Living with sex addiction can feel lonely, but you do not have to deal with it on your own. Sex addiction is when sexual thoughts or behaviors become hard to control and start affecting your relationships, work, or daily life. At Dallas Whole Life Counseling, we provide online sex addiction counseling Texas-wide, so you can talk to a licensed therapist privately from home or anywhere you feel comfortable.
If you are here, you have already spent a lot of time arguing with yourself.
Maybe part of you says, “This is not really a problem.”
Another part of you knows it is affecting your relationship, your peace of mind, your work, your finances, your self-respect, or the way you feel when you are alone.
You may have promised yourself you would stop. You may have deleted apps, cleared your history, set rules, broken the rules, felt ashamed, and then found yourself back in the same cycle again.
That can feel lonely.
It can also feel frightening because this is not always something people feel safe talking about. Many people wait a long time before asking for help because they are afraid of being judged, misunderstood, or labeled.
At Dallas Whole Life Counseling, we want to say this clearly: struggling with compulsive sexual behavior does not make you a bad person. It means something in your life needs care, attention, and support.
You do not have to walk into a waiting room if that feels too hard right now. We offer online sex addiction counseling Texas-wide to help you start privately from home through secure video sessions with a licensed therapist.
Is This a Problem or Just a Strong Sex Drive?
This is one of the first questions people ask. And it is a fair question. Sexual desire is normal. Having a strong sex drive is not automatically a problem. Enjoying sex, wanting intimacy, or having frequent desire does not mean you have sex addiction.
The concern is not desire itself. The concern is when sexual thoughts, urges, or behaviors feel hard to control and keep causing distress or harm in your life.
What Is Sex Addiction?
Sex addiction is a term many people use when sexual thoughts, urges, or behaviors feel out of control.
Some clinicians may also use terms like:
- Compulsive sexual behaviour
- Hypersexuality
- Sexual compulsivity
- Sexual impulsivity
- Problematic pornography use
- Compulsive pornography use
The wording can vary. What matters most is the pattern.
Sex addiction often involves behavior that continues even when it causes negative effects in your relationships, finances, health, emotions, or daily life.
That may include compulsive behaviors in solitude or with partners, such as chronic masturbation, pornography, phone or cyber sex, sex with multiple partners, or sex with anonymous partners.
This is not about shaming desire.
It is about noticing when a behavior has started to feel bigger than your ability to choose.
Sex Addiction vs. High Sex Drive
Here is a simple way to tell the difference.
| High Sex Drive | Sex Addiction or Compulsive Sexual Behaviour |
| Feels wanted and chosen | Feels hard to control |
| Can fit within your values and relationships | Often clashes with your values or commitments |
| Does not usually cause major harm | Keeps causing distress, secrecy, or consequences |
| Can be part of a healthy relationship | Often creates distance, guilt, or mistrust |
| You can pause, choose or redirect it | You may feel pulled back into it even when you want to stop |
| It may bring connection | It often brings shame, hiding, or emotional distance |
A high sex drive does not usually make someone feel trapped.
Compulsive sexual behavior often does.
That trapped feeling matters.
If you feel like you are not choosing the behavior anymore, or if it keeps hurting your life even when you want to stop, it may be time to get support.
Porn Addiction vs Sex Addiction: Are They the Same Thing?
They can overlap, but they are not always the same.
Porn addiction usually refers to compulsive pornography use. Sex addiction can include a wider range of sexual behaviors, either alone or with others.
For one person, the pattern may center around porn. For someone else, it may involve dating apps, risky encounters, paid sexual content, repeated infidelity, anonymous sex, cyber sex, or compulsive fantasy.
The behavior may look different from person to person.
The question is not just, “What is the behavior?”
The question is, “What happens when I try to stop, slow down, or be honest about it?”
What Is Compulsive Sexual Behaviour?
Compulsive sexual behavior is usually about feeling unable to control intense or repetitive sexual urges, even when they cause distress or harm.
It can become a cycle.
A feeling shows up.
Stress. Loneliness. Anxiety. Shame. Boredom. Rejection. Anger. Sadness.
Then an urge follows.
Then the behavior brings quick relief.
Then shame or fear comes after.
Then the shame becomes painful.
Then the person looks for relief again.
This cycle can become exhausting. It can also become very private.
Mayo Clinic describes compulsive sexual behavior as an intense focus on sexual fantasies, urges, or behaviors that cannot be controlled and cause distress or problems in health, work, relationships, or other parts of life.
Again, that is the key point.
This is about distress, loss of control, and impact on life, not judging someone for having sexual feelings.
Common Signs You May Be Struggling With Sex Addiction
You do not need every sign on this list for it to be worth getting help.
But if several feel familiar, it may be time to take the pattern seriously.
Common signs can include:
- You feel obsessed with sex or sexual content
- You masturbate more often than you want to
- You frequently watch pornography and feel unable to stop
- You use phone sex, cyber sex, strip clubs, paid content, or other sexual services in a way that feels hard to control
- You engage in risky or reckless sexual activity
- You act in ways that go against your personal values, faith, commitments, or relationship agreements
- You keep promising yourself you will stop, but the pattern continues
- You feel guilt, shame, anxiety, or sadness afterward
- You hide behavior from your partner
- You lie, minimize, or leave things out to avoid being found out
- You risk your relationship, job, finances, or health
- You use sexual behavior to escape stress, loneliness, or emotional pain
- You have tried to stop or cut back but feel stuck
- You feel like you are living two different lives
If you recognize yourself here, try to pause before turning on yourself.
Shame may say, “I am disgusting.”
Therapy says, “Something is happening here. Let’s understand it safely.”
That is a very different place to begin.
How Shame and Guilt Keep People Stuck
Shame is one of the biggest reasons people delay getting help.
Shame says:
“Hide this.”
“Do not tell anyone.”
“You should have fixed this by now.”
“If people knew, they would leave.”
“You are the problem.”
The trouble is that shame often feeds the cycle. The more hidden the behavior becomes, the more powerful it can feel. The more alone you feel, the more likely you may be to return to the same behavior for relief.
Guilt can sometimes be useful if it helps you take responsibility and make repairs.
Shame is different. Shame attacks the whole person.
You are not helped by being humiliated. You are helped by being honest in a safe place, with someone who knows how to work with this kind of pattern.
That is one reason online sex addiction therapy can be a gentle first step. It gives you space to begin the conversation privately, without having to sit in a physical waiting room or worry about being recognized.
What Causes Sex Addiction?
There is not one single cause that fits everyone.
For many people, compulsive sexual behavior is connected to a mix of emotional pain, stress, habit, access, secrecy, and the brain’s reward system.
Possible factors can include:
- Anxiety
- Depression
- Trauma
- Relationship stress
- Loneliness
- Shame
- Low self-worth
- Emotional avoidance
- High stress
- Childhood experiences
- Attachment wounds
- Substance use
- Easy access to sexual content
- Past betrayal or unresolved grief
- Difficulty sitting with uncomfortable feelings
Some people use sexual behavior to calm down. Some use it to escape. Some use it to feel wanted. Some use it to avoid feeling lonely, rejected, or overwhelmed.
That does not make the behavior harmless. But it does mean the pattern often has a deeper emotional story underneath it.
Good therapy looks at that bigger picture.
You Know Something Is Wrong; Here’s What May Be Happening
Many people do not seek counseling at the first sign of trouble. Usually, they try to handle it privately first. They set rules. They make promises. They try harder. They hide more. They panic when the behavior keeps returning. By the time they reach out, they are often tired, scared, and ashamed.
How Sex Addiction Affects Mental Health Over Time
Compulsive sexual behavior can become emotionally heavy.
Not only because of the behavior itself, but because of everything that surrounds it.
The hiding.
The guilt.
The fear of being found out.
The distance from your partner.
The feeling of being split between who you want to be and what you keep doing.
Over time, this can affect your mental health. People may feel anxious, depressed, isolated, numb, irritable, or hopeless.
Sex addiction can also affect relationships, finances, and overall health. That is why it deserves proper support, not silence.
How Porn Addiction Can Affect a Relationship
Porn use is not always a problem for every person or every couple.
The issue is when it becomes compulsive, hidden, painful, dishonest, or disconnected from the couple’s agreements and values.
For some couples, the hurt is less about the screen and more about the secrecy.
A partner may feel:
- Lied to
- Rejected
- Compared
- Confused
- Not enough
- Emotionally unsafe
- Unsure what is real
- Afraid to trust again
The person struggling may also feel trapped between wanting to stop and feeling pulled back into the behaviour.
That is painful for both people.
Therapy can help slow the whole thing down. It can help each person understand what has happened, what needs to change, and what repair may require.
Trauma and Compulsive Sexual Behaviour
For some people, compulsive sexual behavior is connected to trauma.
That does not mean everyone with sex addiction has trauma. It also does not mean trauma excuses hurtful behaviour.
But it can help explain why the behavior became a way to cope.
Some people use sexual behavior to feel wanted. Some use it to numb out. Some use it to feel in control. Some use it to escape memories, stress, or emotional pain.
Our Trauma & PTSD therapy may be part of the wider support picture when past trauma is connected to current behaviour.
The goal is not to blame the past for everything.
The goal is to understand what the behavior has been trying to do for you, then build healthier ways to meet those needs.
Stress, Anxiety, and Sex Addiction
Sometimes compulsive sexual behavior is less about sex and more about relief.
Stress builds.
Anxiety rises.
The body wants comfort, escape, or a quick change in feeling.
The behavior works for a moment.
Then guilt shows up.
Then the stress grows again.
Then the urge returns.
This cycle can feel very hard to interrupt alone.
Therapy can help you recognize what happens before the behavior, not just after it. You may start to notice that urges are stronger when you are tired, criticized, rejected, lonely, stressed, bored, or emotionally overwhelmed.
That awareness matters because it gives you more room to choose a different response.
If anxiety is part of the pattern, anxiety counseling can help alongside sex addiction therapy.
How Sex Addiction Affects the Partner
If you are the person struggling with compulsive sexual behavior, this part may be hard to read.
Please stay with it gently.
When a partner discovers hidden sexual behavior, porn use, infidelity, or repeated secrecy, it can feel like the ground has shifted under them.
They may feel shock, anger, grief, confusion, fear, self-doubt, and deep hurt.
They may ask:
“What was real?”
“What else do I not know?”
“Was I not enough?”
“Can I ever trust again?”
This does not mean the relationship is automatically over. It does mean the pain needs to be taken seriously.
Recovery often includes accountability for the person struggling, support for the partner, and clear guidance around repair.
If infidelity is part of the story, infidelity counseling or couples and marriage counseling may also be helpful.
Can You Treat Sex Addiction on Your Own?
Some people do make progress with self-help.
Helpful steps may include:
- Blocking or filtering tools
- Reducing access to triggers
- Journalling
- Support groups
- Accountability
- Honest boundaries
- Healthier routines
- Reducing isolation
- Naming urges before acting on them
- Learning what triggers the cycle
These can help.
But self-help has limits, especially when the pattern has been going on for a long time, keeps returning after promises to stop, or has caused serious relationship pain.
Professional therapy can help you understand the emotional roots of the behavior, not just the surface habits.
You do not have to decide alone what kind of help you need. A therapist can help you work that out.
Why People Do Not Seek Help, and Why Online Therapy Can Change That
People delay help for many reasons.
They may feel ashamed.
They may worry about being judged.
They may not want to say the words out loud.
They may fear being recognised.
They may think therapy will be harsh or humiliating.
They may believe they should be able to stop on their own.
Online therapy removes some of those barriers.
Dallas Whole Life Counseling offers Online / Virtual Therapy for patients anywhere in Texas. Sessions are offered through secure video, so you can connect with a licensed counselor from the comfort and privacy of home.
For this topic, privacy can matter a lot.
You can begin the conversation from a place where you feel safer.
When Should You Seek Professional Help?
It may be time to reach out if:
- You feel unable to stop the behaviour
- You keep making promises and breaking them
- You are hiding things from your partner
- Your relationship has been damaged
- Your work, money, health, or well-being is affected
- You feel anxious, depressed, or ashamed
- You use sexual behavior to cope with stress or pain
- You have tried self-help and still feel stuck
- Your partner has asked you to get help
- You feel like the pattern is getting more intense
- You feel scared of what might happen if nothing changes
You do not have to wait until everything falls apart.
If you are already worried, that is enough reason to talk to someone.
What Does Online Sex Addiction Therapy Actually Involve?
Online sex addiction therapy is simply therapy that happens through secure video instead of in an office.
You still speak with a licensed therapist.
You still have a private session.
You still work on real goals.
The difference is that you can do it from home, your office, or another private place where you feel comfortable.
Dallas Whole Life Counseling sees patients virtually anywhere across the state, as well as in person across the Dallas-Fort Worth area, including Dallas, Fort Worth, Arlington, Plano, Irving, Denton, Richardson, and Grapevine.
Is Online Sex Addiction Therapy Effective?
Online therapy is now a common way to access mental health care.
For sex addiction specifically, the fit depends on the person, the therapist, and the treatment plan. But online therapy can be especially helpful when shame, privacy, convenience, or fear of being seen in a waiting room might otherwise stop someone from starting.
The most important thing is that you work with a licensed therapist who can help you understand the behavior, build recovery skills, and address any related mental health concerns.
Why Online Therapy Can Work Well for Sex Addiction
Online counseling can be a good fit for this topic because it lowers the emotional barrier to starting.
It can help because:
- You can speak from home
- There is no physical waiting room
- It may feel more private
- It can fit more easily around work or family life
- It can reduce the fear of being recognised
- You can still receive structured, professional care
- Couples or family members may be able to join from different locations when appropriate
For many people, the hardest part is beginning.
Online therapy can make that first step feel more manageable.
What Happens During Your First Online Sex Addiction Counseling Session?
The first session is not about confessing every detail at once.
You do not have to share everything immediately.
A therapist may ask about:
- What brought you to counseling
- What behavior feels hard to control
- How long it has been happening
- What you have tried so far
- What consequences you are facing
- Whether your partner knows
- Whether porn, infidelity, or secrecy is involved
- Your mental health history
- Stress, anxiety, depression, or trauma
- What you want to change
- What support would feel safe
The goal is to understand the pattern and begin creating a plan.
You are allowed to feel nervous. You are allowed to speak slowly. You are allowed to say, “This is hard for me to talk about.”
A good therapist will not rush you into shame.
CBT for Sex Addiction
CBT stands for Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy.
In simple terms, CBT helps you understand the cycle between thoughts, feelings, urges, and actions.
For example:
You feel stressed.
You think, “I need relief.”
The urge builds.
You act on the behaviour.
You feel guilty.
Then guilt becomes the next trigger.
CBT helps you slow that pattern down.
It may help you:
- Identify triggers
- Challenge thoughts that feed the behaviour
- Build healthier coping skills
- Reduce secrecy
- Create plans for high-risk moments
- Learn what to do when urges feel strong
- Repair patterns that are harming your life
CBT is not about judging your thoughts. It is about learning how to respond to them differently.
ACT for Compulsive Sexual Behaviour
ACT stands for Acceptance & Commitment Therapy.
ACT can be especially helpful when people feel stuck fighting their thoughts, feelings or urges.
ACT does not mean accepting harmful behaviour as “fine”. It means learning how to notice difficult urges without immediately obeying them.
It helps you ask:
“What do I want my life to stand for?”
“What kind of partner, parent or person do I want to be?”
“What choice lines up with my values right now?”
“What can I do with this urge besides act on it?”
This can be powerful because recovery is not only about stopping a behaviour. It is also about building a life that feels more honest and connected.
Can Sex Addiction Be Treated Without Medication?
Often, treatment begins with therapy.
Medication is not always needed.
However, medication may be helpful for some people, especially when anxiety, depression, OCD symptoms, bipolar disorder, or substance use are also part of the picture.
A qualified medical professional or prescriber can help decide whether medication belongs in your treatment plan.
If medication is not needed, therapy can still help you build insight, accountability, coping skills, and relapse prevention.
Dallas Whole Life Counseling also offers Medication Evaluation & Management for patients who may need that support.
Individual Therapy vs Couples Therapy for Sex Addiction
Individual therapy and couples therapy do different things.
Individual counseling gives the person struggling with compulsive sexual behavior a private place to work on triggers, shame, urges, secrecy, accountability, and recovery skills.
Couples therapy gives both partners a supported place to talk about the impact on the relationship, including broken trust, disclosure, boundaries, communication, and repair.
If the behavior has hurt your relationship, both may be helpful.
Individual therapy can support personal recovery.
Couples therapy can support relational healing.
The right path depends on what has happened, what each person needs, and whether both partners are ready to participate.
How Family Therapy Can Support Recovery
Not every family member needs every detail.
Privacy still matters.
But when compulsive sexual behavior has affected the family system, family counseling can sometimes help with communication, boundaries, trust, and emotional safety.
This may be especially helpful when the issue has created ongoing tension, secrecy, conflict, or confusion at home.
Family therapy is not about exposing private details to everyone. It is about helping the family move toward safer, healthier patterns when the wider system has been affected.
Relapse Prevention in Sex Addiction Recovery
Relapse prevention is not about assuming you will fail.
It is about knowing the pattern well enough to plan for hard moments.
A relapse prevention plan may include:
- Knowing your triggers
- Reducing access to high-risk situations
- Creating device and privacy boundaries
- Building accountability
- Practicing honest communication
- Managing stress earlier
- Planning for travel, loneliness, or conflict
- Having a repair plan after setbacks
- Building healthier routines
- Using support groups where helpful
- Knowing who to contact when urges feel intense
Recovery is not usually one perfect straight line.
There may be hard days. There may be slips. What matters is whether you keep returning to honesty, support, and responsibility.
Online Therapy for Porn Addiction
If porn is the main part of your pattern, online therapy can still help.
Therapy may focus on:
- What triggers porn use
- How often it happens
- What emotions come before it
- How secrecy affects your relationship
- Whether it is affecting work, sleep, or daily life
- What boundaries are needed
- How to handle urges
- What repair looks like with a partner
- How to rebuild a healthier relationship with sexuality
The goal is not to shame you for struggling.
The goal is to help you understand why the pattern has become hard to control and what needs to change.
Confidential Online Sex Addiction Counseling
Privacy matters deeply here.
Dallas Whole Life Counseling’s online therapy is offered through secure video sessions, and patients can meet from a private space at home or another safe location.
You will still want to choose a private space for sessions. That might mean using headphones, sitting in a parked car, booking time when the house is quiet, or using a private room at work if that is safe and appropriate.
A therapist can also talk with you about confidentiality, its limits, and what to expect before you go deeper into the work.
You do not have to feel completely comfortable before you begin.
You only need enough safety to take the first step.
Confidential Online Sex Addiction Therapy With Licensed Texas Therapists
Online counseling can make it easier to start support without adding travel, traffic, or the fear of a waiting room.
Dallas Whole Life Counseling has been helping clients since 1999. Our licensed psychologists, counselors, and therapists work with individuals, couples, teens, kids, and families. That matters if you want the option of in-person care later, while still starting privately online now.
Can Relationships Recover After Sex Addiction?
Some relationships can recover.
But recovery takes time, honesty, and support.
It usually requires more than one difficult conversation. It may involve disclosure, boundaries, partner support, accountability, therapy, and a long process of rebuilding safety.
The relationship may recover. It may change. In some cases, both people may need support to decide what is healthy and possible.
Therapy does not promise one outcome.
It creates a safer place for truth, repair, and clear decision-making.
Rebuilding Trust After Sex Addiction
Trust is not rebuilt through one apology.
It is rebuilt through repeated honesty.
That may include:
- Clear boundaries
- Consistent behaviour
- Accountability
- Transparency where appropriate
- Respecting the partner’s pain
- Not rushing forgiveness
- Taking responsibility without collapsing into shame
- Learning how to repair after conflict
- Showing change over time
For the person struggling, this can feel uncomfortable because shame may make you want to hide or defend yourself.
For the partner, trust may return slowly, and that is normal.
Therapy can help both people move through this process with more structure and less chaos.
Living in Recovery: What Long-Term Healing Can Look Like
Long-term recovery is not only about stopping a behaviour.
It is about building a life that feels more honest, connected, and steady.
Recovery may look like:
- Less secrecy
- More honesty
- Better emotional regulation
- Healthier coping skills
- Clearer boundaries with devices and triggers
- More self-respect
- More direct communication
- More trust in daily choices
- A relationship with sexuality that feels healthier and less compulsive
- A stronger ability to sit with stress without escaping into old patterns
You are not trying to become perfect.
You are trying to become more present, honest, and free.
Why Dallas Whole Life Counseling for Online Sex Addiction Treatment?
Dallas Whole Life Counseling offers confidential support for people dealing with sex addiction, sexual issues, relationship pain, trauma, anxiety, depression, and more.
Support may include:
- Online sex addiction therapy
- Individual counseling
- Couples therapy
- Family counseling
- CBT
- ACT
- Trauma support
- Infidelity counseling
- Sexual issues counseling
You can also use the Find a Counselor tool to find a therapist who specializes in your condition and takes your insurance.
That is helpful because each therapist has different strengths, and the right fit matters.
Evening and Weekend Sessions Available
Privacy and timing can both be important.
Dallas Whole Life Counseling’s office hours are Monday through Friday, 9 am to 5 pm, with appointments available during office hours as well as evenings and weekends.
Making an appointment is quick and easy. Dallas Whole Life Counseling can often see patients in as little as 3 days, and same-day or next-day appointment requests may be available depending on therapist availability, insurance, and your preferences.
For uninsured clients, sliding-scale pricing may be available based on need and financial situation.
Self-Evaluation Tools Can Help You Explore the Bigger Picture
Dallas Whole Life Counseling’s self-evaluation tools are free to use and completely confidential.
While a self-evaluation tool does not replace a diagnosis, it can help you notice related concerns that may be part of the picture, such as anxiety, depression, panic attacks, bipolar symptoms, ADHD, relationship health, or sexual dysfunction.
You can explore our self-evaluation tools if you are trying to better understand what you are feeling before making an appointment.
How to Make Your First Appointment Confidentially
You do not have to explain everything perfectly when you reach out.
You can simply say:
“I’m looking for help with compulsive sexual behaviour.”
Or:
“I’m struggling with porn use, and I need to speak with someone privately.”
Or:
“I think I may need sex addiction therapy, but I feel nervous talking about it.”
That is enough to begin.
After you submit an appointment request, office staff will send information about new patient paperwork, gather needed documentation, and confirm your appointment.
FAQs
What is sex addiction?
Sex addiction is a term used when sexual thoughts, urges, or behaviors feel hard to control and keep causing distress or harm in relationships, finances, health, work, or other parts of life. It may also be called compulsive sexual behavior, hypersexuality, or sexual compulsivity.
What is the difference between sex addiction and a high sex drive?
A high sex drive is not automatically a problem. Sex addiction, or compulsive sexual behavior, is different because it feels hard to control, clashes with your values or commitments, and keeps causing harm or distress.
Is porn addiction the same as sex addiction?
Not always. Porn addiction usually refers to compulsive pornography use. Sex addiction can include a wider range of compulsive sexual behaviors. They can overlap, but they are not exactly the same for everyone.
What are common signs of compulsive sexual behavior?
Common signs include secrecy, repeated failed attempts to stop, guilt or shame afterward, hiding behavior from a partner, risking your relationship or job, and using sexual behavior to cope with stress, anxiety, or emotional pain.
What causes sex addiction?
There is not one single cause. It may involve stress, anxiety, depression, trauma, loneliness, shame, emotional avoidance, relationship pain, easy access to sexual content, or patterns in the brain’s reward system.
Can trauma, anxiety, or depression be connected to sex addiction?
Yes. Some people use sexual behavior to cope with stress, trauma, anxiety, depression, or painful emotions. Therapy can help you understand what is underneath the behavior and build healthier ways to cope.
Can sex addiction be treated without medication?
Often, yes. Many people begin with therapy. Medication may help some people when anxiety, depression, OCD symptoms, bipolar disorder, or substance use are also present. A qualified prescriber can help decide what is right for your situation.
How does CBT help with sex addiction?
CBT helps you understand the cycle between thoughts, feelings, urges, and behaviors. It can help you identify triggers, challenge unhelpful thoughts, interrupt automatic patterns, and build healthier responses.
Is online sex addiction therapy private?
Yes, online therapy can be private when provided through secure video sessions and attended from a private space. Dallas Whole Life Counseling offers virtual therapy for clients anywhere in Texas.
Should I choose individual therapy or couples therapy?
Individual therapy is usually helpful for understanding triggers, urges, shame, and recovery skills. Couples therapy may be helpful when the behavior has damaged trust, communication, or emotional safety in the relationship. Some people benefit from both.






