Judging Yourself Can Lead To Sexual Addiction
By Dr. Margaret PaulMarch 04, 2019
Discover how self-abandonment can lead to using and objectifying others sexually.
Nicholas consulted with me because of problems he was having in his marriage. He was very distressed that his wife, Kayla, never wanted to have sex with him.
In the course of our work, it became apparent that Nicholas was very judgmental of himself. Throughout a day he was constantly telling himself how inadequate he was. "You certainly messed that up." "You are such a jerk." "You never do anything right." "What's the matter with you?" His wounded self was totally in charge, trying to have control over getting Nicolas to do everything right in order to get others' approval.
The ubiquitous self-judgment meant that his inner child felt constantly abandoned, which created intense aloneness and emptiness within Nicholas. This made Nicholas dependent upon others to fill him up and make him feel good.
He was especially dependent on his wife…
In his belief system, if Kayla wanted to have sex with him, it meant he was okay. Having sex with Kayla filled Nicholas for the moment. In his mind, it was Kayla's job to make him feel good by having sex with him.
Because Nicholas wanted to use Kayla in an addictive way, he could not see her as a person. She was an object to be used, not a woman to be loved. He could not love her when he was not loving himself, because when he needed her to fill him up, he just wanted to control her, and he would get angry when she didn't want to have sex with him.
As long as Nicholas was treating himself so badly, he could not help but treat Kayla badly. As long as he was abandoning himself with his self-judgments, he could not help but treat Kayla as an object to make him feel better.
Is It Any Wonder That His Wife Was Not Turned On To Him?
When we first started working together, Nicholas believed that there was something wrong with Kayla's sexuality. And whenever he reverted to his self-judgment, he would again think that the problem was with Kayla's sexuality. But over and over, whenever he was loving to himself and sharing his love with Kayla, he found her to be far more open sexually.
Many people, both men and women, do not feel turned on to a person when they feel objectified and used. Take a look at your own experience. Is it a turn-on for you when someone just wants to use you for their own gratification? Do you find it erotic when you feel pulled on to fill up the other's emptiness?
Sometimes, It’s Not Easy To Connect The Dots…
It was not easy for Nicholas to connect his own self-judgments and other forms of self-abandonment with his meager sex life. It took time for him to notice that the moment he judged himself, he wanted to have sex to take away the aloneness and emptiness that he created with his self-judgment. He could have used another addiction to fill up and avoid the pain of his self-abandonment - food, drugs, alcohol, spending, work, TV, gambling, and so on. But since, in his experience, it was sex that made him feel the best, this became his primary addiction. Second to sex was approval, which he constantly sought from others. In his belief system, someone had to take away the emptiness - he couldn’t see that he was causing it himself.
With much Inner Bonding work, Nicholas finally became aware that he was capable of loving himself and sharing his love with others. He was delighted to discover that Kayla now enjoyed being physically intimate with him. And surprised to discover that sex was not nearly as important to him as it used to be!
Heal your relationship with Dr. Margaret Paul’s Intimate Relationship Toolbox, a 12-week online course.
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Daily Inspiration
Free will is a great gift. Because of free will, we have the opportunity to choose who we want to be each moment. We can also choose to be unconscious of this choice. Today, be conscious of choosing who you want to be - loving or unloving; open or closed; in surrender to Spirit or attempting to control feelings, others or outcomes; learning about love or protected against pain.
By Dr. Margaret Paul