

Meth and sex addiction may be partners. Methamphetamines cause a temporary, euphoric high that also may lead to seemingly positive sexual side effects.
Many methamphetamine users report developing a voracious sexual appetite. This seemingly positive experience is when drug use and sexual activity become mentally intertwined. It can result in a person developing a cross-addiction.
Co-occurring disorders, such as meth and sex addictions, can develop together. Meth use and sex impact dopamine release and trigger your brain’s reward system. This fusion results in people thinking they can’t have one without the other.
It’s common for people to fuse substance use and other addictive behaviors. People often link drugs and alcohol with sexual behaviors.
When you have an addiction, you notice changes in your sexual desires and behaviors. You feel less inhibited. You’re also more likely to escalate your sexual patterns. This escalation is because your brain develops a tolerance to activities that previously pleased you.
Dopamine release and production encourage addictions. Dopamine is a neurochemical the brain releases when it perceives something pleasurable. Dopamine helps you remember things that feel good so you can do them again. Over time, as people continue to use meth and have sex, the brain becomes less receptive to the “pleasure chemical.” The brain then produces less dopamine and shuts down the dopamine neuroreceptors. You then need more of the drug or more intense sexual activities to get the same high.
When two behaviors become mentally fused, you usually need to stop them both completely.
People also often link meth use with porn addiction. Porn usage creates the same surge of neurochemicals as sex. It forces the brain to think you’re engaging in sexual activities with the people you’re watching.
Therefore, watching porn and using meth can become mentally fused as well. A person who uses meth feels more confident, empowered, and sexually fueled. Masturbation and porn usage increase as you become more resistant to the dopamine produced by your brain. Then watching porn and meth usage become mentally fused, so you can’t do one without the other.

When you snort, smoke, or inject meth, you experience an initial high that you’ll want to recreate. Meth has an impact on your body that can have lifelong consequences.
Meth also has prolonged and sometimes lifelong negative impacts on your physical, mental, and sexual health.
To recover from cross addictions, such as meth and sex addiction or porn and meth addiction, you have to treat both at the root cause. Trauma likely is at the heart of both addictions. At Begin Again Institute, we help you address the trauma that resulted in your addictions. We can provide you with a unique, safe space to help you recover from your addictions and create a clear path toward a sober and secure future.
Due to the nature of Begin Again Institute being a two-week intensive for intimacy disorders, our program is only appropriate for clients who are stable in all other substance use and mental health disorders. Call our admissions team to learn more at 720.702.4608
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