Free Resources for Sex and Porn Addiction – Module 4
Free Resources for Sex and Porn Addiction – Module 4
Module 4 of V2V provides recovering sex and porn addicts with tools to promote and safeguard their initial period of abstinence – the critical phase from 0 to 90 days. You will find in here guidance on managing various forms of environmental and technological controls as well as an emergency toolkit to win the battle against urges and cravings.
Controlling Opportunity Triggers
What are opportunity triggers?
Being alone
compulsive sexual acting out is secretive and anonymous
Time
an important resource which sex and porn addiction erodes
Place
needed for both secrecy and access to some forms of acting out such as sex workers
Money
cash is needed for meeting sex workers or paying for an erotic massage while cards give access to many online activities
People
colleagues, neighbours or contacts on dating apps present constant risks
Technology
probably the biggest enabler of constant accessibility to sex and porn and anonymity
Hurdles form a protective barrier
Controlling opportunities is really a question of installing as many hurdles as practically possible so that your access to, say porn or online chat forums, is seriously hindered. A good range of controls will form a protective barrier around your green-light GO activities and shut out the red-light STOP activities. With such barriers in place you will have thinking time, decision points in other words, when you can revert back to your commitment to abstinence.
Flow experiences
What makes flow?
If you are in a state of flow you are said to be experiencing the following;
- Complete concentration and focus on the task to the exclusion of other things
- Clarity of goals and reward in mind and immediate feedback on accomplishment towards those
- Distortion of time (speeding up/slowing down of time)
- The experience is intrinsically rewarding and is an end in itself
- Effortlessness and ease due to training, practice and familiarity
- There is a balance between challenge and skills – the skills are well developed, enough to push the challenges within the activity
- Actions and awareness are merged so there is less conscious thinking
- There is still a feeling of control over the task – confident and semi-automatic
Examples of flow-type experiences
- Participating in a competitive sport or game (squash or chess) or a challenging solo physical activity such as skiing or climbing.
- Being engrossed in a hobby, interest or pursuit such as painting, model-making or home DIY
- Learning a new skills such as playing a musical instrument or juggling
- Becoming highly proficient in a skill or activity such as writing, drama, motor racing, water-skiing, sailing or a martial art.
A flow experience is achieved through a combination of focussed concentration, intense enjoyment, deep immersion in the activity and a lasting sense of achievement. In a flow experience time becomes immaterial and other things seem to have either stood still or moved on more quickly. Importantly, flow experiences have a positive effect on the neuro-chemicals linked to feeling-good states – dopamine, serotonin, endorphins and so on, and unlike sex and porn they provide these as a bonus on top of the sustained enjoyment which comes from the accomplishments associated with flow experiences.
Emergency Toolkit for Cravings
The following MIDAS toolkit is for immediate application when experiencing cravings, urges and triggers related to compulsive sexual behaviours. If you follow MIDAS you will not give in and act out. Using MIDAS you will be able to cope with withdrawal symptoms, the ‘flat-line’ period associated with abstinence from dopamine-led addictive behaviours, and unexpected triggers such as difficult events which give rise to emotional challenges.
Combined with your work on boundaries using the Traffic Lights Re-wiring Plan (V2V Module 3) and Opportunity Controls (above) the MIDAS toolkit will keep you safe and confident to achieve complete abstinence. You must commit to using MIDAS, learn its contents and purpose and practice using it on a regular basis so it becomes second nature. Over time, the behaviours promoted by the MIDAS tools will become automated and work as barriers to sexual acting out.
Mindfulness
Instant distraction
Don’t distort
Adverse Consequences (aftermath)
- Damage to or loss of relationship, marriage and family
- Loss of or diminishing of reputation, image and respect from others
- Threat to or loss of job due to breaches of protocols or reduced performance
- Financial loss
- Actual or threatened police action
- Sexually transmitted infections or the worry about them
- Loss of time and reduced achievement in other areas of life
- Lowered self-esteem and self-respect
- Constant weight of shame, guilt, and remorse
Self-validation
Next V2V Module 5 explains the influential and unconscious process of cognitive distortion in addiction and how you can notice and control them.