img src Eclipart
*Test Yourself
*To The Newcomer
*What is a Sexaholic?
*The Twelve Steps
*The Twelve Traditions




SA INTERNATIONAL WEBSITE

SA NEW ENGLAND STEP STUDY

SA ONLINE (YAHOO! GROUP)

WOMEN IN SA

NEWCOMER BROCHURE

WHY STOP LUSTING?

FOR THE HEALTH PROFESSIONAL

ESSAY NEWSLETTER/SAMPLE ARTICLES

SA PHONE MEETINGS

GLENN K-SA & S-ANON TAPES/CD'S

S-ANON

AA BIG BOOK ONLINE
img s.gif
Welcome to SA of greater Providence, Rhode Island!
imgs.gif
Click here to edit your pageClick here to go to your office
first.jpg       
We are glad you are here...this is the website of the greater Providence, RI Monday night meeting of Sexaholics Anonymous. This site is designed to be a helpful source of information and guidance.

Here you will find excerpts from our literature about sexaholism (also sometimes referred to as sexual addiction or compulsion) and recovery. Weblinks provide access to other sources of information and help including phone and online meetings. If we may be of service to you please feel free to call our hotline number 617-499-9450. Anyone who turns to SA can be assured that his or her anonymity will be protected.

Sexaholics Anonymous is a fellowship of men and women who share their experience, strength, and hope with each other that they may solve their common problem and help others to recover. The only requirement for membership is a desire to stop lusting and become sexually sober.

There are no dues or fees for SA membership; we are self-supporting through our own contributions. SA is not allied with any sect, denomination, politics, organization, or institution; does not wish to engage in any controversy; neither endorses nor opposes any causes.

Our primary purpose is to stay sexually sober and help others to achieve sexual sobriety.

Adapted with permission from The AA Grapevine, Inc. SA adaptation © 1982, 1989, 2001 SA Literature.

Excerpted from Sexaholics Anonymous, page 4.

 
 
The Problem  The Problem

Many of us felt inadequate, unworthy, alone, and afraid. Our insides never matched what we saw on the outside of others.

Early on, we came to feel disconnectedfrom parents, from peers, from ourselves. We tuned out with fantasy and masturbation. We plugged in by drinking in the pictures, the images, and pursuing the objects of our fantasies. We lusted and wanted to be lusted after.

We became true addicts: sex with self, promiscuity, adultery, dependency relationships, and more fantasy. We got it through the eyes; we bought it, we sold it, we traded it, we gave it away. We were addicted to the intrigue, the tease, the forbidden. The only way we knew to be free of it was to do it. Please connect with me and make me whole! we cried with outstretched arms. Lusting after the Big Fix, we gave away our power to others.

This produced guilt, self-hatred, remorse, emptiness, and pain, and we were driven ever inward, away from reality, away from love, lost inside ourselves.

Our habit made true intimacy impossible. We could never know real union with another because we were addicted to the unreal. We went for the chemistry, the connection that had the magic, because it bypassed intimacy and true union. Fantasy corrupted the real; lust killed love.

First addicts, then love cripples, we took from others to fill up what was lacking in ourselves. Conning ourselves time and again that the next one would save us, we were really losing our lives.

© 1982, 1989, 2001 SA Literature.

Excerpted from Sexaholics Anonymous, page 203.

 

The Solution
The Solution

We saw that our problem was threefold: physical, emotional, and spiritual. Healing had to come about in all three.

The crucial change in attitude began when we admitted we were powerless, that our habit had us whipped. We came to meetings and withdrew from our habit. For some, this meant no sex with themselves or others, including not getting into relationships. For others it also meant drying out and not having sex with the spouse for a time to recover from lust.

We discovered that we could stop, that not feeding the hunger didnt kill us, that sex was indeed optional. There was hope for freedom, and we began to feel alive. Encouraged to continue, we turned more and more away from our isolating obsession with sex and self and turned to God and others.

All this was scary. We couldnt see the path ahead, except that others had gone that way before. Each new step of surrender felt it would be off the edge into oblivion, but we took it. And instead of killing us, surrender was killing the obsession! We had stepped into the light, into a whole new way of life.

The fellowship gave us monitoring and support to keep us from being overwhelmed, a safe haven where we could finally face ourselves. Instead of covering our feelings with compulsive sex, we began exposing the roots of our spiritual emptiness and hunger. And the healing began.

As we faced our defects, we became willing to change; surrendering them broke the power they had over us. We began to be more comfortable with ourselves and others for the first time without our drug.

Forgiving all who had injured us, and without injuring others, we tried to right our own wrongs. At each amends more of the dreadful load of guilt dropped from our shoulders, until we could lift our heads, look the world in the eye, and stand free.

We began practicing a positive sobriety, taking the actions of love to improve our relations with others. We were learning how to give; and the measure we gave was the measure we got back. We were finding what none of the substitutes had ever supplied. We were making the real Connection. We were home.

© 1982, 1989, 2001 SA Literature.

Excerpted from Sexaholics Anonymous, pages 204-205.


 
 WELCOME TO SA OF GREATER PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND!
,
phone: 617-499-9450

Go to OrgSites.com

LOGIN: EDITPAGE | OFFICE

     
 1544 Visitors
TOP