Cruise Control: Understanding Sex Addiction in Gay Men
128 pages
English

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128 pages
English

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Description

Cruise Control is the premiere book on the growing problem of sex addiction in gay men. This second edition explores how technology has impacted the instant ability to "meet up" and the implications of being in recovery in a committed relationship. Accessible resource for achieving sex addiction recovery including a "30 day test" and a dating plan.

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Publié par
Date de parution 21 février 2013
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780985063344
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0000€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

CRUISE
CONTROL
UNDERSTANDING
SEX ADDICTION IN GAY MEN
SECOND EDITION
©2005, 2013
 
ROBERT WEISS, LCSW, CSAT-S
 


 

Gentle Path Press
P.O. Box 3172
Carefree, Arizona 85377
gentlepath.com
Copyright © 2013 by Gentle Path Press
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be used or reproduced, stored or entered into a retrieval system, transmitted, photocopied, recorded, or otherwise reproduced in any form by any mechanical or electronic means, without the prior written permission of the author, and Gentle Path Press, except for brief quotations used in articles and reviews.
Second edition: 2013
For more information regarding our publications, please contact Gentle Path Press at 1-800-708-1796 (toll-free U.S. only)
Published in eBook format by Gentle Path Press
Converted by http://www.eBookIt.com
ISBN-13: 978-0-9850-6334-4
Editor’s note: All the stories in this book are based on actual experiences. The names and details have been changed to protect the privacy of the people involved. In some cases, composites have been created.

 
“Author Rob Weiss, with insight and clarity, affirms a healing spiritual message in Cruise Control that reflects knowledge, empathy and optimism for the gay sex addict. He celebrates the healing powers of treatment and sustained recovery. He understands the inclusiveness of spirituality that enables him to be a prophetic teacher and therapist.”
—Reverend Leo Booth, Master of Theology,
Author of Say Yes to Your Sexual Healing and The Happy Heretic
“When the celebration of sexual freedom for some gay men crosses into the dark road of sex addiction cloaked with shame, Cruise Control can be an invaluable resource. Not only does it provide hope for recovery, it openly explores how they landed on this path and gives strategic solutions to save themselves from it.”
—Stefanie Carnes, PhD,
Author of Mending A Shattered Heart and Facing Heartbreak
“Adding the technology chapter makes this second edition of Cruise Control a very useful, timely, and complete guide. Author Rob Weiss has a knack for presenting a refreshing balanced approach to sexuality. While he encourages freedom of sexual expression for gay men, he advocates for responsible decision making.”
—Marcus R. Earle, PhD, LMFT,
President of the Society for the Advancement of Sexual Health (SASH),
Clinical Director of Psychological Counseling Services, Ltd.

 
 
Dedicated to those men who search
among shadows seeking light
FOREWORD
Sex is at the core of our identities. It is a natural joyous part of life and being human. But when sex becomes a compulsion or an addiction, it can unravel our lives. I wrote about this very thing in 1983, Out of the Shadows: Understanding Sexual Addiction . For the first time, this book explored the dark side of our sexuality and how compulsive sex can mirror the addictive system often used to explain addictions to gambling, compulsive overeating, and substances like alcohol or other drugs. Thirty years ago, and still today the characteristics of the downward spiral of addiction look like this:
• Loss of control over behavior patterns and/or substance use
• Being preoccupied and obsessed with acting out pleasurable behaviors and/or using drugs to the detriment of other life goals, relationships, recreation, health and vitality
• Using or continuing problem behavior despite obvious negative consequences
• Living a double, secret life while hiding acting out behaviors or drug use from those closest to you
• The inability to gain and maintain genuine intimacy with a spouse and loved ones—due to secrets, lies and a hidden compartmentalized life
It doesn’t matter if the addiction is to a substance or behavior, whether you are male, female, gay, bisexual or straight, the underlying psychological dynamics that drive addictive sexual acting out are all the same. Addictions do not discriminate. Early neglect, abuse, character disorders, and other emotional challenges all play a part in the equation.
Although the path to addiction is the same for everyone, the gay male community has its own unique challenges. In addition to a sad legacy of HIV/AIDS, gay men typically have higher rates of drug addiction and alcoholism than heterosexuals. 1 And recognizing sex addiction among gays is more difficult than identifying it in straight men.
A resource like this second edition of Cruise Control couldn’t be timelier. Since the first edition of Cruise Control (published in 2005), our sexual landscape has changed irrevocably due to new and evolving technology. Not only has this greatly impacted how all of us communicate and stay in contact with each other, it’s also changed how we date, mate or even simply hook-up with a stranger. Today, GPS and smart phone apps have changed the way men (and women) cruise for sex. The opportunities to locate a willing sexual partner now require much less effort than in the past, when one actually had to physically encounter another person to find sex. Today, a laptop or readily accessible mobile device tucked in a pocket or briefcase is all that is required to find endless sexual encounters of every stripe. While all this can be liberating for some—it can also cause big problems for those gay (and straight) men who find their lives spiraling out of control because of their sexual behavior. Losing control over pleasure can be extremely dangerous and accurately knowing who and when to turn to for help can be challenging.
Cruise Control is an essential resource for gay men who have found their lives unraveled from the grips of sex addiction. It is also essential reading for anyone in a primary or family relationship with a gay male sex addict. Today, a mere eight years after publication of the first edition, gay male Twelve Step programs now routinely incorporate it as required reading. Cruise Control serves to illuminate a safe path out of the shadows of sexual compulsion, back into the light and fullness of life. Readers are offered insightful, step-by-step direction and solutions to the issues that gay sex addicts and their loved-ones encounter as they begin the long road to healing. And author, Rob Weiss is the perfect person to bring clarity to this often very complicated issue. Not only does he take a realistic and holistic approach to assisting gay men in determining whether or not they are sex addicts, he also provides specific steps to be taken toward hope, healing and recovery.
Rob Weiss clearly is an empathetic guide through the proven strategies that has helped countless gay men develop healthy approaches to sexual expression. I have known and worked with Rob for several decades now—beginning when he was just starting out as a young, dedicated clinician. His ability to get to the heart of the problems of his clients was already legendary early in his career. As the founding Director of the Sexual Recovery Institute in Los Angeles and Director of Sexual Disorders Services at Elements Behavioral Health, Promises Malibu and The Ranch, he has established an international reputation for helping therapists understand the disease of sexual addiction, while supporting those who struggle to begin their sex addiction recovery journey. This revised, current book helps solidify Rob’s wisdom and resources to recovering and gay communities everywhere. It should find a place in the personal libraries of all those recovering people and therapists who want to illuminate the dark recesses of our sexual selves and flourish as human beings.
Patrick Carnes, PhD
PREFACE
My initial commitment to this book evolved out of a series of articles published in the mid- to late 1990s. “Treatment Concerns for Gay Male Sex Addicts” (first published in Sexual Addiction and Compulsivity: The Journal of Treatment and Prevention ) and others like it were written specifically for the many excellent psychotherapists and addiction counselors who needed further insight and language to help them better work with gay male sex addicts versus heterosexuals or even bisexual people with similar issues. The underlying psychological dynamics that drive both men and women, straight and gay, to use sex and relationships in a repetitive, objectified, and ultimately self-destructive way (sexual addiction) is often quite similar, regardless of sexual orientation. However, I felt (and still feel) that both gay sex addicts and professionals who treat them must be able to differentiate between healthy versus potentially pathological patterns of gay male sexual behavior. Only with this clarity can they best assess and treat (not label or judge) sexual issues in gay men. I wrote the journal article, and later this book, in part to educate clinicians and the general public that when working with sexual issues, it’s a mistake to use the “heterosexual experience” as “the norm.”
“Treatment Concerns for Gay Male Sex Addicts” was first written as a straightforward attempt to provide all mental health and addiction professionals with useful information, gleaned over many years of clinical work with gay male sex addicts. At that time American and European gay culture was being devastated by the then unstoppable, mostly sexually transmitted HIV epidemic. And I wondered then, as I do now, how many men became infected with HIV because they are untreated sex addicts who tend to have sex first and then worry about the consequences later.
After that article was published, I began to speak at professional events, introducing the topic of sexually addicted gay men into general lectures about sexual addiction. When meeting with other psychotherapists, before and after such events, I was surprised to hear my professional peers express strong apprehension about openly discussing and writing about gay mental health, gay addiction, and gay sexual problems. At that time, many gay and lesbian mental health colleagues feared that opening a public door to this kind of discourse would either reinfor

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