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Introduction
Several years before I began to write this book, I started writing
about my own recovery from sexual addiction. I have no idea what
motivated me to put my thoughts on paper. The only thing I can
remember was the hope that somehow, someway my experience might be
helpful to others. At that time, I lived alone. Each day after work,
I came home and sat hour after hour, hunting and pecking on my
computer keyboard, producing piles of incoherent, unintelligible
mish-mash. Kind of like this last sentence. I never thought of it as
personal, but it was. I never thought of my writing as important,
but looking back, I can now see how very important it was to me.
Previously, my only literary accomplishment was that I had completed
tenth grade English in only three attempts.
After several months, I was asked by a friend to facilitate a sexual
addiction recovery group for men at my church. I wasn’t thrilled
with the idea, but there was no one else better equipped. (Very few
people have excelled in obsessive lustfulness like I have.) Our
group started small. The first meeting had a grand total of three
men. Then there was 4, then 6, 10, 15, 20. You get the idea. The men
came from all walks of life, each having the desire to change their
lives.
Today, our group consists of a construction worker, a medical
doctor, a marketing analyst, a computer programmer, a rocket
scientist (yes, a rocket scientist), a software engineer, a
professor, a doctor, a welding supervisor, an airline pilot, a real
estate developer, a home builder, a musician, a retired football
coach, a salesman, a teacher, a political consultant and a
contractor. We are a mixed bag of nuts, but for the most part, a
very merry band of characters.
As more and more men came to our group, I continued to write, but my
writing took a new direction. With these men, I became more of a
listener and observer, so I began writing more about what I heard
from them than what I knew to write on my own. I facilitated less
and less, finding more interest in what these men had to say than
what my own experience provided. Sitting at the keyboard in the
evenings, I was no longer simply writing; I was attempting to
capture the thoughts and feelings of these men which helped me to
capture my own thoughts and feelings.
Our group is convinced that most men will struggle with their sexual
integrity (or lack thereof) at some time in their life. Many men
have re-occurring problems with their sexual behavior and in
increasing numbers, men are becoming addicted to sex. The impact on
lives and marriages is staggering, crossing all social, ethnic and
religious boundaries. The great tragedy is that most men, don’t
know, won’t accept and can’t admit that they have a struggle, a
problem or an addiction and even if they did recognize it, where
would they go? Every man in our group knows the struggle, which when
unaddressed turned into a problem, which when left unacknowledged
progressed into addiction. Thankfully we have, with help, recognized
that we were addicted. We freely admit our struggles, problems and
addictions and having done so we have begun to recover from them.
Operation Integrity is a community of men who have come to terms
with our powerlessness over the sexual desires and practices that
are a problem for us. Desperate, we know we must place our lives in
the hands of a loving, powerful God who can do for us what we cannot
do for ourselves. We know that our ineffective and destructive
patterns must be healed before other parts of us will become
integrated as a whole. Therefore, we understand that our sexual
healing is the doorway to authentic integrity. We have come to the
awareness that our ultimate goal is not to simply change behaviors,
but to pursue God himself, who draws us into his grace and offers
complete wholeness. Our secrets and wounds are exposed to His
healing power. In the unity of this spiritual community, we offer
our experience, strength and hope to those around us who seek to
experience the design for life that God intended for them.
It is our belief that most men want to lead lives of sexual
integrity. We’ve seen the carnage all around us, having caused more
than a little of our own. We know what our decisions have cost us
and others in terms of our relationships, our marriages, our
children, time, money and energy. We’re convinced that there is a
better way. In discovering sexual health, each of us is developing
our own personal voice, confidently sharing a message of gracious
confrontation with one another and an enthusiastic expectation of a
healthy life. The following pages are the heard, observed and
expressed experience of our shared group life, as well as my
personal recovery. We speak together as one body, with one voice,
calling you to be free as we are becoming free. Our individual solos
have grown into a collective chorus. We are the sound of men,
struggling mighty men, sharing our lives personally, deeply, in
forthright honest unison. We don’t own the song of freedom we sing.
The song of freedom belongs to God. He sang it to us and we sing it
to you. We invite you to discover the freedom your heart desires, to
find your voice and to sing along.
David Zailer
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