When Sex becomes an Addiction,..Office worker, 29, admits her addiction to having SEX more than 10 times a day has cost her a job and friends (and it's left her boyfriend worn out!)
Sami Walton, 29, developed a sex addiction in her early 20s
after break-up
She travelled hundreds of miles to sleep with friends and strangers
But her life has turned around since meeting partner James Keates, 38
Now she is
raising awareness because 'sex addiction is a serious issue'
She lost her job and many of her friends due to her
struggles with addiction.
But Sami Walton is not under the power of drugs or alcohol, but
rather a slave to her own lust.
The 29-year-old has a sex addiction that leaves her unable to keep
her hands off partner of four years James Keates.
Office worker Miss Walton leaves the 38-year-old exhausted by
having sex more than 10 times a day on some occasions.
But she is keen to dispel the myths around the issue and make
people realise it is a real problem and not something to laugh about.
Scroll down for video
+8
+8
+8
Miss Walton, of Ascot, Berkshire, told the Sunday People: 'Most
men think they would love a partner who needs sex so much, but none of my previous
boyfriends could handle it.
'I'm lucky to have James. Not only does he have the stamina to
keep up with me, he's really supportive and doesn't judge me when I'm having a
bad day.'
If Mr Keates is too tired to sustain her addiction she has a
£1,500 collection of sex toys to turn to.
He told the People: 'In the early days I felt like I'd won the
lottery. But now I'm getting a bit older it can be exhausting and I know it
gets Sami down. I just try my best to be understanding.'
Miss Walton said she has shunned medical treatment in the past
because she did not feel doctors understood what she was going through.
+8
+8
+8
She developed the problem in her early 20s after a break-up with a
long term partner, and ended up travelling all over the country for casual
rendezvous with both men and women.
It led to her failing to turn up to work and her life 'spiralled
out of control', sleeping with regular 'friends with benefits' and complete
strangers.
She added it led to 'dangerous situations' because she would go
home with people she 'knew nothing about'.
Miss Walton said a life-changing moment came in 2010 when she woke
up hundreds of miles away from home and she realised she had a genuine problem
and was not just 'on the rebound'.
She soon lost her job and went to see her GP about the issue, but
was only prescribed anti-anxiety medication, while the waiting list to see a
counsellor was 'too long'.
+8
·
SHARE PICTURE
·
·
·
·
·
+8
Read More Daily Mail
Comments
Post a Comment