Causes of Sexual Addiction

Read about the various causes of sexual compulsivity, sexual addiction and which groups of people are most at-risk for becoming sex addicts.

Read about the various causes of sexual compulsivity, sexual addiction and which groups of people are most at-risk for becoming sex addicts.

The causes of sexual compulsivity and sexual addiction, in general, are complex and difficult to attribute to one single cause. What is known is that many who struggle with sexual compulsivity have survived histories of severe family dysfunction and violence, frequently reporting that they were the victims and witnesses of emotional, sexual and physical abuse. According to the findings of one study, 72% had been physically abused in childhood, 81% had been sexually abused, and 97% emotionally abused. Based on that study, as you might imagine, many sexual addicts come from families where their emotional needs were not met.

Other sexually addicted people report that their addiction developed over time (much like alcohol, drug, gambling or other addictions), slowly escalating towards a need for greater sexual novelty and intensity, eventually eclipsing other forms of human interaction.

Relationship Between Sexual Addiction and Other Psychiatric Disorders

Sexual addiction is hypothesized to be (but is not always) associated with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), narcissistic personality disorder, and bipolar disorder. Some neurological disorders can, rarely, result in sexual addictions. These include epilepsy, head injury and dementia.

Sexual addiction may also be related to a biochemical imbalance in the brain. As with other addictions, it's known to affect the pleasure and reward pathways of the brain.

Some drugs have also been found to cause hypersexuality. Examples are apomorphine and dopamine replacement therapy.

Sexual addiction resembles other addictions in that:

  • Brain chemistry changes are similar.
  • Family background of addiction.
  • Lack of nurturing and other forms of emotional, physical or sexual trauma in childhood
  • Multiple addictions can co-exist.

Whatever the reason behind the sexual compulsion, the behavior has become unmanageable and diminishing to the individual's self-worth and interpersonal relationships. 

Sources:

  • Carnes, P. (1983). Out of the shadows: Understanding sexual addiction. Minneapolis, MN: CompCare.
  • The National Council on Sexual Addiction and Compulsivity

APA Reference
Tracy, N. (2021, December 16). Causes of Sexual Addiction, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2026, April 10 from https://www.healthyplace.com/addictions/sex-porn-addiction/causes-sexual-addiction

Last Updated: December 30, 2021

Symptoms of Sexual Addiction

 

Symptoms of sexual addiction and behaviors that may imply the person is a sexual addict.

Discover the symptoms of sexual addiction and behaviors that may imply the person is a sexual addict.

Do you know, or have you heard of, someone who has an unusually intense sex drive or obsession with sex? This is the description of sexual addiction. Sexually compulsive individuals have lost the ability to control their sexual behavior. Sex and the thought of sex tend to dominate the sex addict's thinking, making it difficult to work or engage in healthy personal relationships.

Symptoms of Sexual Addiction

Here are the symptoms of sexual addiction and behaviors that may imply the person is a sexual addict:

  • Having multiple sexual partners or extramarital affairs.
  • Engaging in sex with many anonymous partners or prostitutes.
  • Sex addicts treat sexual partners as objects rather than social intimates that are only used for sex.
  • Engaging in excessive masturbation, as often as 10 to 20 times a day.
  • Using pornographic materials a lot. Using chat rooms or online pornography or sex chat phone lines excessively.
  • Engaging in types of sexual behavior that you would not have considered acceptable before. Examples are masochistic or sadistic sex. Sometimes more extreme forms of sexual behavior are engaged in, for example pedophilia, bestiality, rape.
  • Exposure in public.

Generally, a person with a sex addiction gains little satisfaction from sexual activity and forms no emotional bond with his or her sex partners. In addition, the problem of sex addiction often leads to feelings of guilt and shame. A sex addict also feels a lack of control over the behavior, despite negative consequences (financial, health, social, and emotional).

Sexual addiction also is associated with risk-taking. A person with a sex addiction engages in various forms of sexual activity, despite the potential for negative and/or dangerous consequences. In addition to damaging the addict's relationships and interfering with his or her work and social life, a sexual addiction also puts the person at risk for emotional and physical injury.

For some people, sex addiction progresses to involve illegal activities, such as exhibitionism (exposing oneself in public), making obscene phone calls, or molestation. However, it should be noted that sex addicts do not necessarily become sex offenders.

Sources:

  • Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Psychiatric Disorders (DSM IV)
  • Sex Addicts Anonymous
  • Society for the Advancement of Sexual Health

APA Reference
Tracy, N. (2021, December 16). Symptoms of Sexual Addiction, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2026, April 10 from https://www.healthyplace.com/addictions/sex-porn-addiction/symptoms-sexual-addiction

Last Updated: December 30, 2021

What is Sexual Addiction - Sexual Compulsion?

Comprehensive information on sexual addiction-causes, symptoms and treatment of sexual addiction.

Comprehensive information on sexual addiction-causes, symptoms and treatment of sexual addiction.

There is no category for "sexual addiction" in the current Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV) and there's a debate in the medical community as to whether addiction to sex even exists; rather some believe it might just be a heightened desire for sex.

The DSM IV does, however, describe certain sexual disorders which are characterized by, or include among their features, excessive and/or unusual sexual urges or behaviors. Under the listing "Sexual Disorders Not Otherwise Specified, the DSM IV describes sex addiction as "distress about a pattern of repeated sexual relationships involving a succession of lovers who are experienced by the individual only as things to be used." The DSM IV list the symptoms of sex addiction as "compulsive searching for multiple partners, compulsive fixation on an unattainable partner, compulsive masturbation, compulsive love relationships and compulsive sexuality in a relationship."

The Society for the Advancement of Sexual Health further defines sexual addiction as a persistent and escalating pattern or patterns of sexual behaviors acted out despite increasingly negative consequences to self or others.

Behaviors Associated with Sexual Addiction

Some out-of-control repetitive behaviors, which may reflect sexual addiction include:

  • Masturbation
  • Simultaneous or repeated sequential affairs
  • Pornography
  • Cybersex, phone sex
  • Multiple anonymous partners
  • Unsafe sexual activity
  • Partner sexualization, objectification
  • Strip clubs and adult bookstores
  • Sexual aversion
  • Prostitution

Sex Addiction can involve a wide variety of practices. Sometimes an addict has trouble with just one unwanted behavior, sometimes with many. A large number of sex addicts say their unhealthy use of sex has been a progressive process. It may have started with an addiction to masturbation, pornography (either printed or electronic), or a relationship, but over the years progressed to increasingly dangerous behaviors.

Consequences of Sexual Addiction

The essence of all addiction is the addicts' experience of powerlessness over a compulsive behavior, resulting in their lives becoming unmanageable. The sex addict is out of control and experiences tremendous shame, pain and self-loathing. The sex addict may wish to stop --- yet repeatedly fails to do so. The unmanageability of sex addicts' lives can be seen in the consequences they suffer:

  • losing relationships
  • difficulties with work
  • arrests, financial troubles
  • a loss of interest in things not sexual
  • low self-esteem and despair

Sexual preoccupation takes up tremendous amounts of energy. As this increases for the sex addict, a pattern of behavior (or rituals) follows, which usually leads to acting out (for some it is flirting, searching the net for pornography, or driving to the park.) When the acting out happens, there is a denial of feelings usually followed by despair and shame or a feeling of hopelessness and confusion.

Concerned? Take the Online Sexual Addiction Screening Test.

Sources:

  • Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM IV)
  • Society for the Advancement of Sexual Health
  • Richard Irons, M. D. and Jennifer P. Schneider, M.D., Ph.D., "Differential Diagnosis of Addictive Sexual Disorders Using the DSM-IV," Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity 1996, Volume 3, pp 7-21, 1996.

 

next: Symptoms of Sexual Addiction
~ all sex-porn addiction articles
~ all articles on addictions

APA Reference
Tracy, N. (2021, December 16). What is Sexual Addiction - Sexual Compulsion?, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2026, April 10 from https://www.healthyplace.com/addictions/sex-porn-addiction/what-is-sexual-addiction-sexual-compulsion

Last Updated: December 30, 2021

Psychological Self-Help: Does It Work and Where to Find It

psychological self help healthyplacePsychological self-help involves learning how to help yourself and then applying what you’ve learned to your life in order to create lasting positive change. Over the years, the self-help industry has grown rapidly. You can find advice in a number of formats, covering a wide variety of topics from finances to abuse self-help to personal success and mental illness.

Does Psychological Self-Help Work?

Many people want to know if psychological self-help works. Is it worth the effort? Yes and no. Some people benefit greatly from psychology self-help books, ebooks and other media, while others do not. Why? According to self-help author and speaker, Robert Ringer, “…those that benefit are ready to receive information that can help them make major changes in their lives, while those that do not benefit are usually not ready.”

Additionally, you’ve got to have confidence in the suggestions and strategies put forth by the person giving the self-help advice. One of the biggest issues with many of the products (i.e. books, audio CDs, videos, seminars) out there offering psychological help is that they provide only superficial advice and are often written illogically or in a boring style without solid empirical evidence to back them up.

But, assuming you’ve found engaging, authoritative material offering mental health self-help for your specific challenge, it’s up to you to follow through and mindfully implement the author’s suggestions.

Finally, the potential of mental health self-help materials to make a positive difference in the lives of those suffering from mental illness is real. The challenge comes in choosing material that’s authoritative, clearly written, and presented in a style that motivates you to do the work required to get better.

Where To Find Quality Psychological Self-Help Materials

Whether you need psychological self-help due to an inability to form lasting relationships, depression, ADHD, anxiety, or another mental health issue, you’ve got to know where to look to find it. Here’s a list of resources that may help:

  • American Psychological Association (APA). The APA Help Center offers a variety of interest areas as well as a way to order free brochures. You can even contact the professionals at the help center and ask them to recommend specific psychology self-help books or other materials covering your topic of interest.
  • Authoritative Guide to Self-Help Resources in Mental Health. This book, available on Amazon.com, reveals which materials are the good ones, which are the bad ones, and why. This book reviews and rates over 600 self-help books, autobiographies, and videos. The materials the authors review cover 28 common clinical disorders and life challenges.
  • Self-Help That Works: Resources to Improve Emotional Health and Strengthen Relationships. Another book, published in 2013 and available on Amazon.com, which offers advice to readers about how to identify effective self-help materials and how to spot shallow, misleading, even harmful works. This book reviews over 2,000 self-help resources and publications, covering a wide variety of mental health concerns.
  • Local Library. Your local library probably has several shelves dedicated to self-help books, audiotapes and CDs, and videos. You can take your time looking through the available materials and evaluate them without having to buy them first.

You might also try asking your doctor or a community mental health counselor for recommendations of psychological self-help materials. Or, perhaps you have a friend who has made progress using a certain psychological self-help book. Ask to borrow the book or where he or she purchased it, so you can get your own copy. 

APA Reference
Gluck, S. (2021, December 16). Psychological Self-Help: Does It Work and Where to Find It, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2026, April 10 from https://www.healthyplace.com/self-help/self-help-information/psychological-self-help-does-it-work-and-where-to-find-it

Last Updated: March 25, 2022

Trauma and Addiction: From One Generation to the Next

Because living with addiction creates trauma symptoms and trauma symptoms can lead one to self-medicate with drugs and alcohol, trauma and addiction can become an intergenerational disease process.

Because living with addiction creates trauma symptoms and trauma symptoms can lead one to self-medicate with drugs and alcohol, trauma and addiction can become an intergenerational disease process.

Children of addiction are four times more likely to become addicts themselves and these statistics don't include multiple addictions such as food addiction, sex addiction, gambling addiction, work addiction etc. Nor do they include those who marry addicts. There is certainly evidence that there is a genetic predisposition to addiction. However, even putting genetics aside, the emotional, psychological and behavioral patterns that get passed down through the generations put each generation at risk for perpetuating the trauma related dynamics that lead to emotional problems across a wide range of indicators and addiction if rigorous treatment doesn't intervene. In this way, addiction and psychological problems become a family illness that is intergenerational.

Resilience

Not all children who grow up in addicted family homes fail to thrive in adulthood. Some of the common traits that resilient children share are a strong, bonded relationship with at least one other person, usually within the extended family network, often a grandmother, aunt or uncle. ACOAs (adult children of alcoholics) can be marvelously adaptive and resourceful. As the Italian proverb goes "what doesn't kill you makes you stronger." Many COAs (children of alcoholics) and ACOAs develop unusual personal strengths, especially those who were able to find and rely on other adults for support.

The faith community has unique opportunities to provide information and a supportive environment that welcomes and supports children and families suffering from the effects of addiction in the family. Trust can be rebuilt and healthy relating can be reinforced as those from troubled families learn to reach out for help and take responsibility for accepting and using the help that they receive. The structure of a faith community can sustain a broken family during their rebuilding period, it can hold them until they can hold themselves. That healing support can begin with simple messages about the hope and promise of recovery - for the whole family.

Find more comprehensive information about Drug Abuse and Addiction and Alcohol Abuse and Addiction.

Source:
(Adapted from The Process Study Guide, with permission of the author, for Congregational Leadership Training, Detroit, MI - 1/24/06)

About the author: Tian Dayton M.A. Ph.D. TEP is the author of The Living Stage: A Step by Step Guide to Psychodrama, Sociometry and Experiential Group Therapy and the bestseller Forgiving and Moving On, Trauma and Addiction as well as twelve other titles. Dr. Dayton spent eight years at New York University as a faculty member of the Drama Therapy Department. She is a fellow of the American Society of Psychodrama, Sociometry and Group Psychotherapy (ASGPP), winner of their scholar's award, executive editor of the psychodrama academic journal, and sits on the professional standards committee. She is a certified Montessori teacher through 12 years of age. She is currently the Director of The New York Psychodrama Training Institute at Caron New York and in private practice in New York City. Dr. Dayton has masters in educational psychology, a Ph.D. in clinical psychology and is a board-certified trainer in psychodrama.

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2021, December 16). Trauma and Addiction: From One Generation to the Next, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2026, April 10 from https://www.healthyplace.com/addictions/family-impact/intergenerational-disease

Last Updated: December 30, 2021

Addiction to Prescription Drugs

In-depth information on prescription drug abuse and addiction. Signs and symptoms of addiction to painkillers and other medications. Treatments for addiction to prescription medications.

In-depth information on prescription drug abuse and addiction. Signs and symptoms of addiction to painkillers and other medications. Treatments for addiction to prescription medications.

Recent news stories have highlighted the increasing number of teens and adults abusing prescription drugs, particularly painkillers.

For example, the National Institute on Drug Abuse's 2003 Monitoring the Future survey of 8th, 10th, and 12th graders found that 10.5 percent of 12th graders reported using Vicodin for non-medical reasons and 4.5 percent of 12th graders reported using OxyContin without a prescription.

The White House Office of National Drug Control Policy maintains that past year abuse of prescription pain killers now ranks second—only behind marijuana—as the Nation's most prevalent illegal drug problem. While overall youth drug use is down by 23 percent since 2001, approximately 6.4 million Americans report non-medical use of prescription drugs. New abusers of prescription drugs have caught up with the number of new people that use marijuana. Much of this abuse appears to be fueled by the relative ease of access to prescription drugs. Approximately 60 percent of people who abuse prescription pain killers indicate that they got their prescription drugs from a friend or relative for free. (information on drug abuse statistics)

Addiction to painkillers

Painkillers such as Vicodin and OxyContin are opiates and are very powerful medications against pain, but they need to be taken under the close supervision of a doctor. These same medications, when taken inappropriately, can cause addiction (characterized by compulsive drug seeking and use) as they act on the same places in the brain as heroin does. (Read about: heroin effects)

These painkillers can be very effective in treating individuals with the medical need for these medications; however, using these drugs without the supervision of a physician or for purposes different from their intended use can lead to serious adverse consequences, including death from overdose.

Which prescription drugs are commonly abused?

Prescription drugs that are abused or used for nonmedical reasons can alter brain activity and lead to dependence. Commonly abused classes of prescription drugs include:

  • opioids (often prescribed to treat pain)
  • central nervous system depressants (often prescribed to treat anxiety and sleep disorders)
  • stimulants (prescribed to treat narcolepsy, ADHD, and obesity)

Commonly used opioids include:

  • oxycodone (OxyContin)
  • propoxyphene (Darvon)
  • hydrocodone (Vicodin)
  • hydromorphone (Dilaudid)
  • meperidine (Demerol)
  • diphenoxylate (Lomotil)

Common central nervous system depressants include barbiturates such as pentobarbital sodium (Nembutal) and benzodiazepines such as alprazolam (Xanax).

Stimulants include dextroamphetamine (Dexedrine) and methylphenidate (Ritalin).

Long-term use of opioids or central nervous system depressants can lead to physical dependence and addiction. Taken in high doses, stimulants can lead to compulsive use, paranoia, dangerously high body temperatures, and irregular heartbeat.

Over-the-Counter Drugs

Some people mistakenly think that prescription drugs are more powerful because you need a prescription for them. But it's possible to abuse or become addicted to over-the-counter (OTC) medications, too.

For example, dextromethorphan (DXM) is found in some OTC cough medicines. When someone takes the number of teaspoons or tablets that are recommended, everything is fine. But high doses can cause problems with the senses (especially vision and hearing) and can lead to confusion, stomach pain, numbness, and even hallucinations.

Sources:

  • National Institute on Drug Abuse, Prescription Drugs: Abuse and Addiction, August 2005
  • The White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, Press Release dated Feb. 20, 2007

APA Reference
Gluck, S. (2021, December 16). Addiction to Prescription Drugs, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2026, April 10 from https://www.healthyplace.com/addictions/prescription-drugs/addiction-to-prescription-drugs

Last Updated: December 30, 2021

The Effect of Familial Trauma on Children

Trauma in childhood can seriously impact development throughout life and can have pervasive and long-lasting effects.

Children living with an alcoholic parent or in an addicted family may suffer life-long trauma.

Trauma in childhood can seriously impact development throughout life and can have pervasive and long-lasting effects. The amygdala, which is a brain center for the fight/flight/freeze response, is fully functional at birth. This means that a baby is capable of a full-blown trauma response.

The hippocampus, which is where we assess stimuli as to whether or not it is threatening, is not fully functional until the age of four to five. In addition, the prefrontal cortex is not fully mature until around age eleven or older. This means that when a child is frightened, they have no way of understanding what is going on around them. They do not have the developmental capability of assessing frightening stimuli for its level of threat nor do they have the cognitive capability to understand what's happening. They need an external modulator, namely a parent, or a caring adult, to help them to regulate themselves and calm down.

Even a sibling, caretaker or pet can help an anxious child to even out their emotions. Without this help, the painful stimuli may become locked in a sensory memory that lives within the self-system without insight, understanding or regulation.

Find more comprehensive information about Drug Abuse and Addiction and Alcohol Abuse and Addiction.

Source:

(Adapted from The Process Study Guide, with permission of the author, for Congregational Leadership Training, Detroit, MI - 1/24/06)

About the author: Tian Dayton M.A. Ph.D. TEP is the author of The Living Stage: A Step by Step Guide to Psychodrama, Sociometry and Experiential Group Therapy and the bestseller Forgiving and Moving On, Trauma and Addiction as well as twelve other titles. Dr. Dayton spent eight years at New York University as a faculty member of the Drama Therapy Department. She is a fellow of the American Society of Psychodrama, Sociometry and Group Psychotherapy (ASGPP), winner of their scholar's award, executive editor of the psychodrama academic journal, and sits on the professional standards committee. She is a certified Montessori teacher through 12 years of age. She is currently the Director of The New York Psychodrama Training Institute at Caron New York and in private practice in New York City. Dr. Dayton has masters in educational psychology, a Ph.D. in clinical psychology and is a board-certified trainer in psychodrama.

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2021, December 16). The Effect of Familial Trauma on Children, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2026, April 10 from https://www.healthyplace.com/addictions/family-impact/effect-of-familial-trauma-on-children

Last Updated: December 30, 2021

Characteristics of Adult Children of Trauma and Addiction

Children of Alcoholics are traumatized living in an addicted family. Discover the behavioral characteristics of Adult Children of Alcoholics.

Children of Alcoholics are traumatized living in an addicted family. Discover the behavioral characteristics of Adult Children of Alcoholics.

Learned Helplessness: A person loses the feeling that they can affect or change what's happening to them.

Depression: Unexpressed and unfelt emotion lead to flat intenal world - or agitated/anxious depression. Anger, rage and sadness that remain unfelt or unexpected in a way that leads to no resolution.

Anxiety: Free floating anxiety, worries and anxieties that have no where particular to pin themselves or look for a place to project at, phobias, sleep disturbances, hyper-vigilance.

Emotional Constriction: Numbness and shutdown as a defense against overwhelming pain. Restricted range of affect or lack of authentic expression of emotion.

Distorted Reasoning: Convoluted attempts to make sense and meaning out of chaotic, confusing, frightening or painful experience that feels senseless.

Loss of Trust and Faith: Due to deep ruptures in primary, dependency relationships and breakdown of an orderly world.

Hypervigilance: Anxiety, waiting for the other shoe to drop - constantly scanning environment and relationships for signs of potential danger or repeated rupture.

Traumatic Bonding: Unhealthy bonding style resulting from power imbalance in relationships and lack of other sources of support.

Loss of Ability to Take in Caring and Suppport: Due to fear of trusting and depending upon relationships and trauma's inherent numbness and shutdown.

Problems with Self Regulation: The deregulated limbic system can manifest in problems in regulating many areas of the self system and thinking, feeling and behavior. Go from 0 - 10 and 10 - 0 without intermediate stages, black and white thinking, feeling and behavior, no shades of gray as a result of trauma's numbing vs. hi-affect.

Easily Triggered: Stimuli reminiscent of trauma, e.g., yelling, loud noises, criticism, or gunfire, trigger person into shutting down, acting out or intense emotional states. Or subtle stimuli such as changes in eye expression or feeling humiliated, for example.

High Risk Behaviors: Speeding, sexual acting out, spending, fighting or other behaviors done in a way that puts one at risk. Misguided attempts to jump start numb inner world or act out pain from an intense pain filled inner world.

Disorganized Inner World: Disorganized object constancy and/or sense of relatedness. Internal emotional disconnects or Fused feelings (e.g., anger & sex, intimacy and danger, need and humiliation).

Survival Guilt: From witnessing abuse and trauma and surviving, or from "getting out" of an unhealthy family system while others remain mired within it.

Development of Rigid Psychological Defenses: Dissociation, denial, splitting, repression, minimization, intellectualization, projection, for some examples or developing rather impenetrable "character armor."

Cycles of Reenactment: Unconscious repetition of pain-filled dynamics, the continual recreation of dysfunctional dynamics from the past.

Relationship Issues: Difficulty in being present in a balanced manner; a tendency to over or under engage, explode or withdraw or be emotional hot and cold. Problems with trusting, staying engaged or taking in love and caring.

Desire to Self Medicate: Attempts to quiet and control turbulent, troubled inner world through the abuse of drugs and alcohol abuse or behavioral addictions.

Find more comprehensive information about Drug Abuse and Addiction and Alcohol Abuse and Addiction.

Sources:

  • From Trauma and Addiction, Dayton 2000 (van der Kolk 1987, Krystal 1968)

APA Reference
Gluck, S. (2021, December 16). Characteristics of Adult Children of Trauma and Addiction, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2026, April 10 from https://www.healthyplace.com/addictions/family-impact/characteristics-adult-children-of-trauma-addiction

Last Updated: December 30, 2021

What Happens to the Family When Addiction Becomes Part of It?

Alcoholism takes a toll on the entire family, from the children of alcoholics to other family members. The impact of alcoholism can be painful and lifelong.

Alcoholism takes a toll on the entire family, from the children of alcoholics to other family members. The impact of alcoholism can be painful and lifelong.

Families where addiction is present are oftentimes painful to live in, which is why those who live with addiction are oftentimes traumatized to varying degrees by the experience. Broad swings, from one end of the emotional, psychological and behavioral spectrum to the other, all too often characterize the addicted family system. Living with addiction can put family members under unusual stress. Normal routines are constantly being interrupted by unexpected or even frightening kinds of events that are part of living with drug use. What is being said often doesn't match up with what family members sense, feel beneath the surface or see right in front of their eyes. The alcoholic or drug addict, as well as family members, may bend, manipulate and deny reality in their attempt to maintain a family order that is gradually slipping away. The entire system becomes absorbed by a problem that is slowly spinning out of control. Little things become big and big things get minimized as pain is denied and slips out sideways.

The Alcoholic Parent's Impact on Children

During early childhood years, this intense emotional environment can set up a fear of feeling or patterns of attachment that are filled with anxiety and ambivalence. In their youth, children of alcoholics or drug dependent parents (COAs) may feel overwhelmed with powerful emotions that they lack the developmental sophistication and family support to process and understand. As a result, they may resort to intense defenses, such as shutting down their own feelings, denying there is a problem, rationalizing, intellectualizing, over-controlling, withdrawing, acting out or self-medicating, as a way to control their inner experience of chaos. The COA may be difficult to identify. They are just as likely to be the president of the class, the captain of the cheerleading squad, or the A student, as they are to act out in negative ways.

Families have a remarkable ability to maintain what family therapists call homeostasis. When alcohol or drugs are introduced into a family system, the family's ability to self regulate is challenged. Family members become subsumed by the disease to such an extent they often lose their sense of normal. Their life becomes about hiding the truth from themselves, their children and their relational world, Their faith in a loving God can be challenged as their family life becomes chaotic, promises are broken and those we depend upon behave in untrustworthy ways. Those in this family may lose their sense of who and what they can depend upon. Because the disease is progressive, family members seamlessly slip into patterns of relating that become increasingly more dysfunctional. The children are often left to fend for themselves and anyone bold enough to confront the obvious disease may be branded as a family traitor. Family members may withdraw into their own private worlds or compete for the little love and attention that is available. In the absence of reliable adults, siblings may become "parentified" and try to provide the care and comfort that is missing for each other.

Such families often become characterized by a kind of emotional and psychological constriction, where no one feels free to express their authentic selves for fear of triggering disaster; their genuine feelings are often hidden under strategies for keeping safe, like pleasing or withdrawing. The family becomes organized around trying to manage the unmanageable disease of addiction, They may yell, withdraw, cajole, harangue, criticize, understand, get fed up, you name it. They become remarkably inventive in trying everything they can come up with to contain the problem and keep the family from blowing up. The alarm bells in this system are constantly on a low hum, causing everyone to feel hyper-vigilant, ready to run for emotional (or physical) shelter or to erect their defenses at the first sign of trouble.

Trauma Keeps Family Members From Getting Help

Because family members avoid sharing subjects that might lead to more pain they often wind up avoiding genuine connection with each other. Then when painful feelings build up they may rise to the surface in emotional eruptions or get acted out through impulsive behaviors. These families become systems for manufacturing and perpetuating trauma. Trauma affects the internal world of each person, their relationships and their ability to communicate and be together in a balanced, relaxed and trusting manner.

As the "elephant in the living room" increases in size and force the family has to become ever more vigilant in keeping its strength and power from overwhelming their ever-weakening internal structure. But they are engaged in a losing battle. The guilt and shame that family members feel at the erratic behavior within their walls, along with the psychological defenses against seeing the truth, all too often keep this family from getting help. The development of the individuals within the family, as well as the development of the family as a resilient unit that can adjust to the many natural shifts and changes that any family moves through, becomes impaired. Initially, addicts may feel they have found a way to manage a pain-filled inner world.

Unfortunately, in the long run, they create one. Chronic tension, confusion, and unpredictable behavior are typical of addictive environments and create trauma symptoms. Individuals in such situations may become traumatized by the experience of living with addiction. One of the results of being traumatized is to withdraw from authentic connection with others which can affect comfort and participation in a spiritual community. Contact with a spiritual community, however, can be a tremendous buffer against isolation and can support young people and help them to sustain their faith in God and in life. Their spiritual life can be fostered and guarded through being a part of faith-based programs and activities, and their sense of feeling normal can be protected by engaging in the kinds of activities that preserve a sense of normalcy in their lives.

Talking about and processing pain is an important deterrent as far as developing posttraumatic symptoms that show up later in life. Intense emotions such as sadness, that are an inevitable part of processing pain, can make family members feel like they're "falling apart" and consequently they may resist experiencing the pain they are in. And the problems in an alcoholic family system are perpetual. For the child in an alcoholic system, there may be nowhere to run, as those they would normally turn to are steeped in the problem themselves. Seeing the problem for what it often alienates them from other family members.


 


The Effect of Untreated Addiction on the Family

If addiction remains untreated, dysfunctional coping strategies become very embedded in the general behavior of the family. Family members may find themselves in a confusing and painful bind, e.g., wanting to flee from or get angry at those very people who represent home and hearth. If this highly stressful relational environment persists over time, it can produce cumulative trauma. Trauma can affect both the mind and the body. Intense stress can lead to deregulation in the bodies limbic system or that system that helps us to regulate our emotions and our bodily functions. Because the limbic system governs such fundamental functions as mood, emotional tone, appetite, and sleep cycles, when it becomes deregulated it can affect us in far-ranging ways. Problems in regulating our emotional inner world can manifest as an impaired ability to regulate levels of fear, anger, and sadness. This lack of ability to regulate mood may lead to chronic anxiety or depression. Or, it can emerge as substance or behavioral disorders, for example, problems in regulating alcohol, eating, sexual or spending habits.

It is no wonder that families such as these produce a range of symptoms in their members that can lead to problems both in the present and later in life. Children from these families may find themselves moving into adult roles carrying huge burdens that they don't know exactly what to do with and that gets them into trouble in their relationships and/or work lives. This is why PTSD can occur; it is a posttraumatic reaction in which symptoms related to being a COA emerge in adulthood, or in the ACOA. The traumatized child lives in frozen silence until, finally, the frozen feelings of the child emerge in adult actions and words. But it is the wounded child still searching for a place to put their unprocessed, unspoken pain.

Find more comprehensive information about Drug Abuse and Addiction and Alcohol Abuse and Addiction.

Source:

(Adapted from The Process Study Guide, with permission of the author,
for Congregational Leadership Training, Detroit, MI - 1/24/06)

About the author: Tian Dayton M.A. Ph.D. TEP is the author of The Living Stage: A Step by Step Guide to Psychodrama, Sociometry and Experiential Group Therapy and the bestseller Forgiving and Moving On, Trauma and Addiction as well as twelve other titles. Dr. Dayton spent eight years at New York University as a faculty member of the Drama Therapy Department. She is a fellow of the American Society of Psychodrama, Sociometry and Group Psycho ¬therapy (ASGPP), winner of their scholar's award, executive editor of the psychodrama academic journal, and sits on the professional standards committee. She is currently the Director of The New York Psychodrama Training Institute at Caron New York and in private practice in New York City. Dr. Dayton has masters in educational psychology, a Ph.D. in clinical psychology and is a board-certified trainer in psychodrama.

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2021, December 16). What Happens to the Family When Addiction Becomes Part of It?, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2026, April 10 from https://www.healthyplace.com/addictions/family-impact/impact-addiction-on-family

Last Updated: December 30, 2021

I Use the Verbal Abuse I Suffered to Better My Relationships

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Having healthy relationships is vital for individuals of all ages. Although, victims of verbal abuse may have a hard time finding someone to build a proper connection with. I know that because of the verbal abuse that consumed my past, my personal relationships were not always the best. After years of therapy, I believe my low self-esteem and decision-making skills contributed to the terrible relationship choices of who was in my life. 

3 Ideas for Using Your Experience with Verbal Abuse to Improve Relationships

1. Who You Surround Yourself with Matters 

There is a saying, you are what you eat, and while that is true, you are also a reflection of the people you surround yourself with each day. Unfortunately, the never-ending cycle of bad relationships is constant for many individuals, with them professing that they always attract the wrong person or cannot find anyone decent. As I look back on my life, this was my world for many years. 

I had a failed first marriage, which resulted in an even more disastrous low self-image and self-esteem issues. I was angry and bitter for many years, which created an environment around me that was not ideal. The dates I chose were men who carried the same abusive traits I was familiar with, or, when I found someone worthwhile, I was incredibly mean and angry. This behavior would only drive them away, reinforcing to myself that I was not worth having someone terrific in my life and good people will always leave me. 

After doing some personal growth and a lot of therapy, I can see now how self-centered or selfish people have no place in my life. When I spend time with someone who is self-absorbed in their world and has no considerations for others, I become agitated and do not want to spend time with them. Likewise, if someone I know is consistently negative and complains about everything when we hang out, I want to avoid them at all costs. 

2. Find Your People 

Thankfully, I did have a small, close-knit group of friends to talk to who were in similar situations. Eventually, we all moved on, slowly started healing, and many of us attended therapy regularly. Today, we talk about how our past choices altered our lives back then and how much better things are now for us. 

I am so happy that I can look around now and see who I want to have in my life and who I do not. So I seek out individuals who make me feel good just being in their presence and spending time together. I no longer feel so emotionally drained after visiting friends or family. 

When finding your people, it is critical to remember that quality is better than quantity. You will feel better and more fulfilled with three terrific friends than you would with a dozen acquaintances who are okay to hang out with, but there is no connection. 

3. Turn It Around

Humans are not meant to be solitary mammals. We thrive on personal connections and relationships. Although I have a past riddled with verbal abuse and bad life decisions, I have chosen to turn it around. Today, I prefer people that are good for me. They support my decisions. They encourage my dreams. They cheer me on or lift me up when I need it most. 

Thankfully, today's world is entirely different from my life 20 years ago. And even though it has taken me a long time to recover and slowly build up the kind of relationships that I should have always had, being a victim has helped guide me to this place. 

I know now what I do not want in my life. I can see the traits and behaviors that I want to stay away from, and when someone close to me says something that I do not like or agree with, I can have an honest, open conversation about it. I am slowly turning my life around and am pleased with my results. 

I hope that someday you can look back on your life and see how far you have come. I want you to look at your present and future with a smile and realize that you can build goodness and hope around you, even after coming through the darkness.