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April 26, 2010Female Sex Addict: Not an Oxymoron
Marnie Ferree's No Stones: Women Redeemed from Sexual Addiction challenges easy assumptions about who gets addicted and why.
Biblical scholars have yet to determine if the woman caught in adultery (John 8:1–11) was a sex addict. But Nashville-based clinical therapist Marnie Ferree says the woman’s shame and social status make her an apt archetype for women struggling with sex addiction. For one, women sex addicts often face a double dose of shame because they believe they as women aren't supposed to have sexual sin. And because the number of female addicts is relatively small (expert Patrick Carnes estimates 3 percent of the U.S. population, with male addicts composing 8 percent), few books and recovery groups are available. “I tell some of my colleagues, such as Mark Laaser, ‘you wrote a great book, but the pronouns are wrong,’ ” says Ferree.
Thankfully, the story of the adulterous woman in John’s gospel reminds sex addicts that not even their deepest secret is outside Christ’s healing touch. Ferree knows this from personal experience, because she is a recovering sex addict — something she hid for 20 years until an HPV diagnosis in 1990 brought it to light and kick-started her recovery. Today, alongside her husband of 29 years, Ferree runs Bethesda Workshops, which aims to provide “Christian treatment for sex addiction recovery.” Their dramatic story appears in No Stones: Women Redeemed from Sexual Addiction, Ferree’s immensely practical, deeply biblical book for female sex addicts, out this month from InterVarsity Press. Ferree spoke recently with Her.meneutics editor Katelyn Beaty.
What is sex addiction? How is it different from, say, porn addiction?
There’s no difference between porn addiction and sex addiction. Sex addiction is an umbrella term; the particular form of acting out, whether it’s pornography, affairs, sex chat rooms, prostitutes, picking up people in bars, is immaterial. These are all just one manifestation.
The main characteristics of sex addiction (and any addiction, for that matter) are
Obsession: the behavior becomes the organizing principle of life. The addict is obsessed with acting out, trying to hide the acting out, and figuring out when she can act out again.
Compulsion: continuing behavior in spite of your best efforts to stop. You keep doing what you don't want to do.
Continuing despite adverse consequences: you continue behavior that clearly isn't in your best interest. You pay a price for your behavior (in terms of relationships, jobs, shame) and yet you keep doing it.
Several times you describe female sex addiction as an intimacy disorder: the search for “love, touch, affirmation, affection, and approval.” Is male sex addiction also at root an intimacy disorder?
Yes, absolutely.
Doesn’t that challenge some assumptions about male sex addicts, that what they seek is the physical sexual release?
To be clear, there’s no doubt that [the desire for physical sex] is a powerful force, and some women really just like sex. And some men really just like sex. And it’s still bigger than that. That’s where the Christian framework differs from our clinical colleagues and the professional associations that deal with this issue, because for a Christian, genital-based sex is not enough. Even if it’s just with your husband, God longs for us to have so much more than genital-based sex. That one-flesh union is spiritual and emotional and [about] companionship and fun and recreation, and God longs for us to have so much more than orgasms. So even someone who has a higher sex drive than others — and there is some validity to that concept, they are wired differently — but still on a continuum, it’s a pretty narrow one. It’s not nearly that wide of a continuum.
At many points in No Stones, the language of addiction reminded me of alcoholism. How does sex addiction compare with other addictions?
Many addictionists consider sex addiction, along with food addiction, a core addiction. They are core because they are central to who we are and to survival. Obviously you can never drink alcohol or smoke a cigarette, and you’ll be fine. But you do have to eat, and we’re made as sexual beings — that doesn’t mean we have to have sex, but sexuality is part of who we are and our automatic nervous system response. That makes recovery from either one of those significantly harder. A sex addict is, neurochemically speaking, constantly carrying within her own body her drug.
Is sex addiction best understood as sin or as a neurological disease?
The answer is yes. Unquestionably this is sinful behavior. There’s no getting around that or trying to make excuses. And it does follow a disease model in terms of having predictable neurochemistry involved, predictable withdrawal involved, and being progressive without intervention.
In terms of the mental illness category, sex addiction is what’s known as an attachment disorder. Attachment describes a person's experience with early caregivers and how well the child "attaches" to her parents. When parents aren't attuned to the child's needs, when they fail to make eye contact with her, when they don't touch her affectionately, when they don't respond to her verbal cues — the child doesn't bond adequately with her parents. She doesn't develop the sense that the world is a safe place and others will be there for her and take care of her needs. These early experiences (especially those before age 5) imprint the child emotionally and even neurochemically. Sex addiction is rooted in attachment failures, which is why it's often described as an intimacy disorder. A woman doesn't learn from her parents about healthy intimacy, and she tries to fill that in unhealthy ways.
How would you advise a single Christian sex addict to proceed in recovery?
Bless her heart. It is hard. I think obviously to proceed in integrity and holiness, I think to really focus on her healthy relationships, and they can be of opposite gender, but to be certain about what’s driving them and what the foundation is. And I think to embrace her sexuality, and by that I mean to be very aware of and in touch with her feminine side, whether that’s her appearance or her creative side or her athletic side. To really be a whole person and not just focus on “Well I’ve gotta find a man.”
What do sex addicts need most from the people who love them?
They need loved ones to educate themselves about sex addiction, especially about women. They need to understand the extraordinary challenge that the female sex addict is facing. Second, female sex addicts need their loved ones to be working on themselves. My husband would say that he enabled me for years by his passivity. I’m still totally responsible for what I did, but it sure would have helped had he been healthy enough to put his foot down and say, “I am not going to live with a wife who is unfaithful to me.” That’s what I mean by doing their own work: setting healthy boundaries, learning themselves how to address their own attachments and the impact they have had in their own life.

Comments
Thanks for the great article. It was eye-opening.
Posted By: Andrew | April 26, 2010 3:52 PM
have you looked into bi polar disease - have daughter with this and when she is manic she is over sexed - dressing sexy, etc.
Posted By: jan s | April 26, 2010 6:03 PM
A great interview with a great woman!
Posted By: Mavis Humes Baird | April 26, 2010 9:10 PM
@Jan--that's a great question. I've written a novel (unpublished) that deals with a young woman who displays hypersexual behavior/dressing/etc. while she's manic. AFter having done tons of research on this, I know that what you and your daughter are going through is difficult. There is hope, though. You have my sympathy and prayers.
@ Marnie, I commend you for your honesty and heart to help others who have struggled the same way you have. It's not an issue many people like to think about--why are we forever avoiding hard-to-deal-with issues?--but it's clear that it must be faced head-on. I pray that many people, churched or not, will read your book, be helped, and give God glory for restoring and redeeming them.
Posted By: Laura K. Droege | April 28, 2010 1:27 PM
Sex addicts, both men and women, surround us. They are real people, many times they are just kind and loving people but are unable to attach and enjoy healthy intimacy due to adverse childhood experiences. For true healing and restoration of the identity given at birth by God, those truamatic incidents must be resolved. This usually requires the assistance of another. That is why God instructs us to bear our burdens with one another. Not every person is equipped to bear the burden of helping abused individuals but, thankfully, out of His great love God has called and equipped some of us to bear that burden and bring His healing into these precious lives. Yes, their are consequences for the behavior but none so great that Romans 8:28 does not apply. When we accept His call on our lives and seek His purpose we are able to see something good come from the past wounds that caused this inability for healthy intimacy. Thankfully, a l l things are possible when we put God first.
Posted By: Nancy Anderson | May 14, 2010 10:01 AM
This is beyond stupid. Diagnosing abstinent Christians, who have never had sex even once in their lives, as sex addicts, is like diagnosing a man who hasn't eaten for 30 days as a food addict. The lack of common sense in this article is reprehensible.
Posted By: Jeremy | May 23, 2010 4:26 PM
As a sex addiction therapist, I applaud your blog post, Marnie. Women have a much bigger challenge to face than men do if they have the problem of obsessive and compulsive sexual cravings as a form of achieving control over their anxieties.
In the same way that men who are raped have the stigma of being in the category of people who "don't get raped," women who have a sexual addiction have the stigma of being people who "can't be addicted to sex."
Marnie and Katelyn, you've touched on a topic not nearly given the attention it so deserves. Thank you for your wisdom.
Jeremy, you are right that the possibility of "abstinent Christians, who have never had sex even once in their lives, as [being] sex addicts, is like diagnosing a man who hasn't eaten for 30 days as a food addict." It may not make sense, but it's accurate. An alcoholic that doesn't drink is still an alcoholic. A sex addict that abstains from sex is still a sex addict. For more information, see http://www.sexintegrate.com.
Regards,
Paul Shepard, PhD, CSAT
Oakland, CA
Posted By: Paul P. Shepard, Ph.D. | December 14, 2010 5:33 PM
wow, this article is so true. i am a sex addict struggling to break free. even i haven't realized what all the issues are surrounding my addictions. i have been told so many times that i need to just stop. no one understands that it is such a deep struggle at the core of my being. thank you for bringing awareness to this issue!
Posted By: elizabeth | January 13, 2011 10:48 AM
nice article and full of insights.. addicts can be a member of our family or our friends, our neighbors anybody can be a victim, i believe it's not their choice to become an addict. i just want to imply that those person either female or male regardless who was the highest ratio are deserve to have a second chance,an understanding and love.
Posted By: evaone | April 7, 2011 1:37 AM