May 24, 2016

Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Falling Back in Love with Your Spouse

Posted at January 13th, 2012
Posted by Geoff Steurer
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Categories: Couples Pornography Addiction Recovery, Pornography Addiction, St. George Utah Pornography Addiction Treatment, Uncategorized
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Couples who have experienced sexual betrayal often reach a point where they wonder if they can ever feel love again for their spouse. Many go through the necessary steps of healing, forgiveness, acceptance, and other recovery steps, but both feel like their love isn’t what it used to be. Infidelity expert Dave Carder shares some specific exercises couples can do to recapture the love they once felt.

Gratitude

Posted at December 16th, 2011
Posted by Geoff Steurer
Categories: Uncategorized
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One of the casualties of addiction and trauma is the loss of enjoyment of the world around us. Addiction and trauma numb the delicate sensitivity required to sense and feel the wonder of nature, the human connection to others, and our own spirituality. The journey of recovery awakens these sensitivities within us and opens us up to what feels like a new world. As you watch this video, notice what you feel as you watch and listen to the message.

Setting Boundaries During the Holidays

Posted at December 15th, 2011
Posted by Geoff Steurer
Categories: Uncategorized
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Does the fear of offending friends or family members keep you from setting boundaries? It’s a timely topic with the holidays fast approaching. Therapist, Julie Hanks, says it’s ok to set boundaries, even if you offend someone.

Who Can We Talk To?

Posted at September 15th, 2011
Posted by Geoff Steurer
Categories: Uncategorized
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In this webisode, Dr. Jill Manning, a licensed marriage and family therapist, answers the question: Who can I talk to?

One thing that I found in my research with wives and also in my clinical work with women was this common thread of isolation. Women, even women who are well connected to friends and family and have a strong social network around them, will tend to feel very isolated when this issue arises in their lives.

And that isolation can be a very serious problem in and of itself because when you are isolated you are not reaching out and seeking resources that are available.

So when women ask me ‘Who can I turn to,” there are two things that come to mind:
1. Not everyone is ready to talk. Some people need time to step back, reflect, OK what’s going on, how did we get to this point and just become oriented.

And for those women I’d want them to know even if you are not wanting to talk, there are still many ways that you can get support. There are so many terrific books, blogs, online websites and resources online that you can get into and learn that you are not on your own and start brainstorming with some of those ideas that are available that way.

For women who need more direct, one-on-one help and to be talking, I encourage them to find someone that they trust, someone that has an understanding of this issue, or is at least curious about this issue, and perhaps they know nothing about it, but they are a trusting friend and confidant that is willing to be taught what your experience is like. And I think anyone like that can be a tremendous sounding board and support.

Now there is also professional helps. And more and more we see a wider range of support available for women to speak one on one in a confidential setting to get ideas and support for how to navigate this tricky and complex issue.


Jill C. Manning, Ph.D., is a licensed marriage and family therapist who specializes in research and clinical work related to pornography and its impact on marriages and families. She was selected to be a visiting Social Science Fellow at The Heritage Foundation in Washington, D.C., and as a result, testified before a Senate sub-committee on the harms of pornography. She is the author of “What’s the Big Deal about Pornography?: A Guide for the Internet Generation,” and the newly released CD, “Let’s Talk about the Elephant in the Room: How LDS Women Can Protect Families from Pornography.”

Dimensions of Self-Care

Posted at August 11th, 2011
Posted by Geoff Steurer
Categories: self-care, Uncategorized
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by: Amy Cluff, LCSW

“To succeed, you need to take that gut feeling in what you believe and act on it with all of your heart.”
- Christy Borgeld

Self-care is an essential piece of recovery for addicts and their partners. Make a commitment today to take good care of yourself.

A good place to start is to choose 1-2 activities for each area of your life: Emotional, Spiritual, Physical, Relational, and Personal Development. You can choose from the examples below or journal your own self care activities. Decide how often you want to participate in the activity. If this is new to you, it is okay to start slow, and then add in more self-care as you feel ready. It is very helpful to write down your commitments to self care and to track your activities. You will feel the confidence and satisfaction that comes from taking care of yourself.

Emotional:
o Participate in your meetings, therapy, support groups
o Journal
o Use positive affirmations each day
o Identify and maintain your personal/ relational boundaries
o Identify and reach out to people who support you
o Practice mindfulness and reflective contemplation
o Value your accomplishments and progress
o Take some alone time for self care (be sure to communicate about it with your spouse and children, if needed)
o Develop and use a routine (again- start small if needed, such as a morning routine, or a night routine, or a spiritual routine)
o Use uplifting music, media (books, movies, television)
o Remember beautiful scenery
o Remember happy, peaceful past events
o Slow down life’s pace, take healthy breaks
o Share healthy touch (hugs, holding hands, arm around shoulders)
o Share intimacy with your spouse (if you are emotionally ready)
o Reach out and talk to some one if you are down, overwhelmed, or feeling ashamed
o Contemplate your purpose, goals
o Create an inviting atmosphere with lighting, music, and organization
o Take quiet time
o Dress up nice for yourself
o Think about your good qualities
o Think about the unique qualities, strengths of your gender
o Spend time with people who support you
o Ask for help if you need it. Take help if it is offered

Spiritual:
o Prayer
o Meditation
o Scripture or spiritual reading
o Attend church services and participate in religious ceremonies
o Repeating spiritual affirmations
o Serving others
o Journaling
o Listen to uplifting music
o Sing uplifting music

Physical:
o Use relaxation or breathing exercises for at least 5 minutes daily
o Stretch, practice yoga
o Exercise 3-6 times per week, for at least 30 minutes
o Take a long walk
o Set a time to go to bed and to wake, and get adequate sleep
o Spend at least 10 minutes outside daily
o Limit “screen time” of television, computers, gaming, and hand-helds to little or none. It is a good idea to set “no technology times” during the day, such as at meal times, and family time
o Keep a food journal
o Limit sugar and/ or fat intake
o Limit caffeine to little or no caffeine
o Limit alcohol to little or no alcohol
o Follow nutrition guidelines or diet plan
o Maintain your grooming, hygiene
o Soak in the bathtub
o Get a massage
o Repetitious movement, such as yoga, dance, jogging, swimming, needlepoint, doodling, crocheting, quilting, playing an instrument, weeding/ gardening

Relational:
o Share how you’re feeling with your spouse
o Practice check in routine with your spouse
o Spend time playing with children
o Go on a date
o Talk with some one you love, check in with them about how you are feeling
o Spend time with another adult, go on activities with other adults
o Consciously smile at others
o Consciously say something kind to others
o Limit complaining to little or none
o Limit gossip/ talking about others to little or none
o Simple acts of service
o Participate in a social group, such as choir, book club, class, play group
o Share family meals
o Attend religious services as a family
o Write a letter
o Play interactive games, cards, board games
o Play on a sports team
o Hold family meetings/ family check-ins
o Family activities
o Participate in family sports
o Group nature activities, such as hiking, bird watching, boating
o Go on a picnic
o Tell some one what you are specifically thankful for about them
o Do household chores as a family
o Sing, play music together
o Make a gift for some one

Personal:
o Work on your hobbies or start a new one (gardening, reading, art, music, cooking, needlework, sports, photos, mechanics, building, family history, etc.)
o Educate yourself individually or at a class
o Plan and maintain a budget
o Read uplifting book, articles, etc.
o Work on your projects or repairs (often stuff you’ve been procrastinating)
o Set mini goals for work/ school/ home
o Do a crafts, arts

Helping Children with their Emotions

Posted at August 11th, 2011
Posted by Geoff Steurer
Tags: - - - - -
Categories: Protecting Children from Pornography, St. George Utah Pornography Addiction Treatment, Uncategorized
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In our work with families in recovery, parents often ask how they can help prevent their children from becoming addicts. One important piece of addiction prevention is helping children learn to manage their emotions. Deanna Gallagher, Licensed Marriage & Family Therapist and LifeSTAR therapist, offers parents some tips on how to help children manage their emotions.

Is there hope of recovery?

Posted at July 7th, 2011
Posted by Geoff Steurer
Tags: - - - -
Categories: Pornography Addiction, St. George Utah Pornography Addiction Treatment, Uncategorized
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Porn Derails Deep Relationship Instincts

Posted at March 15th, 2011
Posted by Geoff Steurer
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Categories: Couples Pornography Addiction Recovery, Pornography Addiction, Uncategorized
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Porn Derails Deep Relationship Instincts

by Mark Chamberlain, PhD – Co-Author: “Love You, Hate the Porn
Clinical Director of ARCH (www.archcounseling.com)

Want to bond with another human being? Here are your instructions: read and reciprocate. Read a signal from them (rather than ignoring it), then reciprocate by sending a signal of your own (rather than doing your own thing, independently of what they just did). Read and reciprocate, It’s as simple as that.

Oh yeah, there is one more ingredient: repeat.

So, let’s put it all together, here goes: read, reciprocate, times ten thousand. Okay, that might take a while. But it will be worth it. Once you’ve put in the reps, you’ll have built a strong bond.

Not only did I not make these instructions up, I didn’t even need to tell them to you. We don’t learn to connect with our closest loved ones in this way, we do it instinctively. We mastered the skill in infancy and we’ve been doing it ever since.

In 1975, developmental psychologist Ed Tronick demonstrated that even babies have mastered this dance of attachment. Watching the reciprocal responsiveness of mothers and their children, he wondered what would happen if he had mothers stare with blank faces at their infants.

To reestablish connection, the babies in Tronick’s study attempt to reengage their unresponsive mothers. They donned their cutest smiles and emitted their most engaging coos. When the blank stares persisted, the infants’ distress heightened to the point of desperation.

So, what does this have to do with porn?

According to pioneering human development theorist John Bowlby, this inborn attachment system does its important work of connecting us to loved ones, not just when we’re young, but all the way “from the cradle to the grave.”

In order to love and feel loved by a romantic partner, we must to go through the same process we did way back then: read, reciprocate, and repeat. And so on, ad infinitum.

Because we are drawn to our beloved, we’re willing to attune and attend to the signals they send.

Somewhere in my heart there’s a delicate magnetized arrow that orients toward my partner and any signal she’s sending. Sort of the way my two dollar compass managed to pick up the signal all the way from the North Pole when I was a Boy Scout.

As powerful and reliable as the North Pole is, my big brother pulled off a wizardly feat. He managed to reorient that arrow. He brought a magnet closer and closer to my compass until—boing!—its little foil arrow trembled in his direction.

So (ahem!), what does this have to do with porn?

We’re all grown up now, but our magnetized little foil arrows are still delicate. They don’t always necessarily orient toward our real live human attachment figure. What happens when we bring in the big neodymium magnet of porn?

Boing!

Here’s how it goes for the couples I see in my practice:

Even before she found out he was into porn, it felt to her like something had changed. He seemed…

  • distracted and calloused,
  • less empathic and patient,
  • easily irritated,
  • emotionally detached.

He’s unresponsive. The adult equivalent of that mother in the video with the still face.

What happened?

For a male, no signal packs a bigger wallop than registering that he has pleased the woman who has ignited his sexual interest.

In real life, this payoff doesn’t come without significant investment. The process requires a great deal of patience and effort and just the right touch. You gotta read and respond and repeat, read and respond and repeat. It’s no mean accomplishment.

And yet, throughout recorded history and in all of literature, music, and art, there’s more celebrating the joys of this quest than bemoaning the steepness of its slope. The arrival is sweeter for the journey, the quenching more blissful for the thirst.

Porn, so easily accessed and exquisitely pleasurable, evokes within us the positive feedback signal we naturally yearn for, but without all the hassles of a real life relationship.

So why not load up on the stuff? Then, once you’re into it, why go back to the real thing? Ever?

My clients who work hard to come back tell me why: There’s no life there. It’s all overload. No reciprocation, no interplay. It’s all boing and no quest. It’s like finding the cheat code to all your favorite video games and scoring touchdowns, home runs, and holes-in-one with each and every attempt. Feels great at first, less so over time as the brain registers that it’s devoid of meaning.

Plus, it changes you. Without the relationship grounding, we careen in a downward spiral. At a workshop I taught in Boston, one of the therapist participants quoted one of his pornography-addicted clients: “Moy Loyf is gyoin’ dyown the cryappa fyasta than I can lyowa moy styandads.”

Perhaps the most devastating effect of dosing up on porn: we lose our attunement to an actual partner and the signals they’re sending no longer capture our interest. As Gail Dines observed in her book, Pornland, porn quite effectively “trains men to become desensitized to women’s pain” (2010, 74).

Pornography attacks the essence of healthy attachment: reciprocal responsiveness. Here’s how Naomi Wolf puts it: “Far from having to fend off porn-crazed young men, young women are worrying that as mere flesh and blood, they can scarcely get, let alone hold, their attention.

In response to Wolf’s argument, one reader commented: “As a man, I’ve always disliked the fact that my sexuality made me an easy mark for manipulation. This explains part of the attraction of porn. It represents a kind of freedom which we have never had before. We can do away with our weakness…by eliminating real women from the equation and therefore the risk of being controlled and potentially humiliated.”

He would be right about how nicely eliminating one factor can change the equation, if only sex were an equation. However, if it’s not an equation, but a dynamic—a relationship—then we need to stick it out in the messier realm of reciprocal responsiveness.

Reach Out or Act Out

Posted at February 11th, 2011
Posted by Geoff Steurer
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Categories: Uncategorized
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By: Jeffrey J. Ford, MS, LMFT

Recovery from sexual addiction is a complex process that begins with accepting the invitation to start a journey without knowing who we can reach to along the way. The first obstacle that seems almost insurmountable is facing the fear of disappointing people, especially our loved ones, when we tell them our story. We are absolutely convinced that if we tell our stories the weight of it will be so heavy that it will push people away. We fear that we will be totally defined by our addiction. The feelings we experience that disconnect us from others and ultimately keep us in hiding exemplify shame.

Managing shame is key to addiction recovery because it stops us from telling our story and experiencing real relationships. Sexual addiction is defined by replacing real relationships with false ones. Reaching to false relationships when we are in pain quickly becomes the dominant pattern in our lives, locking out the real people that stand by confused by the distance shame has established in the relationship. As we progress along the way of recovery, we learn how good it feels to reach out to others and tell our stories, and be real. In fact, it changes our lives.

Despite how good we feel when we tell our story, it can be hard to share about our personal struggles, especially when we make a mistake or have a slip. We forget how good it feels to turn to our real relationships. Even though shame tries to convince us we should not open up about our struggles, reaching out to real relationships is the answer and way back to recovery every time. Managing shame is important, and understanding a few things about it may help us confront it.

Brene Brown has studied shame and found that there are three things that we need to understand about shame:

1. We all have it.

2. We’re all afraid to talk about it.

3. The less we talk about shame, the more control it has over our lives.

I would also add that the less we talk about shame the more disconnected we become with ourselves, and the real relationships in our lives. We become less connected and more driven to create false relationships by acting out. One of the most important rules in recovery is reach out or act out. It is crucial that we find someone we feel safe with to reach to when we feel the grip of shame after we have made the normal mistakes in life, and especially when we have slipped. It is important to remember that in many ways addicts experience the normal mistakes of life differently because of shame. The good news is that we can develop safe relationships that help us combat shame when we open up and share our experiences about our personal struggles with life and our addiction. Shame occurs between people, and can only be healed between people. Healing comes when we allow ourselves to be vulnerable and talk about our mistakes in an open and transparent way.

Brene Brown found that people can overcome shame by doing four things:

1. They understand shame and recognize what messages and expectations trigger shame for them.

2. They practice critical awareness by reality-checking the messages and expectations that tell us that being imperfect means being inadequate.

3. They reach out and share their stories with people they trust.

4. They speak shame-they use the word shame, they talk about how they’re feeling, and ask for what they need.

The reality is that shame loses power when it is brought out into the light and challenged by telling our story. Shame needs three things to grow: secrecy, silence, and judgment. When something shaming happens to us and we keep it locked up, it festers and grows. Soon it begins to consume us to the point where we are absolutely convinced no real person in our life will understand. It is at this point, when we are disconnected from ourselves and others, that we are most likely to return to the fake relationships that are nothing but empty wells in our lives. Noticing when we feel disconnected is an important step in reaching out. The sooner we reach out and name our shame, the better we will feel in our real relationships.

Here are some useful tips that we can use when someone in our group is reaching out to us because they feel triggered or are feeling shame. First, we can make sure they are safe by asking “are you near any computers or places you have acted out?” It is essential to feel safe before taking the next step. Second, we can ask when did shame convince them that nobody would understand what they were going through? When did they start reaching into themselves shutting out everyone else? Disconnection from others happens much sooner than the desire to sexually act out does. It is important to offer this person a real relationship that they can tell their story to. Third, we can talk about the people that are important in this persons life that need to know about struggles and slips. We can help them remember that disconnection and secrecy hurt their loved ones, and them, much more than any mistake or slip can. Finally, we can affirm them for having the courage to tell us their story, and encourage them to tell their story to their loved ones.

Brown, Brene, 2010, The Gifts of Imperfection: Let Go of Who You Think You’re Supposed to be and Embrace Who You Are

Jeffrey J. Ford, M.S., MFT received his B.S. degree at the University of Utah in Psychology. He earned his masters degree in Marriage & Family Therapy at Purdue University. He has practiced therapy in Indiana, Illinois, and Utah and is a member of the American Association of Marriage and Family Therapy. He has contributed to the field by publishing articles about the practice of marriage and family therapy. In addition to his clinical practice, he has been an instructor of psychology and adolescent development on a university level. He regularly speaks to audiences about understanding pornography addiction. He is married and the father of four children. His favorite pastimes include being with his family and doing anything outdoors, especially mountain bike riding, camping, and hiking.

Utah Coalition Against Pornography hosts Southern Utah Regional Conference Nov. 6, 2010

Posted at September 21st, 2010
Posted by Geoff Steurer
Categories: Uncategorized
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We’re excited to announce that the Utah Coalition Against Pornography is hosting the first-ever Southern Utah Regional Conference on Saturday, November 6, 2010 from 9am - 1pm. The theme of this conference is “Protecting Children and Families from Pornography and Other Harmful Materials.” This conference will feature nationally renowned speakers along with our own Utah Attorney General and a KSL news anchor as the keynote speakers.

Visit the UCAP website for more information