"How Do I Handle My Husband's Porn Addiction?"
For the past year or so, I have been recording and watching where my husband visits hardcore porn sites. This has been extremely painful for me. What is wrong with me? He never seems interested in me, I have provided a good sexual relationship for us. He tries to hide this, I have confronted him twice, each time to be told "they aren't real people" -- YES they are! He stays up until 3 or 4 a.m. each night and views this stuff. He sleeps until 2 or 3 in the afternoon. We have a daughter who is four, I wish he would spend more time with us. I have also viewed conversations he has had with coworkers regarding women he works with. I have viewed emails he has sent to online "whores" including pics and descriptions on what he wold like to do with them. I am tired and starting to feel a little numb to all this. My doctors have told me to "learn to accept it or just leave". This is a little more complicated than that. I have asked for counselling once -- he is TOTALLY against it. I am about to give up and ask him to leave, do you think this is too excessive and that I should give him another chance? I am tired and don't want to deal with it anymore. I hate that porn has ruined our marriage. Thank God for my closest friends and for the occassional comment from other men. Help me, please.
I am so very, very sorry that you have to deal with your husband's addiction. PLEASE KNOW--this is not about you. There is nothing wrong with you. This is about him. You could be as gorgeous as a supermodel with the world's most perfect body and he would still have the addiction, because it's doing something for him that is completely separate from you.
I want to suggest some excellent resources for you to help you cope with a situation you can't change AND to bring glory to God in the process.
Focus on the Family has a website divided into two sections: one for the strugglers, the other for the wives. www.pureintimacy.org
Porn-Free.org has a helpful essay, "Help for Christian Spouses of Sex Addicts" at www.porn-free.org/spousehelp_christian.htm
There is an online support group at SettingCaptivesFree.com for wives of men caught in a porn addiction. It started as a support group for spouses of those going through their online course to overcome this addiction, but it's not limited to those whose husbands are seeking help. Go to www.settingcaptivesfree.com and click on the Communications link, then Spouse Discussion group.
One of our Probe board members, Henry Rogers, has written a wonderful
book on this called The Silent War. Having researched this difficult
topic thoroughly, he says the first thing wives need to know is that
IT'S NOT YOUR FAULT. IT'S NOT ABOUT YOU.
In fact, in a chapter called "The Wounded Wife," he reprints "Emily's
Story":
"I write this out of love. Love for the porn addict, love for his wife,
and most of all for the children. I pray this chapter is used for God's
glory and honor, that it might somehow prevent families from being
destroyed.
"I remember listening to a panel of women James Dobson had on his radio
program. They talked about being married for over 20 years and
discovering their husbands were involved in pornography. It seemed so
unfathomable to me that someone could be deceived for so long. I
remember thinking how stupid those women were. Little did I realize I
would be one of those women less than a month later.
"It was like a birth process. Pain, agony, sweat, tears, hours of
intense hurt, and finally truth. My husband is a porn addict. I heard
it. I reacted. For two weeks I was numb. Numb to after 20+ years knowing
something was wrong, but not knowing what. A relief to finally know the
truth. A relief to now live in reality — in light and truth rather than
the unreality of darkness and deception. My husband would never tell me
the secrets of his past before our marriage. I always thought if I loved
him enough some day he would tell me. If I loved him enough. . . .
"We always had a difficult marriage. My husband was always withdrawn and
quiet. I thought I could help him. I was outgoing, attractive, and
spontaneous. In our marriage I could never do anything good enough. I
was constantly criticized and put down. I thought it was me so I started
a self-improvement program, more counseling, more semi nars. I learned
more was never enough. My world stopped, knowing something had died in
me.
"My husband always seemed to be "tuned out" — in another world. He
worked long hours and often fell into bed at 2 a.m. I missed him. I
begged him to come home. I raised the kids as he pursued his career. I
told myself I needed to help him. I poured my heart and soul into his
endeavor — supporting and encouraging. There were still problems. When
he was home he would go into his office and read his books, newspapers,
and reports, and again I would cry myself to sleep. I had others
confront him. I gave this man every chance to tell me about his
pornography addiction. Lies weave other lies. Secrets kill. Comparisons
kill. I feel every time he looked at an image and masturbated he took
away a part of me that God intended to be mine. I remember seeing him
masturbate and he was in his own world, set on his own pleasure,
stimulated and excited by images of women he didn't know. It was a
feeling of betrayal and heart-wrenching emptiness that a woman feels
when she learns that her husband is living a lie.
"Pornography tears at the very thread of a woman and her femininity. My
heart was ripped and uprooted — thrown somewhere into a desert with no
place to find refuge. It's as if I wasn't enough. Not sexy enough. Not
beautiful enough. Not thin enough. Not exciting enough. Women get
significance from their relationships with their husbands and when he
turns to another for satisfaction it cuts her deeply at the core.
"I started buying sexy nighties, acting sexier, and suddenly I realized
I was bowing down to an idol. It hurt that he chose not to tell me ...
to not allow me to come alongside him as his helper. To this day he
refuses to see the pain that he caused. It amazes me as a wife how we
are involved in every other area of a man's life — his profit margin,
his ability to manage, everything — but when it comes to pornography,
it's hidden in deception. A man's way seems right to a man. Porn
addiction is very selfish. It takes and takes and doesn't give back.
It's all for the user's pleasure.
"Another lie is that porn does not hurt anyone. Such a web of deception.
'And they, having become callous, have given themselves over to
sensuality, for the practice of every kind of impurity with greediness'
(Eph. 4:19). There are consequences and the stakes get higher. It takes
one lie to cover another. It saddens me how men can compartmentalize
this sin. He has the little wife over here with precious children and
this nasty sin over here for his private time, justifying it because he
still loves his wife and children. You can't walk simultaneously in the
darkness and the light.
"I'm a wife. I'm a wife of a porn addict. I'm relieved to know what it
is, though I always knew something was wrong. Tears. Pain. Disgust.
Betrayal. To face the death of a husband would be better than this. A
widow has the support of the church. A porn addict leaves shame and
divorce. It would be easier if he were dead. We wouldn't have to face
the public humiliation and shame.
"Today is a new day. It's early morning and I must get breakfast for my
children. I take each day as it comes now. Just for today. My husband
still chooses his sin and refuses to take responsibility for it. I have
to let him go and let the Lord deal with him. I can no longer be his
excuse, his enabler. It's a new day and I'm moving on and my Deliverer
is by my side. He is faithful. He will never leave me nor forsake me. He
will never break His promise. To a woman who has been betrayed, this is
my comfort. Hear my cry."
The Lord bless you as you seek Him on this. Again, I am so sorry.
Sue Bohlin
See Also:
Pornography by Kerby Anderson
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About the Author Sue Bohlin is an associate speaker with Probe Ministries. She attended the University of Illinois, and has been a Bible teacher and conference speaker for over 30 years. She serves as a Mentor Mom and speaker for MOPS (Mothers of Pre-Schoolers), and on the board and as a small group leader of Living Hope Ministries, a Christ-centered outreach to those dealing with unwanted homosexuality. She is also a professional calligrapher and the webmistress for Probe Ministries; but most importantly, she is the wife of Dr. Ray Bohlin and the mother of their two grown sons.
What is Probe? Probe Ministries is a non-profit ministry whose mission is to assist the church in renewing the minds of believers with a Christian worldview and to equip the church to engage the world for Christ. Probe fulfills this mission through our Mind Games conferences for youth and adults, our 3-minute daily radio program, and our extensive Web site at www.probe.org. Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by contacting us at: Probe Ministries 1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100 Richardson, TX 75081 (972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
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