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“addressing contemporary matters that just might matter to you.”


©2007 by Intellectual Reserve, Inc. All rights reserved.

Editor’s note: There are so many thoughts to convey, so many questions that need answers, so many areas of focus on which to concentrate. It is frustrating to choose only one. Eventually, we will get through all the wonderful ideas, comments shared, and points that need to be approached. Today, though, it is necessary to offer the very real hope that is available to any and everyone — and share some success stories of pornography addicts or those who love them through their repentance and rehabilitation process. To those who are feeling hopeless, please know that there are avenues of assistance available. There are people who care to assist in rebuilding the life of truth and light you want.

Two powerful quotes that need sharing in today’s article are by two powerful, special witnesses of Jesus Christ:

Discouragement is not the absence of adequacy but the absence of courage. (Elder Neal A. Maxwell)

One of Satan’s most powerful tools is discouragement. Whisperings of

• “You can’t do it,”
• “You’re no good,”
• “It’s too late,”
• “What’s the use?” or
• “Things are hopeless”

are tools of destruction. (Elder Marvin J. Ashton)

Although I have received emails from people who are despairing, and who echo the kind of feelings Elder Ashton spoke of, I have also read beautiful letters of encouragement, growth, repentance, blessings, and of great love.

Some have written to share gratitude for the love between spouses when one of them is working his way back to light, having fallen down the dark hole of pornography’s grasp. Some have written to share gratitude for a bishop who, having gained insights and divine guidance as well as some training, has lovingly worked with them. Others have rejoiced in the blessings of websites, books, and other materials that lovingly lead them toward freedom from the addiction.

Common Thread

There is a common thread in every person who has written of some healing from this disease — who has found strength, hope, and insight — who is regaining a sense of self-worth and courage. That common thread is the LDS Church’s Twelve Step Recovery program. There is dignity and love felt within the circles of these groups. The ability to repent and move forward is tremendously improved.

The underlying principle that offers this hope and encouragement is this: The Atonement of Jesus Christ does factor in. His sacrificial gift works for any who wish to take advantage of it. He loves every single one of us! Whether we stand strong and pure, are curled up in shame and discouragement, sit in judgment of others or of self, or kneel in humble request for cleansing, He loves us, anyway.

I say “anyway” because maybe some don’t believe they are worthy of the love. Maybe some feel like it is too late. Maybe some have given up on themselves because people around them seem to have given up. Maybe they stopped caring because they have forgotten how very worth it they are.

As a reminder, as a conveyance of tender counseling, and as a witness of love — “anyway” — here are some beautiful excerpts from reader responses. Real people with real and helpful insights, from their own struggles, work, prayers, and understandings:

• “As a bishop, I deal with outcomes of pornography addiction weekly. The members of my ward who are making progress are the ones who:

    1. Persistently and precisely obey the Lord’s counsel that comes through me
    2. Are working with the 12-step program step-by-step with another person.
    3. Are actively participating in work necessary to improve. The 12-Step program, like most things in life, is not a decoration to set on one’s shelf. Daydreaming about or sleeping next to the booklets that outline the 12 steps and hoping for osmosis to take affect simply does not work.”

• “In my current experiences, the most successful ones are the ones where wives are working with their husbands (or vice-versa) to lovingly work through it together.”

• “In a destructive environment like pornography, great patience and love for the loved one with an addiction is necessary.”

• “Well, what is the worth of a soul? What is the worth of an eternal companion? How much does a spouse really love her (or his) affected companion? It will come down to this! Pride has to go, along with a lot of other things. Without deep faith in the Lord this battle will not be won, either in individuals families nor on a larger scale.”

• “In the scriptures, the Lord asks plaintively, ‘Is anything too hard for the Lord?’ and He constantly says, ‘Come unto me...’ Although I have a strong testimony and have long lived the gospel faithfully, I did not fully understand, and probably still don't, the depth of the Lord's commitment to eternal marriages and the magnificence of His willingness and ability to be a very real and very powerful partner in such marriages.”

• “When first confronting this challenge I read everything I could find written by General Authorities about this subject and I also read a lot of material written by professional LDS counselors. Frankly, as I read and prayed, I realized that pornography addiction is not a physical problem. It is a spiritual problem.”

• “I run a pornography addiction treatment program, and spend my days working with those plagued the by effects of pornography. I love my work and it's rewarding to be on the front lines helping to save ailing marriages that have been weakened by the effects of pornography.”

• “For years I lied to my wife, to the Church authorities, to myself, about the moral fabric of my being. I was a pornography addict and had been since I was a teenager. I was too embarrassed to say anything. I was sure that it was too late for me. I was wrong! The Savior’s loving assistance has been clear and profound in my life. I know that He loves me. Please share this with other readers. It is never too late. The Lord loves every one of us, and is waiting to help us.”

One beautiful woman whose husband has overcome his addiction — with her help and with the Savior’s tutelage for both of them — has written a booklet worth of insights and helps. I will share her thoughts from time to time (with great gratitude for her compelling ability to convey her feelings and share righteous principles). I could feel the joy in her words, as she described a recent temple trip she and her husband made:

The light I see in his countenance as we participate in these sacred ordinances, the humility and sweet offerings I hear in his prayers, the love with which he reads the scriptures, the greater trust he has in Heavenly Father and our Savior, Jesus Christ, and! the greater love and trust he has for me, are worth anything and everything I can possibly do!

Beware!

From a wise reader, I received this counsel: “I deeply admire your efforts to help in this effort, but it is dangerous. When President Hinckley has described it he has used terms he has never used to describe any other sin. There is a temptation to read ‘clinical’ things to try to understand this. Beware.”

There is great wisdom in her caution. It is not needful for those of us watching as a loved one dabbles in or delves into pornography to learn the whys or the hows of this problem. Whether we are counselors, spouses, parents, or bishops, it is not the problem we should search. It is the solution to the problem.

I am grateful for those trained in this particular field. I am grateful for the stamina and resolve needed for a counselor, loved one, advisor or friend to walk with an addict as he or she seeks to become “sober.” I have learned from my friends at CP80 that caution and care are needed, lest those helpers become enmeshed in the ugliness themselves. By focusing on light and truth, the addict and those who walk with them, may feel the Savior’s healing, loving hand in their solution.

I personally wish to know as little as necessary about this ugly problem. I do need to understand the spiritual component of healing from this addiction. I need to prayerfully watch over and guard my own family. I need to focus on gospel based principles to offer help to any of you who may want it.

I need to get good advice from those who know what they are doing in this field of addiction recovery. I need to remind myself, and all of us, that the Lord’s Atonement is effective for anything that removes us from Him and our Father in heaven. I need to find good, effective ways of nourishing my family and myself. I need to watch for good programs that may enlighten and strengthen in this cause.

Conference in Utah

As a heads up, there is a conference being held in Provo, Utah, on March 10. Joseph White, conference director, is excited to offer an interfaith program that will offer spiritually-based insights and helps for any who can attend. Additional information may be found at either of these URLS: http://www.ldsmarriagenetwork.org/ and http://www.amoreexcellenthope.org/ . If any of you readers are interested, it promises to be a good choice to offer hope, tools, and loving acceptance of any who attend. If any of you know of programs or conferences, let me know. I am happy to pass the word along! It is good for our readers — wherever they are in the world — to know that there are programs that offer help and hope!

More than anything, it is required of us to love. This means loving without unnecessary judgment or closed-minded assumptions. There are many, many instances of families ripped apart by this insidious addiction. There are spouses and children who need to run for their lives. There are folks in a situation from which they must extract themselves — some sooner, and some later. There are innocent children, and innocent adults, whose lives are altered by ugliness and betrayal. They must start over, rebuilding a life after surviving the wreckage of an unholy union.

Miraculous Experiences

But there are miraculous experiences for those who can, and who will, work together. When both spouses — the “offender” and the “offended” (however you may deem to determine it) — choose to work together, building upon the love of the Savior and the blessings of the Atonement, there are miracles ahead.

When an offender can say, “I am loved anyway,” miracles may grow. When an offended one can say “I am loved anyway,” miracles can grow. When individuals and couples and families and wards can say, “I am loved anyway,” miracles occur.

As a reader so beautifully put it, “Miracles have not ceased! They only cease when we do not do what we need to so that the Lord can reach down and touch our lives, touch our hearts, and heal our pains and our sins. I love that the Holy Ghost is called Comforter. I love that the Lord Jesus Christ is the second Comforter!”

Whether you are battling with this addiction, have just recently dabbled into something that you know is improper, or carry the heavy burden of dealing with this ugliness in your family, know that it is not too late. You are worthy of change and improvement. You are worth the efforts. The prayers are heard — do not give up. Regardless of the difficulties weighing upon your heart and your shoulders, you are loved, anyway.

If you want to contact Vickey to make comments or share your experiences, please write to her at Vickey.whatmatters@gmail.com.

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© 2007 Meridian Magazine.  All Rights Reserved.

About the Author:

Vickey is a songwriter/producer, vocalist, professional speaker, and columnist. She is a Billboard award-winning songwriter, but has focused her songwriting efforts on charitable foundations and gospel-centered messages. Her last collaborative music projects were “Women at the Well” with Kenneth Cope and “My Beloved Christ” with Randy Kartchner. Her writings include a number of published books, and years’ worth of weekly articles that appear on various internet sites.

She has enjoyed participation in the Church Education System’s Youth and Family programs for two decades, and loves to travel to different stakes in order to speak at women’s conferences, youth conferences, and firesides. Vickey is gospel doctrine teacher in her ward.

She holds a masters degree in interpersonal communications and currently resides in Salt Lake City, Utah. She and her husband Dean have eight children, two grandchildren, and two dogs.

She most loves laughter, cooking Italian, studying the gospel or driving up the canyon with her husband, hanging out with her kids, and eating Tootsie Rolls.

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