Sex Addiction

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24 November 2015
20,110
56,048
There is a woman on now who suffered for 25yrs and had to have it up too 5 times a day :eek: the NHS couldn't help her, she's crying here distraught :)
Poor fella I say but I don't agree that the nhs should foot the bill for such things , I read a few years a go about a lady who climaxed every five ten mins a day for years ,demanded treatment of some kind and was mightily miffed when the dr suggested being forced through the change
 
Pearls

MOTM

18 July 2015
55,094
120,662
Poor fella I say but I don't agree that the nhs should foot the bill for such things , I read a few years a go about a lady who climaxed every five ten mins a day for years ,demanded treatment of some kind and was mightily miffed when the dr suggested being forced through the change
It's a tricky one eh ;)
 
19 March 2015
23,755
64,856
They need Swinging in their lives :sneaky: :devil:

Send the ladies here. :whistle:

Should it be helped via the NHS?
Don’t know. Think the NHS has enough to deal with maybe. Broken legs and knees for example. :whistle:
If there’s a dude whose horny and needs ‘attention’ but someone with a broken leg, I think the leg needs attention first.
By leg I actually do mean the real leg btw :D x
 

Therapon

Admin
11 August 2015
24,408
47,420
Difficult I guess because most people have sex because they enjoy it and most people do not fully understand what addiction is. I read the article and it seems, if I understood it correctly, that this is a true addiction. There is a need for sex but no enjoyment, caused the break up of the marriage and is putting her health and life at risk so in this case I think some form of nhs treatment is needed.
 
Pearls

MOTM

18 July 2015
55,094
120,662
Difficult I guess because most people have sex because they enjoy it and most people do not fully understand what addiction is. I read the article and it seems, if I understood it correctly, that this is a true addiction. There is a need for sex but no enjoyment, caused the break up of the marriage and is putting her health and life at risk so in this case I think some form of nhs treatment is needed.
Look at Michael Douglas, he had therapy (y)
 
19 March 2015
23,755
64,856
Difficult I guess because most people have sex because they enjoy it and most people do not fully understand what addiction is. I read the article and it seems, if I understood it correctly, that this is a true addiction. There is a need for sex but no enjoyment, caused the break up of the marriage and is putting her health and life at risk so in this case I think some form of nhs treatment is needed.
Yes, in the real sensible approach - it is all that above ^ actual addiction no different to say, smoking. One lady walked around even after having sex, on average of 5 times a day and thought of nothing else. To the point it made her ill.
Another couple, divorced because of it. A bloke, seeing working girls behind his wife's back as a result.
In that real sense of addiction then people do need help.
What we need to ask is; is this any different to any other kind of addiction that does get help from the NHS?
 

Therapon

Admin
11 August 2015
24,408
47,420
I truly believe in therapy. (y)

As you know, I used to help out at my local nhs for both drug and alcohol addicts and fully support the idea. Therapy isn't a panacea but it can help people to actually understand they have a problem. If you can do that then it's hopefully the first step on the road to recovery. It doesn't always work unfortunately.
 
Pearls

MOTM

18 July 2015
55,094
120,662
As you know, I used to help out at my local nhs for both drug and alcohol addicts and fully support the idea. Therapy isn't a panacea but it can help people to actually understand they have a problem. If you can do that then it's hopefully the first step on the road to recovery. It doesn't always work unfortunately.
It's never a quick fix but it can work amazingly for some but as you said not everyone, I think more should try it, rather than shove a bottle of pills down them and I think there are many out there in this situation and have never tried Therapy x
 
19 March 2015
23,755
64,856
As you know, I used to help out at my local nhs for both drug and alcohol addicts and fully support the idea. Therapy isn't a panacea but it can help people to actually understand they have a problem. If you can do that then it's hopefully the first step on the road to recovery. It doesn't always work unfortunately.
Admittance and acknowledging is always the first step and the hardest.
 
D

Deleted member 1402

Should give them a discount code for a sex robot with the gender of their choice :D