Marriage

Top Tip 020 – Newlyweds and Sexual Sin

by Jeff Fisher on April 5, 2012

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Let’s face it – sexual sin is a blow to any marriage.  But for newlyweds, it can be traumatic.  A young marriage is shaken.  They start asking questions like:

“Where did this come from?”

“Did I marry the right person?”

“Is our marriage over?”

We want to offer our encouragement and insight.  We want to explore why this is so hard, and share some reasons why the early years are the best time to work on sexual struggles in a marriage.

THIS IS NOT THE END OF THE WORLD OR YOUR MARRIAGE
We want to say, first of all:  you can get through it!  Your marriage is not hopeless.

You’re not alone.  Sexual sin affects most couples.  Our backgrounds are full of negative sexual messages and experiences.  Internet pornography is prevalent.  You are not the only ones faced with a sexual issue in your marriage.

Many have worked through it.  There are many, many marriages that have been able to work through sexual addiction in a healthy way.  It doesn’t matter how deep it goes, you can work through it.

Great help is available. You will be able to find the resources you need to work through this.  Our Porn to Purity website has resources for men, women, couples, and ministers.  We have links to ministries, counselors, and support groups that will be able to come alongside you in this crisis.

There are people who are actively talking about their sexual struggles. Most of us did not grow up in environments where sexual matters were talked about openly or in a healthy way.  But we live in a time where many individuals and couples are reaching out with their stories.  Our website is an extension of our own recovery journey and there are many others.

This was not a surprise to God. You may have been caught off guard with the reveal of sexual sin, but God wasn’t.  God may be the one who allowed your spouse to get found out.  He may have prompted you to walk in on your spouse while he was on the computer or catch that email.  He is here and He can help you recover from this.  He’s done it for so many already.

WHY THE REVEAL IS SO HARD
It’s happening in the front of your marriage
– This is not a chapter you expected to have to go through as a couple, certainly not in the early years of your marriage.  Now should be a time for the Honeymoon Phase or the First Years – the time when you are still riding the waves of having two lives become one.  Sexual sin is a major disruption to this bliss.

Your relationship is younger and more fragile – Even if you and your spouse have been dating or engaged for years, your married life is very young.  Your investment in your marriage is not as strong as it will be 15 years from now.  You are less mature relationally and emotionally.  You have not weathered many storms together and built up strength in your marriage.

Doubts – The news of a spouse’s sexual struggles creates doubts and serious questions to any marriage.  It’s not unusual to ask, “Did I marry the right person?” or “Did I make a mistake?” Both of you have recently stepped into the scary territory of marriage.  You are combining bank accounts, consolidating your possessions, and living under one roof.  Sharing your lives together for the first time brings a lot of instability.  Sexual struggles bring another layer to a relationship that’s already causing you to feel uneasy.

Who did I marry? – We feel like we know everything there is to know about our spouse.  We feel like our spouse has been honest with us and talked about their issues.  This is not the case with most marriages.  We keep the skeletons to ourselves and hide parts of our lives in dark corners, even from our spouse.  There are parts of our family background and sexual history that we probably haven’t talked about.  We probably didn’t think it would affect anything.  Bottom line, the real person we married is different from the perfect person we thought we were saying “I do” to.

WHY THE REVEAL IS GOOD FOR YOUR YOUNG MARRIAGE
A challenge you now have to tackle together
– This may be your first big challenge.  It is an opportunity to face it head on, surrendering to God and getting the help you need.  God can take this challenge and help you get healthy in ways you can’t imagine.  If you and your spouse work this, you will thank God for allowing this to happen early in your marriage.

A quick lesson in baggage – Eventually we figure out that the husband and the wife bring their past baggage into the marriage.  Your spouse’s sexual sin has accelerated this process. Finding the answer to “Why did he do this?” is not easy.  You have to go backwards.   Sexual struggles have roots in family background, early exposure to pornography, wounds and unmet needs.  Both the husband and the wife will discover junk they brought into the marriage and ways that they contribute to an unhealthy marriage.

A critical lesson in true intimacy – Intimacy is the degree of knowing one another and being known by one another.  Physical intimacy is only one part of intimacy.  You’ll find through the process of recovery that God wants you to develop relational, emotional, intellectual, and spiritual intimacy.

Mr. Perfect he’s not (neither are you) – Most of us have idealized dreams and expectations about our spouse.  We think our spouse will complete us and meet all our needs.  Sexual sin often shatters the image we have of our spouse.  Our spouse is a struggler.  He does not have his life together in this area.  A couple that recovers well will have to reset their dreams and expectations.  We realign to reality and not the fantasy image we had of our spouse.

Our lies about sex are busted up – Recovery will help you uncover lies you or your spouse have believed about sex.  Lies such as:

  • When I’m married I can have all the sex I want.
  • A good sex life is the gauge of a good marriage.
  • Marriage will cure my lust problems.
  • Sex will make me feel wanted, loved, and valued.
  • Sex is the ultimate high in a relationship.
  • I won’t have any more needs after my sex life is fulfilled.

Many couples never figure these out.  You are fortunate for learning these lessons.  They will help you have the healthy sexual intimacy that God desires for you.

The secret sexual sin and cover up would be much worse later on – Some couples have to deal with decades of sin, cover-up and lying.  The betrayal felt and broken trust is tremendous to longer marriages.  Sure, it’s terrible now, but not as terrible as it would have been if you had found out 5, 10, 20 years down the road.  Repenting and turning the marriage around is much easier in the early years of marriage.

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE – DID YOU MEAN IT?
I (Jeff) have performed countless weddings.  Most couples include in their vows to one another “for better or for worse”.  Sexual sin brings a “worse” condition to a marriage.  You weren’t prepared for it were you?

You and your spouse have to decide if you really meant what you said.  God takes your vows seriously.  He believes has brought you together.

He has not abandoned us in spite of all of our sins past, present and future.  He calls us to a high level of commitment to our marriage.  He calls us to work this problem together.

And this may not be the worst thing you have to face together.  It might be the other spouse’s junk next time.  It might be a family issue.  It might be a tragedy or period of unemployment.  There are many hardships that hit a marriage.

You can get through this!  God and others can help you navigate this overwhelming reveal.

jeff@porntopurity.com

@porntopurity on Twitter

Call-in voicemail line line:  (321) 5-PURITY


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One of the top tips I’ve been picking up has to do with the focus of my recovery and where my priorities are.  The central focus for a while is going to be on ME.  Not me for selfish purposes, but me to go from unhealthy to healthy.

I can’t try to fix my marriage or fix my wife or fix my friends or make a proactive dent in the porn industry if I’m not healthy.

I’ve talked to many guys who have not looked at porn in a few weeks or a few months that thing they’re cured and ready to help their wives.  The reality is they’re probably not anywhere close.

Here’s the pecking order I want to share with you:

  • Work on getting sober
  • Work on your part of the recovery
  • Work on your marriage
  • Minister to others and make an impact.

I want us to think of these areas as buckets.  Early on (say the first 3 months) almost all of my energy is poured into the Sobriety Bucket.  Gradually, I’m able to pour myself into the Recovery Bucket.  And as I get healthy, I can pour more energy back into my Marriage Bucket, and eventually use my experience to the Glory of God to help others struggling sexually in the Ministry Bucket.

Let’s walk through the buckets in a little more detail.

BUCKET 1:  Sobriety Bucket
I’m no good to myself, my marriage, or anyone else if I’m still acting out.

Sobriety is about stopping bad behaviors

I can strongarm it for a few days, some call it white-knuckling.  When we gut through it.  Our will power can sustain us for a short while, but we’ll quickly find that our sexual desires overpower us.  I have to link up with a good support system and with the divine power of God to make sobriety work long-term.

I also have to Check the Nouns.  This is when I drop the people, places and things that are dragging me down, and add into my life people, places, and things that will help.

Sobriety is putting distance between me and my acting out.  It’s the only way I can get strong.  Each additional day that I say “no” to unhealthy sexual behaviors is one more day of strength built up.

A support team is essential for the withdrawals that we are going to feel.  It hurts to say “no”, deny ourselves, and sacrifice.  It hurts our brain and our body when we’re not feeding it the “feel good” chemicals that come with looking at porn and having an orgasm.  It hurts emotionally when I severe the attachments I have to porn.

Sobriety is always my first goal.

BUCKET 2:  My Recovery Bucket
Some sponsors and groups stop at sobriety.  It’s only the beginning.

Alcoholics Anonymous sometimes describe a person as a “dry drunk”.  This is a person who is sober from drinking alcohol, but is trying to medicate their pain with other substances.  The new drug of choice might be food, smoking, relationships or their job.  They are taking care of the behavior, but not the struggles and motivations underneath that are driving the behavior.  And I would add, the deep spiritual cravings that only God can fill.

Recovery is a process, not a “next step”.  I start working on recovery the instant I repent and choose to go the right direction.  Sobriety is a part of recovery, but the guts of recovery has to do with getting healthy emotionally, physically, intellectually, relationally and spiritually.  Getting healthy means I have to unlearn the lies I believe and replace them with truth.  I have to face my pain, admit my hurts, and seek healing.

My recovery was intensified greatly and sped along when I started going to a Christian counselor and began attending a support group.

The biggest barriers to me getting healthy are internal not external.  Recovery is an intense focus on my heart, mind and spirit.

BUCKET 3:  Marriage Bucket
Again, this is not a “next step”, but a major shift of my energy and commitment.  I can work on my marriage during my sobriety and during my recovery, but it cannot be the main focus.

How can I work deeply on my marriage or help others if I’m not healthy?

At no time is there a Work on My Spouse Bucket. That’s not my job.  That’s God’s territory and that’s my spouse’s territory.  Working on my marriage has to do with me rebuilding trust, building intimacy with my spouse and children and serving my spouse and children, not me telling my spouse what he or she ought to be doing.

I can encourage my spouse to get help and make changes, but my job is to do everything I can to make positive contributions to my marriage.

Early in my recovery, my wife and I went to marital counseling.  We were not ready to do the hard work on our marriage, but counseling helped us navigate the Crisis Stage and create an environment in our marriage where healing could take place.

The Work on Your Marriage stage is about restoration, forgiveness, getting healthy as a couple, pursuing healing, and regrowth.

BUCKET 4:  Ministry Bucket
I think the guys I talk to that have been sober for a few weeks and immediately want to jump to this stage have a lot of passion and zeal.  I applaud their desires.  But they do not have the power and health necessary to take this big step.  If I’m not sober, not healthy, and my marriage is crumbling… how effective am I really going to be focusing on others.  I don’t have the energy to give.

Early recovery needs to be about me.  If I jump too soon to any of these stages I will still make it about me, and I end up making things worse.  It has to do with my healing and health.  All of us are designed to be used by God in mighty ways.  He can take our sexual struggles and recovery and use them to minister to other, but the majority of this comes years later.

Focus on getting well.  Make it your goal to be as well as possible and to heal as much as possible.  When I’m well, I can glorify God like never before.

We men are quick to get passionate about the things we are learning and are aggressive in trying to help others.   Don’t rush your ministry.  It distracts you from your more important goals.  You trying to help others could also be a subconscious of trying to take the focus off of you.  We always feel better about ourselves when we are the teacher and someone else is the learner.  Many of us are bad at sitting in the Learner’s Chair, and the Listening Chair, and the Go to the Painful Places Chair.

How do you know you’re ready to pour major attention into helping others?  When you’ve got some sobriety, some health, and you’re doing everything you can to work on your marriage.

jeff@porntopurity.com

@porntopurity on Twitter

Call-in voicemail line line:  (321) 5-PURITY

14 Ways We Justify an Emotional Affair

by Jeff Fisher on February 17, 2012

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In her book Entangled:  A Woman’s Guide to Recognizing Your Emotional Affair and Restoring Your Marriage, Amy J. Bennett shares a great list of ways we justify an emotional affair.

  1. It’s just pretend, fun, no harm
  2. This could never happen in real life
  3. Not physical, so OK
  4. I’m helping him; he’s helping me
  5. Helps my marriage
  6. I would never cheat on my husband
  7. Not even physically together
  8. He’s my real soul mate
  9. Better than my husband
  10. My husband doesn’t deserve my attention
  11. Husband deserves my betrayal
  12. Just friends
  13. My husband would tell me if he has a problem
  14. Enough love for both

Available at www.entangledbook.com or on Amazon.com

OTHER POSTS

Jeff’s book review of Entangled

How Do You Know You’re Getting Close to an Emotional Affair?

The 4 Stages of an Emotional Affair

14 Ways We Justify an Emotional Affair

Four Stages of An Emotional Affair

by Jeff Fisher on February 17, 2012

{ 0 comments }

In her book Entangled:  A Woman’s Guide to Recognizing Your Emotional Affair and Restoring Your Marriage, Amy J. Bennett gives us some insight on how an emotional affair develops.

  1. More than friend thinking – It goes beyond average with this person.
  2. What ifs – Fantasies kick in.  You wonder what it’s like to be with this person romantically.
  3. Discussing feelings – You begin having conversations you don’t have with anyone else, sharing your feelings and longings.  You are trying to get to know them on a personal level.
  4. Doubts about your current spouse – You are giving up your current relationship for this new one.  You are convincing yourself that life would be better with this new person.

Available at www.entangledbook.com or on Amazon.com

OTHER POSTS

Jeff’s book review of Entangled

How Do You Know You’re Getting Close to an Emotional Affair?

The 4 Stages of an Emotional Affair

14 Ways We Justify an Emotional Affair

In her book Entangled:  A Woman’s Guide to Recognizing Your Emotional Affair and Restoring Your Marriage, Amy J. Bennett gives us some insight on how to know you’re getting close to an emotional affair.

  • Your accelerated heart beat gives you away.
  • Your lack of appetite is noticeable.
  • You feel exhausted.
  • You think about him all the time.
  • Your daydreams are consumed with him.
  • You wish you’d never met your husband or you fantasize about his death.
  • Songs make you think of him.  You may share lyrics.
  • You write poems or stories reflecting feelings or fantasies.
  • You think of him when you dress or fix your hair.
  • You confess dreams or feelings for each other.
  • You find reasons to give gifts.
  • You desire to see him or being where you know he will be.
  • Find reasons to see each other.
  • You allow yourself to be alone with him.
  • When you’re not together you remain connected.  Your spouse is unaware.
  • Friends and family remain clueless.
  • You refer to each other as girlfriend / boyfriend or office wife / husband.

Available at www.entangledbook.com or on Amazon.com

OTHER POSTS

Jeff’s book review of Entangled

How Do You Know You’re Getting Close to an Emotional Affair?

The 4 Stages of an Emotional Affair

14 Ways We Justify an Emotional Affair

Entangled – A Woman’s Guide to Recognizing Your Emotional Affair and Restoring Your Marriage

February 14, 2012

ENTANGLED BOOK REVIEW Amy J. Bennett Entangled:  A Woman’s Guide to Recognizing Your Emotional Affair and Restoring Your Marriage QUICK SUMMARY: Author Amy J. Bennett shares her story of falling into an emotional affair with a co-worker.  She gives a thorough analysis of how her emotional affair happened, how it progressed and the points of [...]

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Top Tip 006 – Lust Hurts My Intimacy

January 23, 2012

  Press HERE to Play Podcast or Download – I was thinking this morning back to the times when my wife and I were struggling in our intimacy during our first 8-10 years of our marriage.  Our counselor recently asked ups about our intimacy during our first 6 months of marriage and then how things [...]

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Recovery NO-NOs: Diversion

November 18, 2011

Let’s call attention to a tactic that many us use to minimize our sin. It’s called diversion.

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I’m Trying to Stop Looking at Porn, Pray For Me

November 15, 2011

Marsha and I get several emails from Porn to Purity readers that say: “I’m struggling with pornography.  I’m trying to get out.  Pray for me.” Some are testing the waters to see if we are really out here and will respond.  We are, and we do. Others are reaching out for the first time, and [...]

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5 Reasons Why I Got Married – Some Healthy, Some Not

September 14, 2011

Marsha and I recently finished leading a study by John and Stasi Eldredge called Love and War:  Finding the Marriage You’ve Always Dreamed Of. We went through the DVD study with seven other couples in our church. One of the exercises asked us to think about the reasons we got married.  Here’s my list. Companion [...]

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Four Types of Intimacy Building

August 23, 2011

Today I wanted to share some intimacy builders for you and your spouse.

Read the full article →