I WILL KNOW A NEW HAPPINESS... By Scott W. My addiction started like so many others - in a dysfunctional family. My mom had a drinking problem that started when I was in the fourth grade. As her addiction grew, mine took root. I discovered masturbation quite my mistake while taking a bath. I soon learned how to use it to make myself feel better. I was not that aware of that at the time, though. I had my first sexual experience at a birthday party for my sister. All of the older kids thought it would be funny if they got me drunk. After two beers I was totally wasted. I remember trying to put pajamas on a yucca plant and feed it beer. (My first love!) One of my sister's friends took me up to put me to bed and that night I was molested for the first time. Mark started to set up situations where we would be alone. The sex was always one sided. Mark would use me just long enough to get off and then he was gone. We continued to have sex for the next seven years. One night, Mark had taken me from a party to the playground of a church where I got to kiss him for the first time. When I kissed him, he told me to never do it again... because that was not what I was good for. I took the opportunity to have sex with a neighbor one night. He had been out drinking with my brother and I molested him after he fell asleep. I had discovered a new way of taking control. I get them drunk and then I take advantage of them. I did this time after time. I got caught in the act one night by the brother of one of the guys I was molesting. The next day, I got beat up in front of all of our friends. That was the first time I knew shame. I went into high school a total love addict. I was in love with over fifty guys. I wanted them to notice me, but it never happened. When it became obvious that I was not getting anywhere with the guys, I decided to get close to them another way. I would get into the locker room at night and take the gym clothes of the guys I liked. I had a way into the locker room any time I wanted in. I found myself locked in there night after night, totally wrapped in a fantasy world. I ended up with over one hundred pair of underwear under my bed - not to mention the sports uniforms hidden all over my room. At home, I started to do the same thing. If I liked someone, I would case their house for a few days and when the opportunity came up, I would break in and take their underwear for my collection. I have broken into nine or ten homes. I was now living a life of secrets, crimes and lies. One day, I overheard someone talking about the parks and malls as places to pick up sex partners. I wasted no time in starting my search. Once I found the acting out places, I threw myself into anonymous sex with everything I had. I was soon acting out with eight to twelve men every time I was there. I met my lover in the park acting out one day. He and I moved in together three months later. I thought this was the answer to all my problems. I wanted to stop acting out so bad and I came very close to getting some sobriety. But, only weeks after Randy and I got together, I was looking for ways to act out. I had stopped having sex with Mark only a few weeks before Randy and I met. I had had sex with several hundred men in the previous four years. I was not aware of how difficult it was going to be to stop. My answer came when we had the opportunity to move. This would be my way to start fresh. About a week after we moved to the desert, Randy told me about all the acting out places. He had grown up there and he had no idea what he was telling me. I'm sure I would have found them soon enough on my own, however. In the seven years that Randy and I owned our business in the desert, I had slipped to the lowest depths. I was arrested for climbing on the roof of a gay hotel and trying to look into the skylights. After I was released that night, I went back and acted out there. I acted out a different fantasy in each room. In less than two months, I had totally trashed the hotel. I was sure that I was HIV+. After all, I had to go with the odds. I had acted out with over 1000 men in the desert and I was often less than careful. There is a great danger in presuming. As it turns out, I was using that HIV status as an excuse to act out even more - and I'm negative! Sometimes, I would have to get drunk before I would act out and this would often lead to my being raped and abused by strangers. Without Randy knowing anything about my behaviors, I was beginning to feel depressed, guilty and worthless. I was making deals with myself only to see them go down in failure. I knew I needed to move again if I was going to stop. We moved to the beach and settled into a new life. In such a small town I knew I would be free from this addiction. That was true until Randy and I went to the beach. Randy came back from a walk and told me I should see what was going on in the bushes. That day, I resisted the temptation to go check it out. But, by my next day off, it was business as usual. By the end of that summer, I was worse than I had been in the desert. On our tenth anniversary together, I told Randy all my secrets. I was prepared to move out and live on my own. Randy just listened and we talked for most of that day and all the way through our anniversary dinner. During that dinner, he told me he would stay with me and try to work it out. I went to my first SCA meeting on a Saturday night in Los Angeles. The drive was 180 miles, round trip. I didn't mind, though. I had found a group that would understand and support me. I became literature person at that meeting a few months later, and I loved taking home the literature to read. Just before Christmas, I had a slip and I got caught in a public restroom acting out. I was alone, but I was definitely breaking the law. When the police officer found me doing what I was doing, I found out what hitting bottom is really all about. The officer asked me if I was on drugs or alcohol. I told him, no. He asked if he could look in my car just to make sure. I told him he could. He slowly opened the literature box, not knowing what to expect. He asked me to explain the literature. After I told him about my meetings in Los Angeles, he said they were obviously needed in my life. He let me clean up the mess I had made, and, in leaving, he suggested that I start a meeting in the area because there were others he had seen who needed the same help. Now a year has passed and I have celebrated more sobriety that I could ever have imagined. I do still have slips and difficult moments, but they are far less a part of my life now. Randy is still with me and I am truly grateful for all he has done to help me through this. With the help and understanding of my mom and dad and all my brothers and sisters, as well as the countless numbers of people at the meetings, I will know a new happiness. Thank you, Scott...