Depression and sex addiction:
The moment between the trapezes
By Stephen S, Brockway, M.D
“I choose my behavior; the world chooses my consequences” is a phrase that
any recovering
sex addict
would do well to hold in vivid consciousness. When the
awareness of a pattern of sexual addiction starts to become clear, a trail of
consequences is likely to follow close behind. Rather than attempt to manage or
minimize the consequences, the sex addict is advised to curtail sexual acting
out and embrace a quality recovery program taught and modeled by other
recovering addicts.
Despite the conviction to move toward the rigorous honesty of recovery, the
addict is likely to experience the cold sweat of repercussions of previous
behavior. The secret life is unveiled revealing affairs, exhibitionism,
voyeurism, or other behaviors comprising a particular sex addict’s modus
operandi of acting out. Like the trapeze artist in the circus, the addict
encounters the moment between letting go of one trapeze and catching the other.
Such a crisis will make one exquisitely aware of hopelessness and depression.
Hopefully, it will also dawn on the addict that he/she is powerless and that a
Higher Power alone can and will be there in that moment.
Six classes of depressive types expressed in sex addicts
The mental health practitioner who treats sex addiction is called upon to
diagnoses and treat the depression that is likely to be present before, during,
and after the between-trapeze experience. This depression may present in several
different forms, which can be summarized in the following classes:
1. Most commonly, a chronic,
low grade depression or dysthymia in a
shame-based person who has low self esteem and relatively undeveloped social
skills. This dysthymic disorder may be punctuated with major depression
especially likely at the time of significant relationship losses or at the time
of exposure of the pattern of sex addiction. Shame, loneliness, and awareness of
lost time spent in active addiction may haunt the addict. When shame rolls in,
depression follows the flood. This type tends to have a strong superego and be
at risk for
self-punitive suicidal thoughts and behavior.
2. A seeming lack of depression in a perfectionistic, shameless-acting high
achiever. Despite not having a history of previous clinical depression, this
person may experience an overwhelming
major depression as perfectionism and
narcissism no longer stem the tide of mounting negative consequences of sexual
behavior. Since this person may have a lofty professional and occupational
position, the sexual acting out may involve level III abuse of a power position
with employees, clients, or patients. If professional consequences (e.g. loss of
license, termination of employment) lead to a further and more devastating
breakdown in personal relationships (e.g. divorce, marital separation), the
person’s shame can be catastrophic and overwhelming, making suicide a real and
pressing danger. This person may even need to be hospitalized against his or her
will until adequate defenses can be reestablished and a recovery process begun.
3. The depleted workaholic whose life is without joy, and who has no balance
in social or recreational spheres. This sex addict is likely to find someone or
a series of subjects at work to groom as he/she presents as a martyr-like victim
slaving to support a family yet deserving of a sexual release. When depression
finally breaks through clinically, after the pattern of sexual behavior is
exposed, it is likely to be massive because this addict has little to fall back
on when the merry-go-round of work stops. The workaholic pattern becomes a
central treatment issue with both sex addiction and depression seen as
outgrowths of the long term lack of self care. If a workaholic pattern recurs
after treatment, relapse into sex addiction is almost certain, whether it be in
the behavior or thoughts of the addict. Therefore, a goal in treatment and after
for this person is to halt the pattern of self abandonment expressed previously
through workaholism, sex addiction, and martyrdom.
4. Psychotic depression in a person who may be older (45-60 or above) and who
has a pre-morbid obsessive-compulsive style and a suspicious temperament. This
person may have practiced a type of sex addiction that included perpetrating
children or teenagers, but kept it concealed for years. When the addiction
progresses and the behavior is discovered, the public outcry and shame may be
processed by the addict via psychotic defenses of massive denial and projection.
The addict may sink into a stuperous depression with psychotic features
including frank paranoid thoughts of feeling acted upon by outside forces and
profound social withdrawal. The reality of the perpetrating behavior is alien to
the denying lifestyle the person has practiced for years. The recovery from
psychosis is gradual and in-depth work on recovery from the addictive sexual
cycle must be put off until aggressive pharmacological treatment takes effect.
5.
Bipolar depression in a person who may or may not be a true sex addict.
Since the manic phase and mixed manic/depressive phases of bipolar disorder are
often accompanied by hyper-sexuality with heightened sex drive and increased
sexual behaviors of boundary-less type, the clinician, in attempting to make an
accurate diagnosis, should be mindful to search for a true pattern of sex
addiction behavior which transcends the mood swings of bipolar disorder. A
bipolar patient may also be a sex addict, but a significant subset of bipolars
show hyper-sexuality during mania that is not part of a pattern of sex
addiction. The bipolar group as a whole is at significant risk for suicide (the
lifetime suicide rate for untreated bipolars is 15%) and risk can do nothing but
rise for the portion who are both bipolar and sex addicts. The dual bipolar/sex
addict patient may actually complain of two types of depression; one that is
without a particular stimulus (the bipolar depression that comes on suddenly
like a black cloud overhead), and another depression which mounts slowly and is
accompanied by shame and the emptiness of active addiction much like the
dysthymia of Class #1.
6. A sociopath who may feel pain from consequences of addiction or
perpetration, but lacks true remorse and may feign a victim stance for secondary
gain from significant others and legal authorities. The dramatic victim behavior
may mimic depression, but usually lacks the classic vegetative signs (sleep,
appetite, energy, and interest disorders) of true major depression. If a person
with
antisocial personality disorder threatens suicide or acts on suicidal
thoughts, it is usually in retaliation toward authority figures, related to
substance abuse, or associated with additional accompanying character pathology
(e.g. borderline personality).The sociopathic pattern should eventually be
evident by the triad of lack of remorse for perpetrator behavior, failure to
learn from past mistakes, and projection onto others of blame (lack of
accountability). Such a person may have been through multiple previous
treatments accompanied by a professed wish to work a strong recovery program
yet, in reality, followed by failure to “walk the talk.”
The six classes of depressive types show that the entire array of depressive
disorders is expressed in sex addicts. As a practical help to the mental health
therapist, it might be useful to codify some of the clinical tools to employ in
assessing and treating the depressed, suicidal sex addict. First, the
practitioner will want to be able to distinguish the type, depth, and severity
of the depression. Second, the therapist should as accurately as possible know
what to consider in terms of risk of suicide.
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Last updated: 10/05
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