I found
this article, with this disturbing story:
Greg, a 17-year-old graduate of the program, said he struggles with chronic depression, and "I was humbled to the point where I decided that I would never be able to get rid of my addiction."
"I tried this one last thing, and if that didn't work, I would just end my life."
This poor kid was seriously going to kill himself over masturbation? That's effed up.
This seems to make more sense:
Malan asked not to be quoted directly, but cited a paper -- "Sexual Behavior-Modification Groups and the Need for Comprehensive Care for Compulsive Sexual Behavior" -- he presented at The Institute for Advanced Study of Human Sexuality, Basic Lecture Series in San Francisco.
In the paper, Malan wrote that compulsive sexual behavior, the term preferred by clinical sexologists, is a complex issue with many possible causes.
Although an addiction approach that treats the situation through behavior modification might be good for treating people whose problems are mostly psychological, that approach can be damaging for others, Malan wrote.
For example, people with high hormone levels may find simple abstinence through willpower or therapy alone difficult and some may "become deeply depressed, develop internalized shame, lose healthy sexual functioning, and even become suicidal when only abstinence training is attempted to deal with their condition," he wrote.
Malan wrote that regulating compulsive sexual behavior is highly individual and using one approach for all causes could be psychologically damaging and require corrective treatment later.
Some people believe they have a sex addiction when they may have a values conflict, Malan said, and people should get a diagnosis from a professional certified in human sexuality health care.
I may be going to hell in a bucket, babe / But at least I'm enjoying the ride.
-Grateful Dead (lyrics by John Perry Barlow)