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2000 The New York Times Company
The New York Times
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November 19, 2000, Sunday, Late Edition - Final
SECTION: Section 6; Page 96; Column 1; Magazine Desk
LENGTH: 5468 words
HEADLINE: How Do You Cure A Sex Addict?
BYLINE: By Lauren Slater; Lauren Slater is a psychologist and the
director of AfterCare Services, a mental health and substance-abuse clinic in
Boston. Her most recent book is "Lying: A Metaphorical Memoir."
BODY:
Once, sex addicts were treated with pillories and guillotines and gleaming
clamps, but what used to be a moral problem is now a medical one, and this is no
surprise. Our understanding of sexual compulsion has followed the same
trajectory as our understanding of melancholy and moodiness. It's all in the
brain. Goodbye heart, goodbye groin, and voil rumpled, slick organ crammed in
its sheath of skull. New scientific theories are shedding an interesting light
on the biochemistry of perversion and maybe, by extension, on the chemistry of
ordinary kinkiness -- what you and I do, volitionally and consensually, behind
bedroom doors.
His name, in all seriousness, is Dr. Kafka. No relation, he says. Martin Kafka
treats and studies paraphiliacs at McLean Hospital in Belmont, Mass. Paraphilias
are disorders characterized by persistent deviant sexual arousal -- think
exhibitionism, fetishism and pedophilia. Closely related to the paraphilias are
what Kafka calls the paraphilia-related disorders (P.R.D.'s). Those suffering
from P.R.D.'s are, in common vernacular, sex addicts, who may not be breaking
the law but are driven by libidos so excessive that they are pinned beneath
their weight.
Kafka, senior attending psychiatrist at McLean Hospital and a clinical assistant
professor at Harvard Medical School, where he lectures to residents on
hypersexuality, is a nationally renowned expert in his field. He has published
14 papers on his subject. He comes to work each day in a serious suit, but he
likes to laugh, and he likes to eat, insisting, always, that I meet him in the
cafeteria at McLean, where he dines on Otis Spunkmeyer chocolate-chip cookies.
"My father was a dentist," he says, biting into a bit of chocolate goo, "and I
did two years in dental school before I realized it wasn't for me. I like to say
I went from dental to mental."
In his practice he sees about 40 patients a week, more than three-quarters of
whom have what by current cultural standards at least are perversely heightened
libidos. His most serious cases are sexual predators; his "lite" cases include
the old standbys of masculine misery: compulsive porn-watchers, compulsive
clients of prostitutes, men incapable of monogamy. The middle range is composed
of guys we call creeps, the ones who peer in your bedroom window, the guy in the
red raincoat parting the slicker's flaps.
Kafka started out at McLean in 1983 as the medical director of the
cognitive-behavior therapy unit, which is a fairly grand beginning, given that
McLean is to mental hospitals what Harvard is to colleges. In fact, McLean is
affiliated with Harvard, and its gracious grounds reflect that. Originally,
Kafka worked with women who had eating disorders, women so thin that the bones
rose in ridges under their skin. "One day, a sex offender was admitted," Kafka
says. "There were no other beds in the hospital, maybe, so they put this guy on
my unit, with all the eating disorders, and that's when I had my eureka moment.
I began to see that the sex offenders were just like the bulimics. Both groups
were suffering from a disregulation of appetite. I began to think that
paraphilias and the P.R.D.'s are to men what eating disorders are to women. I
was so excited by this breakthrough, I didn't sleep for two nights."
In fact, there are interesting inverse relationships between eating disorders
and sexual-impulse disorders. The sex distribution of paraphilias and related
disorders is about 95 percent male, 5 percent female, whereas the sex
distribution for eating disorders is the opposite. Both disorders involve
difficulty experiencing satiation, as well as a general disregulation of
appetite drives.
"T.S.O.," Kafka says. "Total sexual outlet." We are sitting in his damp basement
office.
"So you have to look at total sexual outlet as one way of diagnosing a
paraphiliac or a P.R.D.," he says. "How many times does he masturbate a week?
What are the number of orgasms he has per week. Anything over six and my ears
perk up."
"Six?" I say. By this definition, my husband may be in trouble.
"What's the average amount a man masturbates?" I ask.
"Three," he says. "It varies."
"There must be a lot of paraphiliacs out there that we don't know about," I say.
"There probably are," he says.
In one study, 33 percent of normal men admitted to having rape fantasies. In
another study, penile tumescence was measured for both normal men and convicted
pedophiles when both groups were shown deviant stimuli. Twenty-eight percent of
those in the normal group were sexually aroused, some of them by pedophiliac
images.
I look to my left. On a small table, Kafka, a jokester at heart, has his own
fake pharmacy. There are medicine bottles -- red, green, piglet pink. One is
labeled "Virginity Restorer" in frilly script. There's another bottle called
"Will Power," a third labeled "Passion Control Pills." Kafka sees me staring.
"You have to have some humor in my line of work," he says. I nod. I try to
imagine the porn addict, the rapist, sitting in the seat I occupy now,
confessing. I wonder if they think the pills are funny. I wonder if they ever
take them -- desperation, desire, the wish for an easy cure -- and feel the
sweet sugar in their mouths.
"Sex," Kafka says, "can be a curse."
We have heard, of late, so much about sex and hormones; testosterone shot slowly
into layered, striated muscle; estrogen rubbed on labial skin. One of Kafka's
most significant contributions to the chemistry of perversity may be that he has
been able to look beyond the obvious culprits -- our grease-based sex steroids
-- to the more nuanced chemical messengers and the complex roles they play in
mediating our desires.
In a 1969 study published in Science, a scientist shoots up some rats with
parachlorophenylalanine, a compound that lowers serotonin levels in both blood
and brain. Within minutes of its administration there's a veritable drought of
serotonin. What happens to the rats? They become sexually aroused. They mount
each other compulsively. Conversely, feed rats a serotonin-laced snack, thereby
raising their levels, and almost all sexual appetite disappears. "In other
words, this isn't just about testosterone," Kafka says. "It used to be thought
sexual deviants had just testosterone abnormalities, but they may really have
serotonin abnormalities. It may be that the lower the serotonin, the higher the
sex drive, or it may be something much more complex, that sexual deviance is
linked to an as-yet-unidentified disregulation affecting the serotonin system."
Other studies on male animals bear this hypothesis out: before copulation, there
is an increase in dopamine and a decrease in serotonin. Post-copulation, the
opposite occurs. If this proves to be the case in the human species as well,
afterward, when the man is smoking his cigarette or snoring as if he had chowed
down a turkey dinner, he may be experiencing a serotonin surge. In a culture in
love with the idea of "high" serotonin, it might surprise us to know that
passion, and its distant cousin lewdness, may lie not in the dosed-up but in the
dosed-down version of being.
Kafka calls his theory of sexual-impulse disorders "the monoamine hypothesis"
because he is looking at the central role our monoamines -- dopamine,
norepinephrine and, specifically, serotonin -- play in mediating desire. One of
the more interesting studies he cites involves castrated rats that are injected
with parachlorophenylalanine, which depletes central nervous system serotonin,
and are subsequently able to resume normal mounting behavior with little or no
testosterone additives. In other words, at least as far as animal analogues go,
serotonin deprivation and its hypothesized partner, depression, appear to be
powerful aphrodisiacs.
After hearing Kafka talk about this, after hearing, yet again, about serotonin
grabbing the star role in still another psychiatric drama, I asked my husband, a
chemist, to bring some of this chemical home so I could finally wrap my hands
around it. He did, presenting this molecular media slut in a tiny glass tube
with "Warning" written all over the label. "Central Nervous System Irritant. For
RD Use Only." I cupped the tiny tube in my palm. I uncapped the pink plug and
peered inside. I had always imagined that a neurotransmitter would be wet. How
else does it spurt from one ravenous cell to the next? But the serotonin was
crystallized, like salt or snowflakes. Beneath our microscope, it pulsed into
view, six-pronged, simple as a star; you could cap your Christmas tree with it.
Seeing it there, magnified and crude, I found it difficult to believe that its
presence or absence could cause such a ruckus in our heads.
"The brain is such an incredibly complex organ, so largely beyond our
understanding," says Dr. Laurence Kirmayer, professor of psychiatry at McGill
University. "It's ridiculous to think that any one chemical causes, or is
responsible for, this or that. It's patently reductive."
But Kafka isn't so sure. "Of course it's complex," he says. "All of these
systems are interrelated. But because these men respond so well to drugs like
Prozac or other S.S.R.I.'s" -- selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors -- which
alter serotonin transmission in the brain, it's reasonable to point to that
monoamine as central in sexual-impulse disorders."
That Kafka treats male sexual-impulse disorders biologically is nothing new.
"Chemical castration," the administration of testosterone-suppressing compounds
that eradicate desire, has been used legally in this country for some time.
However, Kafka does not want to castrate his patients. What he aims to do is far
nobler, complex and chemically questionable. He aims, through the use of
serotonin-selective drugs, to whitewash deviance but somehow spare conventional
sexuality.
Drugs like Prozac and Paxil specifically target the serotonin systems, thereby
avoiding the widespread side effects of the older generations of
antidepressants. But in Kafka's conceptualization, selectivity has reached new
heights. Kafka claims that the drugs are capable of reducing or eradicating
pathological desire while preserving or enhancing what are culturally considered
"normal" sexual urges. How can this be? Does deviant lust reside in one part of
the brain, affiliative, conventional lust in another? Is a man's erection when
he fetishizes powered by, say, the pituitary, while some other, friendlier lobe
raises the tumescent tissue when he makes love? Kafka is by no means claiming
this as fact, but his statements imply that it is one of myriad possibilities.
"You give a man with sexual problems Prozac," I ask, "and his deviance
disappears while his affiliative sexuality emerges?"
"I've seen it happen, over and over again," he says.
Bill Morrill is not a handsome man. this is the first thing he says to me after
he shakes my hand. "I am not a handsome man," he says, lowering his bulky body
into the seat across from me, fingers gripping the sides.
"I'm nervous," he says, "and when I'm nervous, my nose twitches," which it is,
twitching like a libidinous rabbit's while he snuffs and dabs with a huge hankie
pulled from his pants pocket.
Morrill is 49. He has a jowly face and wears square glasses. There is something
frankly appealing about him, his palpable anxiety, his willingness to talk.
"People need to know," he says. "Go ahead, use my name. Use my story. This is a
sickness, and people need to know, but God, I'm nervous to tell you." Twitch,
twitch.
He touches his throat, as though to take measure of his pulse, which, I imagine,
is bebopping at a rate too rapid for his comfort. "All right," he says, "this is
what I did."
Morrill is a carnival man. He sets up and then disassembles the gear of other
people's pleasure: moonwalks, painted carousels, Ferris wheels that jingle and
sway.
"I felt my first wave," Morrill says, "when I was in my 30's." It came on
slowly, a clenching in the stomach, "and then I was totally out of control -- I
had to have a woman."
The waves, the waves. Morrill talks at length about the waves, a total corporeal
takeover that resulted in picking up prostitutes, cruising for hours on end,
woman after woman, in a Dionysian but dystonic frenzy. Ambers and Jo Jos and
Mandys and Sunshines. "Exhausting," Morrill says. "And I was married."
Morrill describes a life before treatment of crippling obsession, a life in
which he was driven to repeated exhibitionistic bouts of intercourse in bus
stations, in the back seats of Greyhounds, in elevators with the stop button
engaged. He describes sitting at the dinner table with his wife and feeling
himself jerked upward by a powerful, invisible hand, reeling out into the night,
leaving behind him a thick trail of lies. "I never got anything done," he says.
"I was totally unreliable. Sex was to me what sleep was to a narcoleptic. I was
in horror of it. Desire would come on. I'd drop down and wake up and have lost a
whole day. Who knows? I lost 20 years of my life."
In the mornings, after getting up, he had to watch at least one hour of porn.
"But it was mostly the waves," he says. "I could get them anywhere. I kept a
mattress in the back of my van just so I could get a prostitute as quick as
possible. My van has more mileage inside than out."
At first, Morrill thought he was simply oversexed. "But then I noticed that in
my 40's the waves started coming more and more," he says. "They were especially
bad after rainstorms."
"And did your wife know about this behavior?"
"Oh, no," he says.
"Did you have sex with your wife as well?"
"Sure," he says, adding: "Married sex is vanilla. I needed something dangerous.
Anne, though, my wife, she's a super person. A super person. She's a
Sagittarius. I'm a Gemini. We just blend."
Finally, at the age of 47, Morrill succumbed to what he says was the vilest
deed, repeated sex with an 18-year-old.
"I was in a wave, which is why it happened," Morrill says. "She was so young.
You've gotta understand. In a wave, anything can be sexual to me." He points to
the lamp on the desk. "Like that lamp," he says. "In a wave, that lamp could
turn me on."
Dr. Peter R. Martin of the Addiction Center at Vanderbilt University elucidates.
Using M.R.I.'s, Martin, along with his colleague Dr. Mitchell Parks, has begun
studying the parts of the brain involved in arousal. "If we can classify what
parts of the brain are involved in normal arousal," he says, "then maybe we can
see if these parts are different in normal volunteers versus men with sexual
addictions or paraphilias." He has a hunch that "sex addicts" may show
activation in a larger -- or smaller -- portion of the brain in response to a
stimulus than a normal volunteer. On an M.R.I. color-coded image, the aroused
paraphiliac brain might look like a lobe of scarlet activity, whereas the
aroused normal brain might look like, well, a normal brain. If this proves to be
true, then in men like Morrill sex may bleed into the brain's more general
geography, and thus such brains may be more capable of turning everyday events,
and even objects, into erotic tools. Morrill's brain, perhaps, can make an
aluminum lamp from Staples into some fluid fantasy object.
I reach over and switch off the lamp. Morrill laughs. "I like you," he says. "I
feel you're on my side. Now, before treatment, if I had feelings of liking you,
they'd go elsewhere. I'm not a handsome man, but before treatment I was so out
of control, and I could get any woman."
Morrill is the seventh man I interviewed for this article. All claimed to be
more or less cured, but all spiked their conversation with troublesome kinds of
come-ons, which at first made me uncomfortable but now engender little response.
Say "sex" enough times, and it starts to sound like "xxx," which is nothing.
Nowhere. Dead.
"I tried to kill myself," Morrill says. "I lit my trailer on fire, with me in
it. When that didn't work, I decided to jump off the crane in the Quincy
shipyard. It's called a Goliath Crane, 384 feet tall." He stood at the top of
the crane for some time before deciding maybe he could kill a part of himself
instead of the whole package. "I went to a doctor and told them to take care of
it." He points to his groin. "Cut it off. Kill it. No doc would touch me."
Morrill finally found his way to Kafka. "Kafka is a great man. He knew just what
questions to ask. I filled out a million questionnaires. He looked at them and
said: 'I think I know what's wrong with you. You are a sexual compulsive."'
Common wisdom has it that the sexually compulsive or the sexually deviant were
often themselves victims of abuse. "The fact is," Kafka says, "only one-quarter
to one-third of my patient population suffered physical or sexual abuse, and
many of them had unremarkable childhoods, as far as I can see." Which is why
Kafka, who acknowledges the need for a multimodal approach and does refer men
for psychotherapy, treats his patients with medication. In Morrill's case, the
pill was Celexa, a newer version of Prozac.
Morrill went home and swallowed a pill. The next day he swallowed a second pill.
Kaboom. Morrill No. 1 melted away, and Morrill No. 2 stepped forward, the only
live wire his twitching nose. "On these pills, I am a different man," Morrill
says. "My head is clear as a bell. But the weirdest thing is," and here his
voice drops in wonder, "the weirdest thing is how huggy I am now. I hug people
left and right."
For one moment I think he is going to hug me, but he collapses back, exhaling
out his astonishment. "Really, it's quite amazing," he says.
"What about your wife?" I ask. "How's sex with her?" I've been waiting to get
here, to see how "affiliative sex" perseveres or, in Morrill's case, is enhanced
in the face of this chemical assault, as Kafka has described it to me.
"Listen, sex is dead," he says, patting his crotch as if it were a pet. "It's
gone."
"So you don't have sex with your wife either?"
"Only when she insists," he says. "And then, I'm good for maybe a minute, if at
all."
Prozac and its chemical cousins have been hailed as many things:
antidepressants, PMS drugs, better-than-well drugs. Here's a new use for them,
as far as I can tell -- chemical castrators. This idea flies directly in the
face of Kafka's pioneering efforts, which are meant to restore normal sex drive
while wiping out deviance. But Morrill's case points to another possibility. The
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors work in the treatment of paraphiliacs
and sex addicts because they dampen if not destroy all libido, along with all
sorts of other excessive behaviors. It makes sense that one day Prozac may be
approved for chemical castration. After all, many say that S.S.R.I.'s cause
sexual dysfunction in 80 percent of users, so why not use them to, well,
dysfunction an overly functioning man?
"Sexual dysfunction is not the same as chemical castration," Kafka says. "These
men can function sexually -- it's just sometimes difficult. Furthermore,
chemical castration came out of a need to punish these guys, whereas my aim is
to help and value these men."
Apparently, then, pharmacology, like crime, can be judged not only by outcome
but also by intent. If you did not intend to murder the person, then it's
manslaughter. If you don't intend to castrate the person, then it's . . . what?
But Kafka has a point. You cannot easily tease apart the cure from the cure
giver; medicine is an amalgam of hopes, intentions and observable results. The
placebo effect underscores this. The drug is inextricably bound up with the
patient's expectations. In Kafka's scheme, the doctor's expectations get thrown
into the mix, as well they should. A drug is as much a wish as a fact.
All philosophizing aside, Morrill is happy with his outcome. "It's dead, and I
love it," he says. He is not the first man to bow down in gratitude to his
ruined sexuality. Many sex addicts and sex offenders hate their sexuality. They
see it as "the Devil." It is horrific to the humane sides of their personality,
which are everywhere in evidence. Morrill holds hands with his wife and walks on
the beach. Jim, a convicted sex offender, designs dahlia gardens with his
daughter. Bob, an exhibitionist, who, like Jim, requested anonymity, takes pride
in his brand-new Hyundai, polishing its black armor until it shines like onyx.
Kind men. Careful men. "Sick men we are," Morrill says.
Why or how Prozac blunts sexuality is open to speculation. Animal studies
clearly show a correlation between raised or altered serotonin and diminished
sexual appetite. In addition, both serotonin and dopamine do an intricate dance
with our hormones, priming neural pathways so that they can respond to
testosterone. "I don't think that the S.S.R.I.'s are really capable of restoring
a normal sex drive," Peter Martin says. "We all know that the S.S.R.I.'s cause
sexual dysfunction. The sex addict, or the 'overly sexed' man, may have such a
large portion of his brain dedicated to arousal that a blunted sex drive just
looks like a normal sex drive, which is much different from the idea of two
separate sexual systems, one for deviance, one for affiliation. The S.S.R.I.'s
really need to be studied."
Vince, who requested that his last name not be used, is one of Kafka's star
patients. Kafka urges me to call him. "Vince is evidence of how a paraphiliac
can take medication and become sexually normal," he says. "He is fully
functional."
"But why is he functional?" I ask. "Is he blunted, or has something been
restored?"
This distinction is important. If the S.S.R.I.'s cure a man by inducing sexual
dysfunction, then they are in some essential sense not normalizing eroticism but
just transmogrifying it in yet a new way. Is this the role of good medicine --
to cure one illness by inducing another? Is this medicine or doctor-induced
injury? Maybe, especially in the case of dangerous predators, a little injury is
healing. But replacing one dysfunction with another is a problematic practice
and is certainly different from treating a person with drugs that restore the
flesh to its rightful homeostasis.
When I meet Vince, he is definitive, sure of himself, free of Morrill's twitches
and tics. He works in accounting. His nails are nacreous, buffed pale crescents
below trimmed cuticles, each knuckle a well-defined walnut. His dress is
impeccable -- pressed chinos, a red designer shirt.
Vince's diagnosis: transvestic fetishism. He grew up in an Italian household,
dark curtains hanging on the windows, red gravy bubbling on the black-topped
stove. "My grandmother was a seamstress," he says, "and we visited her every
weekend." There, Vince learned the luxury of textiles, the silky material
pedaled in and out of the Singer sewing machine, the pearl-topped pins jabbed
into crushed-velvet hearts, rhinestones, tiny and numerous as caviar eggs, sewn
into the collars of cocktail dresses.
He was 8 years old when his fetish emerged. He started trying on his mother's
clothes, and this gave him such a soothing thrill, "the silky parts against my
privates," that it developed into a full-blown compulsion culminating each time
by masturbating while wearing his mother's underwear. He engaged in this
repetitive behavior until he was 26, always with his mother's garments first and
foremost. "I liked her thigh-high stockings," he says. "I liked her black silk
panties and her slips and her teddies."
At 27, Vince married. His wife knew nothing of his behavior. "Now it was really
terrible, because we had this two-bedroom apartment, and I bought all these
clothes from Frederick's of Hollywood catalogs, and I had to hide them in this
really small space," he says. "And I spent too much money at Shoe Town buying
thigh-high boots. I was so afraid she'd find out. Still, I'd cross-dress
whenever I got the chance -- when she was in the shower, when she was at work,
when she was asleep. And I began, also, to be aggressive. I'd push her into sex
acts. This put a damper between us."
Vince describes a life of silk swathes and nylon netting, a life that he saw as
sordid, partly for cultural reasons. ("Look, I'm not gay," he hastens to assure
me. "I never wore makeup. O.K.?") If the culture condoned this kind of behavior,
I ask, would it have been so problematic for you? Was it the shame that made it
a problem?
"No," Vince says swiftly, dicing my words right up. "With free rein, my problem
would have gotten worse and worse until my whole self was lost. I would have
been nothing but cloth."
One night after a particularly compulsive day of cross-dressing that left him
exhausted and demoralized, Vince had a dream. His car crashed and flew over a
cliff with him inside. He was not, in the dream, afraid of dying, but afraid of
what would happen when his wife went through his possessions, when she found his
secret stash of sling-back pumps and monstrous teddies.
He woke up soaked in sweat, resolved to change. His wife lay curled on her side.
"An object," he says, "but I always loved her anyway."
He started treatment with Carol Ball at New England Forensic Associates in
Arlington, Mass. Behavioral treatment with paraphiliacs follows a fairly
predictable pattern, including, among other things, what is called aversive
reconditioning. Men are instructed to masturbate to their deviant fantasies and
just prior to climax to take a deep breath of ammonia, meaning that they
ejaculate in a clutch of coughs and cramps. Behavioral therapy can be highly
successful. Two months after Vince started at the institute, Ball referred him
to Kafka for a medication consult.
Vince credits Kafka, not Ball, with the bulk of his success. "I love Carol
Ball," he says. "But it was the medication, definitely the medication, that
really changed things for me."
Kafka put Vince on Celexa. "Within three months I felt totally different," Vince
says. "All my cross-dressing urges were gone. I put the teddies, the Frederick's
of Hollywood stuff, the panties, the thigh-highs, I put it all in a duffel bag
and threw it away. It was just closing a door."
Vince reports that he has no more urges to cross-dress, no more consuming
fetishes, no more desires to coerce his wife into sex. He has not masturbated
since drug treatment began. "My life in the past 11 months has been better than
it's been in the past 28 years," he says. "I have possibilities."
The difference between Vince and Bill Morrill is that Vince enjoys what sounds
like a very "normal" sex life with his wife. "Three times a week," he says. "I
have no trouble. My orgasms are actually better on the Celexa than they were
off. It's because on the Celexa I can really concentrate on my wife's body and
not on the fantasies and fetishes. My wife is gorgeous. She's petite,
five-three, 110 pounds. We take our time."
He goes on to describe his recovery in still more detail. "The fetishisms were
like all this static," he says. "Now the static's cleared away, and what's left
is my real desire. My head feels like a whole new thing. My real desire is not
for my mother or for a man, but for my wife."
Vince is a model for successful treatment outcomes -- living proof that at least
some men experience not a preferable form of dysfunction but an erotic
restoration under Kafka's care. If, in fact, drugs like Prozac and Celexa can
selectively wipe out deviance while restoring or even enhancing "normal"
sexuality, what might this mean about the way our brains are built?
In 1985, a group of scientists reported on a brain-damaged subject who could
recall everything but the names of fruits and vegetables. This case, among
others, has raised the possibility that our brains are modular and store
information in category-specific locales. And this modular notion of brain
function appears to expand beyond the domain of language recall. Other
scientists have written extensively about separate memory systems, short term
versus long term, declarative versus implicit.
Why, then, might not forms of sexual appetite, or desire, be divided as well?
There has been one reported case of a patient with a right thalmic-hypothalmic
infarction that led to hypersexuality and another of a midbrain hypothalmic
glioma leading to pedophilia. Women who develop seizure disorders, which are
often linked to lesions in a specific part of the brain, may also display
exhibitionistic behavior. There is a very rare disorder called Kluver Bucy
syndrome, in which the amygdala is damaged and the patient may experience
intense sexual desire for objects -- pins, cups, maybe even lamps. Does Vince's
brain look different in the act of making love to his wife than in masturbating
in thigh-highs?
Kafka doesn't know, and he isn't afraid to say so. "But it is interesting to
speculate that normal male sexual arousal resides in one area of the brain,
deviant sexual arousal in another, and that the S.S.R.I.'s work by targeting one
arousal system while sparing another," he says. "That's an interesting,
plausible hypothesis, and one that wouldn't surprise me."
Another possibility is this: the higher the intensity of any drive, the more
polymorphous its manifestations. The S.S.R.I.'s may work in paraphilias and
sexual addiction not by deleting but by pruning, so that the person's core
sexuality is finally free to emerge. This hypothesis lies close to the idea some
psychiatrists hold that the paraphilias are simply another form of obsessive
compulsive disorder (O.C.D.) and that the S.S.R.I.'s work not because they
target sexual arousal but because they reduce ruminative thoughts and repetitive
behaviors in all kinds of conditions.
"I hate that idea," Kafka says. "The paraphilias and P.R.D.'s are not a form of
O.C.D. People who have O.C.D. do not have an appetite-disregulation disorder.
O.C.D. is not about appetite. Sexual-impulse disorders are all about appetite."
In the end, we have these men and their appetites. We have just a few facts.
That these men feel better is a fact. That Prozac and its chemical cousins
appear to have yet another use is a fact. That its uses are so widespread as to
present us with a boggling contradiction is a fact; here we have a drug
celebrated for its specificity but employed for every nook and cranny of our
multiple miseries -- that, surely, is a fact. That, when we think of sex, or
brains, we are sometimes reductive is also a troublesome fact.
However, reductive or not, Kafka is doing something right. He appears to have
"cured," or restored to better balance, hundreds of men, many of whom are
dangerous, all of whom are, by their own standards at least, terribly twisted.
Kafka's patients love him. "He is the guy," Jim says. "He saved my life," Bob
says. But where, I wonder, is the history, the culture in this story? Is this
just one more tale of the brain?
Kafka practices neurospeak, but strangely enough, if you're looking for culture
you'll find it right where he dwells, in that basement office, above the Passion
Control Pills. On my last visit to Kafka, I notice what I have oddly not noticed
in all my visits before: large and very beautiful photographs on almost every
inch of wall space. "I took these pictures myself," Kafka says. He has traveled
all over the world. Here, above me, a Peruvian boy holds his little naked
brother -- fat, dimpled buttocks, a sweet grin. Across the way, Italian women
play cards beneath flags of laundry on a line, the photo shot in saturated
yellow light, the fabric as human as flesh, vivid, living. I walk around the
room, staring. There is a photo of a zebra, an extreme closeup of the animal's
face, the dark, dilated eye.
"I took this picture at the Kenya zoo," Kafka says. "The zebra was wounded, in a
cage, so I could get real close to him, put the camera right up next to his
face, and I got this shot of his eye."
The eye, of course, is a part of our brains, a little bit of the visual cortex
poking through our flesh. Now Kafka seems to forget that I'm here. He pulls into
himself. I recall how he told me, over lunch a few days ago, that in this line
of work he has seen the Devil, and that the Devil has neural substrates, but
something more, as well. "I have become theistic," he said, looking troubled.
And then he said: "You know, my patients are my boys. They're all my boys."
Kafka reaches out and touches his photograph, the eye, this bit of animal brain
exposed, unknowable. I think of how he says "my boys," and into my mind comes
the old tale of Pinocchio, and the island of bad little boys, those spectral
males becoming part donkey, hard hoof, the horror of that. He touches the
zebra's eye tenderly, almost sadly, and watching him do this, I have to wonder
if it's the proffered pill, or his hand held out, that, for these men, finally
does the trick.
http://www.nytimes.com
GRAPHIC: Photos: Kafka maintains his sense of humor by maintaining a fake
pharmacy.; Sex can become an obsession so overwhelming that men compulsively
seek it anywhere, any time, with anyone; Some male fetishes invilve wearing or
fondling articles of women's clothing (Amy Guip for The New York Times)
LOAD-DATE: November 19, 2000