Sunday Tribune

You could be addicted to love

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them to fall in love, believing that this time they have found ‘The One’,” says Naidoo.

The second type is the person who becomes addicted to one particular person and no matter how the other person feels or treats them, they believe that they cannot exist without that person. THE CURE AND THE CAUSE

Like any other addiction, if left unchecked it can get worse and that is why proper treatment is imperative. Sex and Love Addicts Anonymous (SLAA) even have their own 12 Step programme based on the AA model for recovery.

SLAA South Africa says the only requiremen­t for membership is “a desire to stop living out a pattern of sex and love addiction.”

By giving and receiving support from others, they believe addicts not only have a better chance of staying sober, but also begin to learn how to engage with people in a non-addictive way.

Simon Turner, founder of Cape Recovery, can identify with fellow addicts.

Clean and sober for four years – after a 20-year addiction to alcohol and drugs – his organisati­on refers addicts from across the globe to rehab and treatment programmes in the Western Cape.

He explains that when it comes to love and sex addiction, both are treated in similar ways – but the two should never be confused.

“A love addict is not so much focussed on the sex. In fact, they can often take it or leave it. What is important to them is the affirmatio­n and companions­hip that being in love and in a relationsh­ip gives them,” he adds.

“Sex addicts tend to separate feelings for the person from sex, so it often doesn’t matter that no love exists as long as the sex is on tap.”

However, having said that, Turner reiterates that there is no hard or fast rule and the lines can be blurred between the two, with many people being diagnosed as love and sex addicts.

Treatment comes down to identifyin­g the problem and dealing with the underlying issues.

“We treat each person as an individual and, as such, I believe every single addict’s recovery journey is different so must be treated as such.” A BITTER PILL TO SWALLOW

University of Oxford researcher­s may even be on to something by suggesting convention­al views of the addiction are one-minded and should be supported by medical interventi­ons. According to them, love is addictive, literally, and could be curable.

The team says that enough evidence from brain-based studies suggest that to love intensely is to essentiall­y be addicted to another person and that people suffering the attachment ought to be offered the same support and treatment as drug abusers.

Their prediction? Targeted pills or “anti-love biotechnol­ogy”, which could be readily available in the future for those in need of a “chemical break-up”.

In extreme cases, it sounds like a dream-like solution. Struggling to get over an ex? Swallow a pill…

Naidoo, however, has a simple solution: it all comes down to loving yourself.

“When you feel self-love; you don’t seek out someone to ‘complete’ you.

“You realise that you are whole and complete and seek someone, who is also whole and complete, to share a healthy, happy, loving relationsh­ip with,” she concludes. HOW TO GET HELP

SLAA offers support groups and meetings across the country: http://slaasa.co.za/

Cape Recovery has treatment and addiction centres across the Western Cape: http:// caperecove­ry.co.za/

Clean Start is a Joburg-based psychology centre that offers outpatient recovery programmes: http://www.cleanstart.co.za/

We Do Recover has a series of addiction programmes across SA, including Durban: http:// wedorecove­r.com/

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