CROSS ADDICTED By an Anonymous Member At 9 AM, on New Year's Eve of 1986, I asked the two hustlers to clean up and leave my apartment. I was finally exhausted from the combination of six hustlers and seven drugs I had had over that last 24 hours of acting out. I had spent $1,000 on this binge; the same amount I had spent on each of the two preceding nights I had gone out. Alone, on the floor, I sat listening to people going to work in the "real world" just outside my windows. I never felt more degraded, empty, unworthy of existence. At that moment, I deeply realized that one hustler was too many and a hundred not enough; that my disease was a thirst that couldn't be quenched -- an itch that I could never scratch -- and that my bottom was bottomless. I was ready to stop. I had used sex for twenty eight years to escape from painful feelings -- for the most part, a titanic sense of low self worth, fear and shame of being gay. From age thirteen to twenty one, I engaged in compulsive masturbation. I came out as a gay man in the late '60's, after college. The message from my gay peers was that lots of anonymous sex was OK because that affirmed our gay identity. At first, this helped to make it feel like acceptable behavior to me. I started my own business under the crushing weight of feelings of low self esteem and incompetence. I turned to alcohol and to more and more compulsive sex for relief. In fact, I became cross addicted to both alcohol and sex. I rarely used one without the other. The alcohol acted as a disinhibitor for sexual behaviors I would never have engaged in without its influence. And once I had "done it", it became behavior that would be repeated. And so the next twenty years were a descending spiral of acting out behavior. Though I preferred meeting people in bars and bringing them home, I also acted out in parks, baths, theaters, bookstores and rest stops. My estimated body count is certainly over 3000. Early on, my reasons for acting out became lost in the behavior itself, since acting out took on a life of its own and became self perpetuating. I often couldn't identify what I was feeling before having compulsive sex, though, afterwards, I felt remorse, guilt and shame, which often led to alcohol and more compulsive sex to expunge the feelings. Once, after an uncomfortable dinner with a friend, during which I couldn't get in touch with my feelings of anger, I tried to pick up a car full of straight young men. They took me to a deserted marsh near the Philadelphia airport. I was held at gun point, bludgeoned and almost gang-raped when I broke free, running through the marsh with blood pouring into my eyes. After getting stitches at a hospital, I compulsively masturbated all night and, soon after that, went out looking for a similar situation. That was fourteen years before I found SCA. I was involved in serial relationships, often to retreat or rest from my compulsive behavior, remaining monogamous for brief periods, then permitting myself to have sex outside the relationship. Almost all ended badly. Filled with self-loathing and near suicide, I dove into my last relationship pledging monogamy, convinced that the relationship would save me. I was faithful for nearly two years, but, as it always had, alcohol pushed me over the edge one night while alone on a vacation. Once I started again, I couldn't stop. I became involved with hustlers, feeling that what I did with them was play-acting out old high school fantasies of the sort that I wouldn't do with my lover. Because I didn't extend any affection to them, I thought I could protect my relationship. I quickly saw that I was out of control. The first week, I tried to stop by setting monetary limits. Initially, I allowed myself a $1,500 ceiling -- the cost of a vacation. At $3,000, I set a $5,000 "for life" ceiling. At $9,000, I was looking for a new therapist. At $15,000 and eight months into my spree, I tried hypnosis and cognitive therapy. At $25,000, I actually gave up alcohol, but substituted Antabuse and Xanax, a powerful tranquilizer to which I became addicted. I continued to buy hustlers, spending many thousands more. My therapist prescribed a combination of drugs which, when taken, would cause me to pass out in about forty minutes. Often, after twenty minutes, I was in a taxi on the way to my hustler service where I would purchase cocaine to counter the effect of the sedatives and be able to act out. When I wasn't drinking, I used cocaine, grass, Xanax and poppers to abandon myself to compulsive sex. I kept all his hidden from my lover for fear of losing him. Maintaining this double life was one of the most painful aspects of the disease for me. Sometimes, I would lie about having an evening freelance job. I'd check into a seedy hotel and go off to score a series of hustlers. I would always carry my own soap so that my lover wouldn't detect the scent of cheap hotel Ivory. I became suicidal and was hospitalized for a month in 1986. This experience was the beginning of my recovery. It was there that I first sensed that a power greater than myself could restore me to sanity. Upon discharge, it was suggested that I find a group like AA for sex addicts. Two weeks later, I found SCA. After my first meeting on June 17, 1986, I deeply sensed that I had found something that would finally work. I stayed sober for a week. I slipped. Contrary to what I felt I deserved, I was not asked to leave, but, rather, supported and given guidance. I got a sponsor and devised a recovery plan which stated that I would not have sex outside of my committed relationship. Alcohol and drugs were not addressed. I stayed sexually sober for four and a half months while trying to control or limit my drinking. It was hard work! Finally, one night during a very stressful period, I had a little alcohol to relax. Suddenly, I felt myself losing the willingness to stay on my plan. I was with my lover that night, but all I could think about was acting out. The desire to stay sober didn't return in the morning, but I DID make a phone call at 7 AM, and was having breakfast with a Program friend at 7:15. I met with two other Program friends during the day and by the evening SCA meeting my willingness had returned. I vowed not to drink anything for at least a week. One week later, I picked up a drink, lost my willingness again, DID NOT make a phone call, and went out on a month and a half binge. My sponsor took me to an AA meeting. I started to go to those rooms daily, but when I acted out, I drank. When I drank, I acted out. My acting out was worse than it had ever been. As they say, my disease had been doing push-ups in the hall while I sat in the meeting rooms. I finally bottomed out on that New Year's Eve. That night, the champagne that I had counted on to relieve my guilt and shame only depressed me. By Grace, I was finally able to admit that if I continued to drink and drug, I could never stay sexually sober. I stopped acting out and took my last drink on that same day. The withdrawal from compulsive sex -- the feeling of always being on the edge of slipping -- took almost two and a half years to abate. With each choice of sitting with a feeling, instead of avoiding it, I get stronger. The more time that passes since my last slip, the safer I feel. I ask for daily strength and guidance from my Higher Power and continue to work on myself, using the Steps as a guide. If I don't continuously work the Program, I believe I'll slip again. I go to meetings daily (either SCA or AA), and I give away what I've been given through a lot of service. A prayer, a phone call, a meeting, and service are the powerful tools that keep me sober. Today, my life is filled with promise. Continued sobriety and working the Program has helped to raise my self esteem. The relationship with my lover is flourishing. I'm happier than I've ever been and I believe that if I stay on this path, I'll continue to experience the happiness which I believe is God's will for me.