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Sex and Love Addicts Anonymous

Twelve-step program


Summary

Twelve-step program

FieldValue
nameSex and Love Addicts Anonymous
formation
founding_locationBoston, Massachusetts, U.S.
extinction
tax_id
registration_id
purposeSex addiction and love addiction recovery
headquartersTexas, U.S.
coords
owner
website

Sex and Love Addicts Anonymous (SLAA) is a twelve-step program for people recovering from sex addiction and love addiction. SLAA was founded in Boston, Massachusetts in 1976, by a member of Alcoholics Anonymous (AA). Though he had been a member of AA for many years, he repeatedly acted out and was serially unfaithful to his wife. He founded SLAA as an attempt to stop his compulsive sexual and "romantic" behavior. SLAA is also sometimes known as the Augustine Fellowship, because early members saw many of their shared symptoms described by St. Augustine of Hippo in his work Confessions. COSLAA is another twelve-step fellowship created to support the family members and friends of sex and love addicts.

SLAA encourages members to identify their own "bottom-line behaviors." The organization identifies these behaviors as "any sexual or emotional act, no matter what its initial impulse may be, which leads to loss of control over rate, frequency, or duration of its occurrence or recurrence, resulting in spiritual, mental, physical, emotional, and moral destruction of oneself and others." Maintaining "sobriety" in the SLAA program requires abstaining from one's bottom-line behaviors. However, these behaviors are never set in stone and may change as SLAA members continue in the program. Examples of bottom-line behaviors might include sexual or romantic activity outside the scope of monogamous relationships, anonymous or casual sex, compulsive avoidance of intimacy or emotional attachment, one-night stands, compulsive masturbation, obsessive fantasy, consumption of pornography, compulsive attraction to unavailable or abusive partners, and a wide variety of addictive sexual, romantic, or avoidant behaviors.

Many of those practicing the SLAA recovery program develop the ability to engage in a healthy committed relationship. SLAA encourages recovery from sexual anorexia, emotional anorexia and social anorexia, three related areas of self-deprivation that lead to isolation and often accompany patterns of addictive behavior.

SLAA publishes the book Sex and Love Addicts Anonymous. It is approved by the organization for use in their fellowship. In an article regarding the applicability of 12-step fellowships to black women, feminist theorist Christine Saulnier criticized the SLAA book, contending that it ignored the social and political circumstances under which sexual behaviors arise and are labeled deviant.

References

References

  1. (1994). "Adolescent Sex and Love Addicts". Praeger.
  2. Griffin-Shelley, Eric. (1997). "Sex and Love: Addiction, Treatment and Recovery". Praeger.
  3. Irvine, Janice M.. (Winter 1993). "Regulated Passions: The Invention of Inhibited Sexual Desire and Sex Addiction". Social Text.
  4. (1995). "Deviant Bodies: Critical Perspectives on Difference in Science and Popular Culture". Indiana University Press.
  5. (1997). "Sexual Anorexia: Overcoming Sexual Self-hatred". [[Hazelden]].
  6. Augustine Fellowship. (June 1986). "Sex and Love Addicts Anonymous". Augustine Fellowship.
  7. Saulnier, Christine F.. (Winter 1996). "Images of the twelve-step model, and sex and love addiction in an alcohol intervention group for Black women". Journal of Drug Issues.
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