of eyes on the list – my sponsor’s eyes – so that I can see clearly enough to make a good list.  This step is extremely important.  It can show me many levels of my dysfunction and help me make my relationships more healthy going forward, in addition to fixing relationships from the past.

Continue reading “Step 8”

Step 4

Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves.

There are many resources that go over step 4, including my favorite treatment of the topic by the infamous AA legends, Joe & Charlie, who have multiple mp3’s about step 4 and overcoming resentment.  So I’m just going to share my own experiences I’ve had in my own inventory and the inventory of those I’ve sponsored. Continue reading “Step 4”