
From Back to Godhead
By Caitanya Carana Dasa
I said to Sandip, âI read about a form of addiction that is increasingly being recognized by specialists as the worldâs most widespread and least discussed form of addiction: sexual addiction.â
âSexual addiction? Whatâs that supposed to mean?â
âJust as alcoholics donât have control over their desire for alcohol, sex addicts donât have control over their sex drive. Drug addicts, for instance, are not necessarily evil or criminal but are in the grip of a habit that makes them act irrationally and sometimes even illegally. So with sex addicts.â
âWhatâs the point of calling it an addiction? That they shouldnât be held responsible because they are addicted?â
âNo, being addicted doesnât mean the addict canât be held accountable for his or her actions. Alcoholics who assault someone in a drunken stupor are punished, but they are also helped to treat their addiction. Why canât the same thing be done for those who are not bad people but who do something bad due to lust? Sexual addiction needs to be treated, not neglected by the simplistic division of people into heroes and villains. Sexual addiction can afflict even common people who otherwise lead normal, responsible lives. Sex addicts may be addicted to many distorted forms of sexual expression like stalking, voyeurism, or stripping, but they are most commonly addicted to pornography.
âDid you know that the porn industry is among the worldâs biggest and fastest growing industries? In the United States alone, porn revenue is greater than the combined revenues of all professional football, baseball, and basketball franchises.â
Sandipâs eyebrows shot up. âThat big?â
âYes. And sexual addiction is often more entangling than all other forms of addiction.â
The Most Entangling Addiction
âWhy more entangling?â
âBecause, in todayâs society addicts just canât get away from it. Alcohol and drugs are available at specific places, but sexual provocations are present everywhere. Other addicts have to spend time, energy, and money to get to alcohol or drugs, but sex addicts often have to spend time, energy, and money to get away from sexual provocations.â
âWhat do you mean? How do they spend time, energy, and money to get away?â âBillboards can act as triggers for sexual addicts. To avoid those triggers, they often have to take another route, which obviously requires time and energy. And with internet access available almost everywhere and porn sites on the net running into the thousands, temptation is always just one click away. Addicts seeking recovery just canât resist temptation when it is so easily available. Experts insist that a vital first step in curing porn addiction is restricting access to the internet. Installing filters on computers requires money, and now that people have multiple devices with net access, they need multiple filters, which means spending more money.â
âAll this sounds reasonable, but Iâm still not convinced we should be calling attraction to sex an addiction. After all, sex is not like alcohol, which is not a fundamental human need. The desire for sex is a natural biological drive thatâs present in all species.â
âYes, sex is natural, but very little is natural about the current cultureâs commodification of sex?â âCommodification?â
The Commodification of Sex
âYes, our culture makes sex into a cog in the economic wheel. And it does so at three levels: sex is used to sell commodities; sex is made into a commodity for sale; and people are made into saleable commodities as sex toys.â
âThat went by too fast. Can you explain?
âSure. The first level is the most obvious and widespread. Everything from cellphones to cars is promoted using sex as bait. Ad agencies know that nothing catches peopleâs attention as much as sex, so they use sexually alluring images to grab peopleâs attention and then direct that attention to the products they want to sell. The second level is when sex is itself made into a commodity. That happens in offices where people take and give sexual favors in return for jobs, increments, or promotions. And it happens in hotels where sex is made into one more thing customers can tick along with optional conveniences like food, air-conditioning, etc. The third level is the flesh trade, where people are seen as nothing more than sex toys. And of course, thereâs pornography, where people are reduced to virtual sex toys.â
âFor a monk, you sure know a lot about sex?â
âNot about sex. About lust.â
âWhatâs the difference?â
âThe difference is huge. Knowing more about sex means knowing how to do it better, longer, in new ways, and to enjoy it more. Knowing about lust means knowing about the force that makes people obsess over sex, that makes them do terrible things for its sake. It means understanding âMr. Lustâ to be Public Enemy Number One. Most people donât recognize lust as an enemy, but monks do. Thatâs often one of the reasons they become monks. And itâs certainly one of the ways they continue as monks. We need to know our enemy well and know how he acts as an enemy. Thatâs why I read about sexual addiction it shows how lust binds people.
âAnother way to understand the difference is to look at the purpose of knowing people read about sex because they want more of it, whereas monks study lust to get the impetus to avoid it completely. By understanding how lust deludes people and drives them to selfdestructive actions, we protect ourselves and others from being similarly deluded.â
Sandip nodded. âOk, the difference makes sense. Where were we?â
âOn the point that the current commodification of sex is not at all natural. No species in nature commodifies sex the way humans do. What to speak of no species, no other civilization in human history has made such an extensive business of exploiting the sexual vulnerability of other human beings. No wonder there is so much sexual violence in todayâs society.â
Sandip objected, âAgain this seems like shifting blame for sexual violence from the person to the environment.â
âWeâre not shifting blame; weâre just looking at all the relevant factors. Suppose our city is ravaged by arson. To counter the menace, we would strongly punish the arsonists and improve the firefighting services. Additionally, we would investigate an underlying cause: are city buildings made of inflammable stuff? If so, then we would try to correct that, wouldnât we?â
âYes.â
âSimilarly, to counter the fire of sexual violence, we absolutely must punish the criminals swiftly and severely, and at the same time provide better security to potential victims. Additionally, we need to look for an underlying cause. As all actions start with thoughts the stuff of the mind we need to check whether peopleâs thoughts are made of sexually inflammable stuff. And they certainly are.â
âYou know, all this is interesting though some of it is debatable but can we get back to the topic of your monkhood?â âActually, thatâs exactly what weâre talking about the discussion about sexual addiction came up as further vindication of what Iâd been feeling: that everyone, I included, needed a way to regulate sexual desire, and that we canât assume that when we have sexual desire, weâre all like heroes who would never do anything the villains did.
âIn that context, I found the bhakti philosophy and bhakti practices so relevant. In the Bhagavad-gita (3.36), Arjuna asks Krishna, âWhat is it that makes people act sinfully, even against their will?â And Krishna answers (3.37), âIt is lust, lust that degenerates into anger and is the enemy of the world.â Reading and comprehending that was one of the biggest Eureka moments of my life, all the more so when I understood that lust is a distortion of our original love for Krishna. The more we revive our love for Krishna, the more lust loses its power over us.
âWhere the philosophy illumined, the practices empowered, especially the practice of mantra meditation. Once I discovered the holy nameâs power in beating away unwanted thoughts, the scales in my inner battle changed dramatically. That discovery was so empowering.â âEmpowering?â
âDefinitely. Imagine a child whoâs been bullied for years. Suddenly one day the child looks down and finds heâs got fists as big as the bullyâs if not bigger. Next time the bully comes to hit him, the child hits back. âTake that! And that! And that. For all the years you tormented me, Iâm going to get back at you now.â
âI felt something like that when I realized the power of the holy name. My chanting became like fighting in a war. I had envisioned meditation to be peaceful. This mantra meditation sure wasnât peaceful, but it was better it was fruitful. I slowly started enjoying the war, because I could clearly see I was gradually getting the upper hand on lust. Its grip on me was decreasing. Not that I have knocked down or completely driven away the bully of lust by no means. Lust is too slippery and too wily. It always gets away before you can deliver a fatal blow. It doesnât allow you to get the conviction that itâs so bad you need to be done with it forever. Then, when it comes back next time, itâs at its wily best or, you could say, wily worst. It has such a sweet smile on its face that you think itâs your best friend. And though you have the iron fist, instead of using it, you embrace My Sweet Smile. Just when youâve lowered your guard, lust strikes. You end up doing something you never thought you could have done.â
âYouâre quite worked up about this war metaphor, arenât you?â
âIâve found very few metaphors that describe reality as accurately as this one. I strongly feel that the more people confront their lower self, that fewer outer confrontations they will have to face. Inner war increases outer peace. And compared to all other methods for self-mastery, the holy name is in its own league. Due to its power, I felt confident about choosing monkhood.â
Restraint is not Deprivation
âSo thatâs how you became free from sex desire?â
âI didnât say I was free from anything.â âBut arenât you making that claim by wearing the dress of a monk?â
âA monk is someone whoâs decided not to engage in sex and is striving to become free from sex desire not necessarily someone who is already free.â âSo youâre admitting you have sex desire?â âSrimad-Bhagavatam says that no one, except Lord Narayana and the sage Nara-Narayana, is free from lust.â
âIâll take that as a yes. So, the question begs itself: If you have sex desire, then why deprive yourself by not fulfilling it?
âDo you sometimes feel sexually attracted to women other than your wife?
âWhat?â The shock was evident on his face.
I kept a straight face. âYou heard me.â
âWell, thatâs personal.â
âYouâre asking me a personal question too. So itâs only fair that you be ready to answer one.â
âBut Iâm Sherlock Holmes, not you. Here youâre meant to answer questions, not me.â
âAgreed. But my question to you is a part of my answer. I need to hear your answer before I respond. Donât worry, my question is not meant to make you feel guilty; itâs meant to highlight a universal feature of human behavior.â
“Well, OK. Iâm just like everyone else. Sometimes I do feel sexually attracted to other women.â
âThen why deprive yourself by not fulfilling that desire?
âBut that would be immoral, scandalous, maybe even dangerous.â
âThose are all negative motivations. Isnât there a positive motivation for being faithful to your wife?â
âYes, definitely. I want to have an honest and deep relationship with my wife, to look her in the eyes whenever we share our hearts. And I know I canât do that if I cheat on her.â
âWell said. That means refusing to act on an existing desire doesnât always have to be a deprivation especially when thereâs a higher purpose.â
âWhen you put it that way, yes . . . I can see what youâre driving at.â
âThe same principle of a higher purpose underlies the self-restraint of a married man as well as that of a monk. The difference is that the monkâs self-restraint is, so to speak, one level higher whereas a married man restricts sex to his wife, the monk doesnât engage in sex at all.â
âThatâs not just one level higher. Itâs an entirely different ball game. You make it sound as if itâs a dietary preference: whether to be an omnivore or a herbivore. But I would say itâs like choosing between eating and not eating at all. Sex is like food itâs a basic bodily need.â
âMaybe I should give you some sound punches on the nose.â Though I knew a smile would belie my words, I couldnât stop it from creeping on my face.
Sandipâs face showed that he hadnât caught the joke. âIf you have to resort to force as a replacement for argument, then you have already lost the argument.â
âIâm considering force not as a replacement, but as a complement.â
âA complement?â
âYour argument is that sex is a necessity, like food. If that were true, then all of us monks should be dead, shouldnât we? If talking with a monk for several hours doesnât convince you that heâs alive, then whatâs that monk supposed to do? Probably an experiential learning session with your nose as a punching bag for the monkâs fists might convince you that he is indeed alive.â
A smile broke across his face. âOK, point conceded. Iâll admit that sex is not quite on par with food as a necessity. Still, the desire for sex is irresistible for most people, if not all.â He spoke in a tone that invited challenge.
But some challenges are worth neglecting, especially when an opening is available elsewhere. âIrresistible isnât the same as essential. Alcoholics feel that alcohol is irresistible. And it may well be for them, depending on how strong the grip of the addiction. But, just because the urge for something is irresistible, it doesnât make that something essential. âIrresistibleâ refers to that which we feel we canât live without, whereas âessentialâ refers to that which we actually canât live without. Food is essential. Alcohol and sex may seem irresistible, but they arenât essential.â
