『Am I REALLY Recovering—Or Just Using My Partner Instead of Porn?』のカバーアート

Am I REALLY Recovering—Or Just Using My Partner Instead of Porn?

Am I REALLY Recovering—Or Just Using My Partner Instead of Porn?

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In Episode 334, we respond to a submission from a man in early recovery who discovered, with honesty and concern, that he may be relying on his partner sexually in order to avoid relapse. His partner discovered his porn addiction, he disclosed much of what had happened, and both of them are now trying to work their own recovery. He recognizes that his brain has been deeply affected by addiction, especially when he is in public and finds himself battling objectification and scanning. He also recognizes that merely pushing down urges through brute force is not sustainable. We affirm that abstinence from acting out is essential, both for the healing of the addict’s brain and for stopping the betrayal of the partner, but we also make clear that abstinence alone is not the same as recovery.

The deeper issue is that real recovery requires the addict to identify and address the underlying reasons addiction became his coping mechanism in the first place. Porn and masturbation often become a fast, powerful escape from shame, stress, loneliness, insecurity, trauma, fear, or emotional immaturity. If those deeper issues are not addressed, the addict may simply white-knuckle sobriety, replace one addiction with another, or begin using his partner as the new outlet for regulation. That creates a deeply unhealthy dynamic, because the partner may begin to feel responsible for keeping him sober through sexual availability. This can intensify her betrayal trauma, reinforce false beliefs that she was somehow “not enough,” and rob her of permission to have her own bad days, boundaries, pain, or healing process.

We emphasize that true recovery means the addict must build an outside support system, develop internal regulation, learn to live life on life’s terms, and stop making his partner responsible for his emotional or sexual stability. Sex is optional; intimacy is not. Healthy sex must become an expression and celebration of real connection, not a medication for urges or withdrawal. We also address the listener’s concern about social media, noting that social platforms, thirst traps, dating-app-style swiping, and constant digital comparison can train the brain toward objectification, instant gratification, and image management. The path forward is not simply avoiding porn; it is becoming whole—learning to see oneself, one’s partner, and others as full human beings rather than objects, outlets, or regulators.


For a full transcript of this podcast in article format, go to: Am I REALLY Recovering—Or Just Using My Partner Instead of Porn?

Learn more about Mark and Steve's revolutionary online porn/sexual addiction recovery and betrayal trauma healing program at—daretoconnectnow.com

Find out more about Steve Moore at: Ascension Counseling

Learn more about Mark Kastleman at: Reclaim Counseling Services

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