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The Truth About Chemsex: Understanding and Overcoming Chemsex Addiction
The Truth About Chemsex: Understanding and Overcoming Chemsex Addiction
The Truth About Chemsex: Understanding and Overcoming Chemsex Addiction
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The Truth About Chemsex: Understanding and Overcoming Chemsex Addiction

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Today's gay and bisexual men face unprecedented challenges in their daily lives. One of the largest challenges is the influence of Chemsex in today's LGBT community. Chemsex addiction, is at an epidemic level in most major metropolitan centres in the world today. This epidemic has resulted in complex issues and questions that face gay and bisexual men today which are explored in this book. "What is Chemsex Addiction?" "What should we do about this issue as a community and as individuals?" "How do I know if I have a Chemsex problem?" are a few of the questions that this book examines and answers. Drawing on research, professional experience from his clinical practice, psychologist and sexologist Justin Duwe's own issues with addiction and stories from his own clients, The Truth About Chemsex, is the ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming this life-threatening addiction. This book takes a current, refreshing and brutally honest look at the Chemsex health epidemic facing gay and bisexual men the world over today.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherBookBaby
Release dateFeb 22, 2018
ISBN9781543926057
The Truth About Chemsex: Understanding and Overcoming Chemsex Addiction
Author

Justin David Duwe

Justin Duwe, BSc, MA, SAC Dip, Dip, MBACP (Accred.) is an American Psychologist and Sexologist in private practice in London, UK. He is the CEO of Autonomous Psychotherapy and Counselling Ltd., and he maintains a very busy private online psychotherapy practice and online addiction treatment programme.

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    The Truth About Chemsex - Justin David Duwe

    Introduction

    A man called Mark

    Mark is a 34-year-old, attractive, rich and educated professional living in central London. He is ambitious, passionate and works hard to maintain his business success. However, Mark also has a dark secret, which not even his closest friends or family know. Mark is addicted to chemsex—the use of dangerous lethal, illegal drugs combined with dangerous sex acts.

    On the weekend, he has a very different life. From Friday to Monday mornings he spends his time high on GHB (gamma hydroxybutyrate), crystal meth and methadone. He then spends his entire weekend being fisted, indulging in orgies in sex clubs or inviting strangers to his exclusive flat to have endless sex sessions that push his physical and psychological boundaries. Mark doesn’t know whom he sleeps with, why he sleeps with them, what he gets out of his weekends or what to do about his problem with chemsex. His life has spun out of control. He feels lost and frightened about his future and his safety.

    The killing factor

    Chemsex kills gay and bisexual men daily in countries across the globe. The United States, Canada, United Kingdom, France, Germany and other countries all have epidemic levels of chemsex addiction in their gay and bisexual communities. Sadly, medical professionals, family members, lovers and friends of gay and bisexual men who are involved with chemsex know little about chemsex. They have no knowledge and little training, if any, of what to do when someone develops a chemsex addiction, let alone the signs that chemsex is a problem.

    Mark started to become involved in chemsex when he and his partner hit a dry spell in their sex life. They decided to open their relationship to see if it would help to ignite their passion. For a short time, things improved, and all seemed fine. That was until one day, when Mark paid a visit to his favourite sauna to have sex with strangers after work. While there, he was offered drugs and decided to try them. After all, the stranger who had offered them had told him he would enjoy getting fucked even more if he took them.

    The curiosity factor

    Curious and wanting to know if there was any truth in this, Mark decided to take the drugs. He was amazed at how both his mind and body seemed transformed. He felt alive, powerful, strong, sexy, desired, very horny and uninhibited. He never wanted these new feelings to leave. They didn’t. He lost track of time and spent hours longer at the sauna than he anticipated, having sex with countless strangers. He would normally have been more selective in choosing his sex partners, but while high on drugs, he no longer even cared about what they looked like, whether they had diseases or anything else. He was simply consumed with an insatiable desire to have sex like he had never experienced before. Mark was now hooked on chemsex. He never wanted to have sex sober again. Sober sex was boring, and it never made him feel the way he felt while having chemsex.

    A man called James

    James came to me one day with a freshly acquired black eye. He asked how he could keep his partner at an arm’s distance so he could stay safe and not relapse or become physically abused. I paused for a moment to reflect upon what James was asking me and told him the truth. He probably already knew what I was going to say to him, but feared hearing it. I told him that there was no possible way he could stay safe in his romantic relationship unless he and his partner had treatment for their issues with chemsex addiction.

    It’s not about me

    Both James and his partner, Brian, were addicted to chemsex. Yet Brian adamantly refused to acknowledge that he had an addiction to chemsex, which made matters worse. Brian would speak about how he thought James needed to get his chemsex issues under control. Brian was afraid and confused about what he should do if he found James passed out from a GHB overdose, which had already happened once before. As I subsequently learned, it had only been when Brian came home with his father one day and found James unconscious from a GHB overdose, naked and convulsing on their bed in the bedroom, that Brian became convinced that James even had an issue with chemsex. There was nothing James or I could say that would convince Brian that he too had a drug issue, even when he would speak openly about his addiction to sex.

    It’s about us

    James entered into treatment with me for his chemsex addiction. Over the course of his treatment he would become sober for a few months and then only have his sobriety sabotaged by Brian’s drug use in their home. The orgies with strangers, who often came over to their home with drugs, was too much for James to handle. James wanted a solution, and the last time Brian had brought strangers over to their flat for sex was when James, Brian and the stranger all got into a fight and Brian punched James in the eye. James sat crying on my couch, trembling, and spoke about how frightened he was for himself, Brian and their relationship of 20 years.

    A man called Sam

    Sam tried to reason with his boyfriend about the abusive nature of his relationship, but with no success. His boyfriend would continue to get high, have sex with strangers, bring them home with him and force Sam to have sex with him and his guests. This would in turn cause Sam to feel pressured, as he never felt as horny as his boyfriend did. To please his boyfriend and perform sexually, Sam would take the drugs offered to him so he could also become horny and not have to worry about losing his erection.

    Panic

    The lower Sam’s self-esteem sank, the harder it was for him to say no to his boyfriend or to anyone else who offered him drugs for chemsex. Sam’s relationship was now a nightmare. He began to experience panic attacks for reasons he couldn’t explain. It was those attacks that prompted him to seek out my psychological services. At first, Sam didn’t mention anything about what was happening in his relationship. After working with chemsex addiction issues for more than 11 years, I now make it a matter of habit to ask my clients about their relationship with chemsex. It so often transpires that there are problems with their joint recreational drug use.

    Death

    The effects chemsex drugs had on Sam’s mind were astonishing. Sam could acknowledge that it was his boyfriend, Tim, who was encouraging him to use drugs and that the drugs he was taking were life threatening, but he didn’t know what to do about his chemsex issue. One night, Sam and Tim decided to play with a local guy at their flat. They invited him over for some PnP (party and play, which is code in the chemsex world for sex with drugs). Their guest arrived, and it wasn’t long before they all took some drugs together and started to party and feel good. They had a few drinks, too, and made sure that when it was G o’clock (a common saying among drug users that it is time for another dose of GHB), that everyone took their regular dose. Sam told me he wasn’t sure what happened, but sometime during the course of the evening, the man with whom he and Tim were having sex, decided to take more GHB. While in the middle of a sex act, their guest became unconscious, not an uncommon occurrence among users of GHB. At first, Sam and Tim didn’t freak out, as they too had both had passed out in the past from taking too much GHB. They decided to just let their guest sleep it off. They both continued to have sex with each other. It was only later when Sam noticed that their guest was making a strange gargling noise that he and Tim became concerned. They called the emergency service. The paramedics arrived, and they tried to resuscitate him. Unfortunately, it was too late. Their guest was later pronounced dead upon arrival at the local hospital.

    Take three men …

    Mark, James and Sam are men from different walks of life and backgrounds. Despite their differences, they all struggle with chemsex addiction. Chemsex is an extremely dangerous behaviour. It creates powerful positive feelings in gay and bisexual men who combine drugs and sex. Sadly, it can also have a devastating effect on almost every aspect of a person’s life. Chemsex is a well-known phenomenon in the gay and bisexual community and has been around for years. However, it has now reached an epidemic level in major cities across the globe, but the general population is unaware of its dangers.

    … Across the globe

    The internet and the plethora of applications designed for gay and bisexual men to find sexual partners has sadly encouraged this epidemic to increase and spread across the globe. Never before has it been easier for gay and bisexual men to find partners who are also looking to get high and have sex together. HIV, Hep C, Gonorrhoea and other STIs continue to increase among this population, yet despite the advances in medical treatment like PEP (post-exposure prophylaxis, drugs designed to prevent someone from becoming infected with HIV after a possible exposure) and PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis, an HIV prevention pill taken before unprotected sex), gay and bisexual men still seem unaware of the dangers involved with chemsex.

    Wake-up call

    A study done at 56 Dean Street, a leading sexual health centre in London, found that 70 percent of the men who attended the clinic and participated in the study reported ‘no chem-free sex whatsoever in the previous six months’. Of these participants, 32 percent were HIV positive (280) and of these men, 42 were not taking medication to manage their HIV, and the majority of these HIV positive men, 64 percent, reported no condom use for sex. Twenty-nine percent of the men who attend this clinic in central London reported injecting drugs, and among the men who reported injecting drugs, 23 percent reported sharing needles and 27 percent of these men reported being injected by their sex partners.

    In another study conducted in the UK, 6.6 percent of the participants had used chemsex drugs (crystal meth, GHB or mephedrone within the previous four weeks). When this number was contrasted with London, the number of men reporting use of chemsex drugs was 14.3 percent. Of the participants that self-identified as HIV positive, 21.9 percent of them had used chemsex drugs in the past four weeks and among those HIV positive participants living in London, the number was 32.7 percent (Hickson, et al, 2016).

    It’s all in the news

    Henry Hendon is a lawyer who supplied chemsex drugs to Miguel Jimenez, his 18-year-old boyfriend. Miguel took GHB with alcohol and died of a drug overdose, despite his boyfriend trying to do CPR to bring him back to life. At one point blood starts to trickle out of his mouth, stated Hendon, and I’m thinking he must be alive. But he’s not. I’ve broken his ribs or something, and it has moved that blood around. Henry Hendon pleaded guilty in March 2016 to two counts of possession with intent to supply mephedrone and GHB and was ordered to carry out 140 hours of unpaid work, at London’s Central Criminal Court.

    Stephen Port is a serial killer who was found guilty of murdering four young men by poisoning them with lethal doses of GHB. Scotland Yard believes there could be more victims and is looking into 58 deaths in London spanning four years that are reportedly related to GHB. Between August 2014 and September 2015, Stephen Port lured and drugged Gabriel Kovari, 22; Daniel Whitworth, 21; Jack Taylor, 25 and Anthony Walgate, 23. Stephen met his victims on gay dating websites such as Grindr and gave them fatal doses of drugs.

    Sign of the times

    These statistics and news stories are an alarming warning about the mental and physical health of the gay and bisexual men in Western countries. Are we on the verge of another health epidemic like the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the early ’80s? Some would interpret the growing trends of increased sexual risks as being reminiscent of earlier health epidemics. Regardless, major metropolitan cities across the globe are reporting increased death rates of gay and bisexual men due to chemsex-related drugs and behaviour. What can be done about this alarming trend?

    The solution

    I have been working with chemsex issues for many years now and have developed an effective technique for working with these complex emotional and physical issues. My process involves three simple angles:

    1.Education about chemsex and its dangers.

    2.Learning how to become sober and stay sober.

    3.Understanding what chemsex is substituting for in your life.

    I have found that when my chemsex-addicted men approach their relationship with drugs and sex from these angles they tend to become sober and stay sober. I won’t claim that overcoming chemsex addiction is an easy or straightforward process. It is normally a path that is marked with significant pain, struggle, relapse and personal development. The path to recovery from chemsex addiction can be difficult. However, I know that with enough courage and strength it is possible to overcome this dangerous addiction and leave it behind you forever.

    My story: it’s all about me

    I am no stranger to drugs and addiction. Just ask those who knew me well when I was growing up. In my late teens and early 20’s, my life was out of control and full of chaos. Much of my parents’ white hair was placed there by my behaviour as I was growing up and learning about who I was and trying to find my place in the gay world. Somehow, I excelled at finding trouble and not being able to avoid it.

    Me, the good-time guy

    I was first introduced to chems when I was dating a boyfriend. At first, I didn’t like the fact that he used drugs, and his drug use placed a significant strain on our relationship at the time. It ultimately brought our romantic relationship to an end. Ironically, I thought it better that we stay friends and that we used drugs together, rather than be in a romantic relationship with him. At first, I started to use drugs recreationally. Yep, I was having a good time. That was what I told myself and those in my circle who were concerned. Sadly, my life very quickly became harder and harder to control. Eventually, I lost all control. I became addicted to club drugs, the same ones used in chemsex sessions.

    Lord of the dance

    I started off using MDMA, then moved onto crystal meth, weed, crack, cocaine, GHB or any other drug that was being offered when I was having difficult feelings or partying with my friends. I used to love dancing to the music in clubs while high, and when the drugs were right, I didn’t even need any music to dance to. I would literally spend hours dancing in front of a bathroom mirror looking at my reflection, mesmerised at my reflection, all alone but with a few glow sticks in the dark. If sex happened, as it did often while I was high, it didn’t matter whom it was with really. It only mattered that I had the attention of someone else and that maybe, just maybe, they would end up liking me, and we would be in a relationship together, and I would finally feel accepted and loved, despite being gay.

    Shoot …

    To say that I was wounded emotionally would be an understatement at that time. Of course, this was impossible for me to admit to myself until one evening when I had decided that I had wanted to know what it would be like to get high from shooting up drugs. I remember this moment and the desire to know and experience the next level of high from injecting drugs was scary … and strong. I was driving when I had this desire, and I can remember that I started to cry because I was afraid for myself and scared about what I would do if I started to shoot drugs. This was a turning point for me. Fortunately, I was dating a man in recovery at that time, and he told me I should start to go to 12-step meetings and sober myself up. I listened to his advice and went to my first meeting. I can remember sitting there in a small room with stale coffee, smoking my cigarettes as I listened to the other men who had lost their entire lives and identities to their addictions.

    Stubbornness runs in my family, and so do addiction, anxiety disorders and other mental health issues. Becoming a therapist who specialises in addiction issues was almost predestined for me. Unfortunately, I am also a slow learner at times and was an especially slow learner when it came to my addiction to chemsex drugs. I continued to go to my 12-step meetings while I also continued to use drugs. The moment I decided to walk away from the destructive choices I was making involved a close friend of mine.

    … You’re out of your mind

    I was over at his apartment one day and using drugs with my other ‘friends’ when my close friend and also my ex-boyfriend pulled out a small cigar box. At first I didn’t make much of what he was doing, as I was high at the time. He pulled out several small objects: a syringe, a piece of elastic, spoon, lighter and crystal meth. He tied up his arm after he prepared his crystal meth and then slammed the crystal. He was higher than I had ever seen anyone before, and in less than the blink of an eye. He had missed his vein several times and also had blood running down his arm. He did such a poor job shooting up that his blood trickled down his and stained the carpet in his apartment.

    Fear turned the key

    This scene scared me straight. I had just seen someone lose

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