A 90 day sexual fast. That’s right, almost three months of abstinence from sex. This is what many porn addiction counselors prescribe for addicts and their spouses during the initial months of recovery. Why is this? Is this really necessary?
Dr. Mark Laaser was a nationally recognized author in the field of sex addiction. He required his patients to sign a 90-day abstinence contract: no masturbation, no porn, not even sex with your spouse. Sam Black, in his book The Porn Circuit, explains Dr. Laaser’s rationale:
“First of all, he says, a person needs to learn that they won’t die without sex, especially for 90 days. But more importantly, the person struggling with pornography or sex addiction needs to work proactively about learning true intimacy. ‘The abstinence contract on the front end is entirely about neurochemical detox,’ Laaser says. ‘It’s resetting the brain in terms of sexual expectations.'”
Dr. Laaser didn’t invent the 90-day abstinence concept. Dr. Patrick Carnes has been called the “founding father of sex addiction therapy. He founded the International Institute for Trauma and Addiction Professionals and has decades of experience in the field of addiction therapy. He also requires this of his patients.
The Clinical Rationale For 90 Days of No Sex
From a clinical perspective, a porn addict is hooked on the neurochemicals released in his or her brain during a sexual encounter. This powerful neuro-cocktail of dopamine, norepinephrine, oxytocin, vasopressin, endorphins, and serotonin is responsible for the physical aspects of porn addiction (including withdrawal symptoms). These neurotransmitters and hormones are part of the “reward circuit” in the brain.
Some addiction therapists believe the only way to deactivate the reward system of the brain is to stop the reinforcing behavior—i.e. letting these neuro-circuits rest.
The concept of “90 days” is taken from substance abuse research which has demonstrated that it takes about three months for neurochemistry to reset to normal levels once the substance use has ended.
Other counselors are far more flexible on the time frame, suggesting 30 or 40 days instead.
The Biblical Rationale For Fasting From Sex
There were some in the early church who thought sex was beneath the ideal Christian life. Sex was a base act of the body. These Christians wrote to Paul saying, “It is good for a man not to have sexual relations with a woman”—not even his own wife (1 Corinthians 7:1).
Hear Paul’s response:
“But because of the temptation to sexual immorality, each man should have his own wife and each woman her own husband. The husband should give to his wife her conjugal rights, and likewise the wife to her husband. For the wife does not have authority over her own body, but the husband does. Likewise the husband does not have authority over his own body, but the wife does” (1 Corinthians 7:2-4).
Paul’s position was radical. In the Greco-Roman world of his day, marriage was often a mere social arrangement. But here, Paul talks about a mutual sexual responsibility and blessing. Moreover, in that day, men of status were masters of their wives. For Paul to say that a woman has conjugal rights and that she has authority over her husband’s body would have been unheard of.
But then Paul adds this addendum:
“Do not deprive one another, except perhaps by agreement for a limited time, that you may devote yourselves to prayer; but then come together again, so that Satan may not tempt you because of your lack of self-control” (1 Corinthians 7:5).
Paul here implies that sex in marriage should be frequent. In fact, he says to deny sex to one’s spouse is to “deprive” him or her—this same word is translated as “defraud” one chapter earlier (6:8). Sex helps to guard against sexual immorality and a lack of self-control. But he does make the provision that a couple can make a mutual agreement to abstain from sex for a “limited time” for the purpose of being devoted to prayer.
Paul is describing a type of fasting. Just as fasting from food was an acceptable way to devote to prayer for a season, fasting from sex was also a custom in Paul’s day.
Caveats and Conditions For Sexual Abstinence
While Paul endorses the idea that sexual fasting can be an appropriate way for a couple to devote themselves to prayer, the following caveats should be noted:
- Sexual fasting is not required. Nothing in Paul’s tone should lead the reader to think most or all married couples should engage in sexual fasting. Paul is wary of Satan’s ability to tempt and sees frequent sex in marriage as a good safeguard.
- Sexual fasting should only be done by mutual consent. The man or woman in porn detox may not simply declare a sexual fast. It must be discussed and agreed upon. Christian counselors, even if they encourage a sexual fast, should not require it if the spouse is not agreeable to it.
- Routine sexual abstinence in marriage is not just unwise but is clearly immoral in Paul’s eyes. My marriage bond means my body is no longer my own, and to deny my wife sex is to defraud her. Fasting from sex might be appropriate on occasion but should never become the norm.
- Fasting from sex should be for “a limited time,” or literally, a fixed period of time. Fasting from sex indefinitely was not prescribed here. A set time should be agreed upon.
- Fasting from sex should end with sexual enjoyment. Paul tells couples to come back together again when the agreed-upon time is over.
How Fasting Can Dethrone the Idol of Sex
Every case of porn addiction is different among men and women. In each instance, counselors should meet people where they are. This means not every couple should fast from sex.
For many Christian counselors, this abstinence period is recommended as a time to intentionally de-throne the idol of sexual gratification. For many porn addicts, sex is life to them. Intimacy is about sex and nothing else.
A sexual fast disciplines the man or woman obsessed with sex to remember that sex is not a need. It may feel like a need, but it is not. A sexual fast can also be helpful for the man or woman who finds it impossible to have sex without pornographic fantasies dominating his or her mind.
A sexual fast also reinforces an important truth for the spouse: She or he is not to blame for the partner’s addiction. It is easy for a spouse to feel like if they were more sexually available, prettier, or thinner, the partner wouldn’t need porn. A sexual fast reminds the couple that porn was never a need to begin with. The spouse can rest knowing there is no pressure to sexually perform to make recovery a success.
During a sexual fast, the couple is encouraged to practice and develop the habits of non-sexual intimacy. For many addicts, their porn-saturated minds are numb to everyday pleasures and joys. They have lost the ability to simply enjoy spending time with their spouses—talking together, taking walks together, cooking together, praying together, etc. Sam Black writes,
“For someone with an obsessive porn habit or an addiction, the focus has been on personal and immediate gratification. The people in porn are used; the porn user gives nothing. Especially for men, porn equates to selfishness that typically extends to their marital life. This even includes the overemphasis men can have of their sexual performance, pride or fear about their prowess, and where sexual performance is equated to their manliness” (The Porn Circuit, 33).
Porn trains us to treat sex as something that should be devoured. A sexual fast retrains the mind to understand that sex is better when it is savored.
Can You Really Go 90 Days Without Sex?
Before Christian men and women are married, they go years—even decades—without sex. Going without sex for 90 days is more than possible.
However, for a married couple, the situation is somewhat different. Sex unites men and women in a profound way; the Bible calls it being made “one flesh.” There is an intimate bond established, and God beckons married men and women to reforge that bond through frequent sex.
“Let your fountain be blessed,
and rejoice in the wife of your youth,
a lovely deer, a graceful doe.
Let her breasts fill you at all times with delight;
be intoxicated always in her love” (Proverbs 5:18-19).
This is why sexual fasting in marriage—in the sparing instances when it is done—should never be done with a grit-your-teeth-and-bear-it mentality. The goal of a sexual fast is drawing closer to God and one another, with the ultimate goal of more intimate sex when the fast is over.
Sam Black writes,
“’Couples often are making that classic mistake of all addicts: that sex is equal to love or sex is equal to intimacy,’ Dr. Laaser says. ‘During the 90 days, we’re trying to teach the couple to have intimacy in spiritual and emotional ways first and then eventually sexuality becomes an expression of that intimacy.’
What does intimacy look like? There is no formula for intimacy; it’s unique to each couple but it has a lot to do with giving and sharing. Consider reading, praying, cooking, and taking walks together. Many couples have forgotten how to play and have fun together. Couples need to explore non-sexual means to express intimacy, and after the 90-day break, they will find this discovered intimacy will make their sex life even stronger and more fulfilling, Laaser says” (The Porn Circuit, 33-34).
So if you choose to sexually fast, whether you choose to go a week, a month, 40 days, or 90 days, do it with the right biblical attitude.
Hello,
I am currently on day 13 without porn. I feel as though every day is getting better, my brain is learning more and more about the truth that God has revealed to me (and all of us) and I see a life without pornography and it looks beautiful. My wife has been a huge help, being able to come to her and tell her the truth of my own addiction was not only freeing but it shown the light of God and his mercy through her onto me. Never before have I been able to go over 14 days without watching porn, so day 15 is a bit of a small but big milestone for me but this is a lifelong journey and I recognize that. So very thankful for Covenant Eyes as their daily readings (especially how gospel central related it is) have been an amazing tool for my own recovery. Truly wouldn’t be able to get through this without you guys.
My wife and I did want to go through this sexual fasting, as I truly believed and still do that it would give me time to connect with God on a deeper level and connect with her on a deeper level while healing my brain and how I view sex. The past two weeks, though as challenging as some days have been, have been amazing with how much closer I’ve grown to God and my wife. We set a goal to get to Christmas for our sexual fast to be over, it’s currently 11/21/21 so it would of been about maybe a little over 60 day fast. Well we gave into our sexual appetite for one another and broke that fast a little early. I feel a little guilty, as though I haven’t really accomplished anything yet. Like I should have gone that 60 or so days because I haven’t gotten to a point yet of what a healthy sexual relation looks like. I did re read this article and noticed it said;
“This is why sexual fasting in marriage—in the sparing instances when it is done—should never be done with a grit-your-teeth-and-bear-it mentality. The goal of a sexual fast is drawing closer to God and one another, with the ultimate goal of more intimate sex when the fast is over.”
We sort of felt as though that was what we were experiencing when we gave into sex, like why are we holding back from something we both long to give each other on such a real way? I still though can see benefits of the sexual fast I do. I suppose now my question is should we re engage back on track to this sexual fast, waiting until Christmas to have sex again or because we already gave in should we just go back to having sex while I’m working through healing of porn? I don’t feel as though having sex with my wife has been any sort of trigger, I still see the grace that God has given me and the light at the end of the tunnel as far as getting through life without porn. I just am curious what your thoughts are on should we stick to the sexual fast, or just end it and continue to work through healing while engaging in sex?
Thank you for all you guys do!
Hi Joshua, thanks for your comment! Congratulations on 13 days porn-free, that is AWESOME! I think the point of this article is 1) a sexual fast can be REALLY helpful in porn recovery 2) the Bible makes it clear it’s not a requirement. Every situation is different, so what’s best for you and your wife may not be the best for everyone. I would strongly encourage you to discuss it and pray about it with your wife. What does she think? One of the points of 1 Corinthians 7 is that any kind of sexual fast should be something you both agree is important. Also, counseling can be VERY helpful for situations like this, so I encourage you to seek this out if you can. Even if you don’t continue the sexual fast, reading a Christian marriage book together might be another beneficial option. God bless!
Keith
Hi there, Thanks for the great article. I am on day 21 of my 90-day fast. I count this article as the single best thing I read on the topic, but I was disappointed by the difficulty I had assembling all the information I wanted. I wanted to have a good idea of what I wanted to achieve with a fast and how a fast was going to help me achieve it. Here is a post I wrote for my Samson Society group.
My wife and I are in the midst of a 90-day sexual fast. My specific struggle includes a real battle with presence during sex. I have only truly “been with” my wife a few times in our 13+ years of marriage. It has made sex just as shame-inducing as pornography use and my abuse of sex has been a major contributing factor of my 7-year relapse. We decided that a lengthy fast would give me space to heal and work on my sobriety without continuing to misuse my wife.
“You can’t fix a sex addiction with sex”
When I read this quote I realized that that was exactly what I had tried to do in 2011/12 when I first started to truly battle my addiction. When I had a hard day, for the “good” of my marriage, rather than look at porn or masturbate, I would have sex with my wife. I took it as a step in the right direction. My wife was gracious with me. She made herself available and we thought we were doing the right thing. But our sex, though physically exhilarating, was never satisfying. I have since said that sex is the least connected thing we do. If we watched TV together I would not have to hide what I was thinking about, but I certainly could not tell my wife what I was thinking during sex. I really was just using my wife as a substitute for masturbation. It was only a matter of time before I relapsed into the use of porn and masturbation because I never got very far in dealing with the core issues of my inability to face my fears and threats.
So, here it goes, I will describe features of our fast and why we selected them.
We are on a 90-day fast from any kind of sexual genital stimulation.
Goals: I want to give us space to work on recovery without the temptation to use sex as a treatment. I don’t trust myself. I will absolutely try to get sex from my wife if I think I “need” it. I will be unkind. I will be manipulative. I’d like to avoid that. A fast lets us put our sexual health first and our sexual satisfaction second.
I want to practice solving problems without using sex to escape them. I have run away or hidden from everything I felt threatened by for so long! I want to take some time to practice not running away. To that end, I am also not playing video games, cruising facebook, reading the news, or escaping into books until I have finished all of my scheduled recovery work for the day. I am doing a daily FASTER check-in and I am doing a FANOS check in with my wife daily. (You can search for FASTER and FANOS to learn more about that).
I want to open avenues for alternative expression of intimacy with my wife and family. I want to develop new ways to connect, I think a fast will help me. That is why we are doing the FANOS each day. We are also listening to a betrayal trauma podcast and discussing it.
I need to demonstrate that sex is not a basic need. To whatever degree my mind believes that sex is a basic need, I need to prove in a way that my mind will accept, that I can survive (and even thrive) without sex. 90 days should do it.
I want to reset my neuro-chemicals. I have been hijacking my brain’s systems to serve my addiction. 90-days without an orgasm-induced dopamine hit should have an impact.
I want to develop a healthy sexual appetite. I am reading and learning from as many sources as I can find to learn about what a healthy sexual relationship is like so that I can come out of this fast on a path to something better. I hope that, by learning to face my fears and feelings with courage I can prepare myself for healthy sex.
During this fast I have two daily devotionals, I am attending (or attempting to attend) a meeting every day. I am reading and studying about sexual addiction (I just finished “Out of the Shadows” and I am about to start “Unwanted”). I am sticking to a strict schedule. I am learning to put off procrastination and face challenges. I am learning to recognize the symptoms of the path to relapse so that I can find problems and deal with them instead of avoiding them. I am learning to be more gracious with my wife and myself.
I have divided the fast into 3 phases. The first phase is 44 days and it is for me to learn what I need to know to define the second phase. Especially I want to answer the question: How will I know that this fast has been a success? How will I know that I am ready to start the path to a healthy sexual relationship with my wife? I am not sure what the second phase will be defined by, but it is 30 days. The final phase for us to spend some time on a SENSATE activity. Here’s a link to an article on the topic. https://health.cornell.edu/pdf-library/sensate-focus be warned the article could be triggering.
I don’t know if this will be useful to anyone, but I wanted to put it out there in case anyone else would like to have a template to start from.
My wife is also getting support and doing a lot of work on her own betrayal trauma, but this is my post, so you only get mostly my story.
Thanks Nick, this is very helpful! My wife and I are on day 1 now, I just read this article tonight.
It has been 9 months since my husband has been clean. He still does not have any desire at all for anything, not the porn or sex in general. Is this very not normal? I have 2 different types of internet blockers and all sorts of protection guards on all of our phones. Maybe God knew that with a 38 year addiction maybe he needed longer to heal those neural pathways. I just don’t know but this sure is hurtful.
Please help!
So what if you aren’t fasting? My husband has deprived me for years for his secret life of looking at pics on the internet. We have been rekindling our relationship. Before he got caught, I had read a book and it said to have sex for 30 days to change your marriage. I suggested this to him before doing all my extra reading. We have come close to 30 straight days of mind blowing sex some days and then romantic the next. We lie in bed for hours talking which is something we haven’t done. Just a kiss leads to being together most days. The spark we have has been so nice but the thought of giving it up terrifies me. Not having sex is how our marriage went down this road we think so why fast now. We have been fasting for 4 years having sex1-2 times a year.
We are reading together a book on rekindling our marriage and have planned a weekend getaway with no kids so we can focus on our marriage and building parts that we lost such as communication, intamacy and fun. He is reading 2 books on how to recover. He said he feels free now that I know. We lie in bed and talk for hours. We actually sit and hold hands.
I do worry my 30 days to great marital sex will harm us in the end after all my readings but at this time, we both agree it’s been a bit healing for our relationship and lots of fun.
Am I to understand that you’re saying the only time the spouse of a sex addict may refrain from sex is if the sex addict is in mutual agreement?
Hi Tera,
Every relationship is different. For some, mutual agreement to refrain from sex can be quite beneficial to the marriage healing. For others, having MORE sex may be the road to rekindling the love and romance that God designed in marriage. I believe that the message of this article is NOT to say what is best for your marriage or relationship, but to describe the rationale behind fasting from sex while working to overcome an addiction.
Blessings,
Moriah
During the 90 day abstinence from sex, what is the stance on fantasies? My husband and I are abstaining after him coming clean about his porn addiction- there are many other things we are also doing; support group for each of us, accountability software, and more. However my husband claims that he regularly (multiple times per day) fantasizes about only me, in order to help him “handle” not having sex. I believe this is still problematic, and feel that to truly address the neurological aspect that he should’t be fantasizing even about me, but I would appreciate your advice.
What about the wife? I am highly sexual and I don’t think I can make it 90 days without sex. What do you advise? Is it ok to masturbate?
Hi, Gale – I think that’s certainly your decision to make, in full disclosure with your spouse. At the same time, could there be power in mutual sacrifice during the time of fasting? Again, it’s something the two of you need to decide, in order to see what’s best for the marriage and not necessarily the individual.
Best, Chris
My husband does need to go on this fast but I feel that those working with him aren’t taking me into the consideration. We do connect in a lot of other ways already but the best way I connect with him is physically and sexually. The way i feel most loved is through physically and sexually. He has already had to reset the 90 days and that was after 3 times of us “loving on me” which was almost sex without an organism. I’m sure my insistance on feeling loved and connected in these ways was part of the reason he messed up afterwards. Living 3 months of a sexless marriage to me means I will have to move out for at least a month of that time so i don’t get us too close to the line to cause problems. What are your thoughts?
I should also say that my husband takes full responsibility for his mess up and doesn’t blame me. I know this 90 days will be best for him in the long run but since he is making a lot of other changes (3 times a week counseling, going to SA amd celebrate recovery meetings everyday, talking to his coaches every day about his temptation levels and other things) I wish I wasn’t being forced into this for his sake. Unfortunately I feel that I would be told that I just need to learn self control etc.. as well. Any thoughts?
Will any of the moderators answer my questions?
Thanks.
Hi, Rach – I’m sorry that no one has replied to this comment. I’m not sure how it slipped through the cracks. Yes, he caused this so it seems unfair. But, it is an “us” recovery. If you jointly agree that you move out for a month, then that’s what you do. There isn’t a prescriptive way for this to play out, other than being in constant communication between spouses. What are you both willing to do to make this work? If I can be direct, it’s not you being forced into this for his sake, it’s you choosing to do this for his sake. We’re talking about 90 days of life! 3 months! I think you can do it.
This may seem like a silly question. But what should the boundries be to a sexual fast? Should anything that could cause arousal be avoided? Like kissing or lying together? Or is it only climax on the part of the addict that needs to be avoided?
Hi, Heather – it’s not a silly question. I don’t know the clinical answer, but I suspect that the answer is somewhat “up to you” depending on the purpose of the fast. Similar to how I would craft a fast from certain foods for a certain purpose. The level of legalism you stick to is likely your choice :)
Peace, Chris
After kicking my husband out for 3 weeks, he returned home and we had intercourse. In fact, we had sex 4 times in the first few days. Prior to that, we had not had sex for many months. He put many things in place (no internet on his phone, counseling, church, peer support, etc.), and we have had lengthy conversations. Do you think that we should have waited to have sex? Should we stop now and wait the 90 days? I don’t want him to ‘relapse’ due to US having sex!
Thanks!
Hey Tiffany. Well, some counselors are pretty hard-core about the 90 days. My husband recovered without the 90-day fast. I personally don’t think there’s any way to guarantee recovery. Will the 90 days help? Maybe. Will it guarantee recovery? No. Is it your fault if your husband relapses? NO. NO. And, NO!
If he chooses to relapse, that is a choice he makes.
You decide on what healthy boundaries make sense to you in this situation, and you keep those healthy boundaries. If you WANT to have sex with him, fine. If you don’t want to, DON’T.
Don’t be pressured one way or another into trying to control his behavior via sex.
YOU get to decide what happens with your body, and when you are ready or NOT ready to have sex again.
Peace to you, Kay
My wife has thyroid/adrenal issues, is overweight and depressed. Lately she has had more energy, but she has no interest in intimacy and this has been for 10 years.. My question is, does God expect a man to be able to be celibate for that long? I am in a horrible place.
I would hope that pursuing the best possible medical care for your wife is the highest priority. It sounds to me like her medications must not be properly regulated. Also, I would hope that she is seeing a counselor to help her with the depression.
Secondly, I would suggest that you look into counseling for yourself, to help you process through your emotions and make wise decisions. No doubt you are in a difficult place. Being the spouse of a depressed person is very wearing. However, since you’re here at Covenant Eyes and we’re a porn-help site, I’m assuming that you’re asking if it’s okay to look at porn in place of a healthy marriage relationship, and I’d say a big NO to that. Porn might help you feel better for a few minutes, but it’s not going to fix the underlying problems in your marriage. I would urge you to find a counselor and get some help with the pain you’re feeling, so you can make good decisions for the long term.
Peace to you, Kay