Sunday, 23 June 2013
"I’ve had sex with 370 men" Nigerian woman Seyi Kolade reveals
Approaching a man at a bar, Seyi Kolade
had only one thing on her mind as she
chatted with the stranger - sex . Within
hours the pair were in bed together and
she was delighted at how her evening
had panned out.
And this was not a chance encounter, for
Seyi was a sex addict and it was what she
did almost every day for 13 years. Last
night she said: “Sex addiction took hold
of my life.”
Seyi, 35, was just 17 when she became
dependent on sleeping with men. By 19
she'd had 40 partners and she says she
has bedded a shocking total of 370 men.
Her dangerous addiction led her to a life
of destruction - catching sexually
transmitted infections, being evicted from
her home and having two terminations.
By the age of 30, Seyi had hit rock bottom
and needed help. Today, after attending
numerous sex addiction meetings and
12-step programmes, Seyi has been
celibate for four years and is helping
others like her.
She explains says: “Sex addiction is
something people associate with men,
but it took hold of my life for more than
13 years.
“It was a craving and a fear of how I’d
feel if I couldn’t get it.
“Once I did, it was a huge relief, like a
weight was lifted.
“It’s like any addiction. It made me
selfish, self-destructive and depressed
but it was a cycle I couldn’t escape.”
She adds: “I lost my virginity when I was
13 with my first boyfriend.
“I was shocked when I fell pregnant. I
gave birth when I was 14. It was a very
difficult time.”
Social services arranged a nanny to look
after her daughter, Sarah, from six weeks
old.
Being a young mum scarred Seyi’s
childhood. She says: “I moved out of
home when I was 16 with Sarah and lived
in a mother and baby unit. I felt terribly
lonely. I craved affection, I was
miserable.”
Moving into a housing association home
at 17, Seyi met then-boyfriend Paul, 31.
It was now that she began to use sex to
replace her feelings of loneliness.
She says: “When I started having sex with
my boyfriend I thought it was the answer
and would stop me feeling so lonely. But
it wasn’t enough.”
Going to bars, Seyi, from Birmingham,
cheated on Paul at least once a week with
strangers or men she would meet
regularly.
She says: “I needed sex and afterwards it
was a relief. When I couldn’t have sex my
confidence would plummet, I felt ugly
and went into a spiral of upset and
frustration, feeling unworthy and needing
another fix as soon as possible.”
Seyi fell pregnant at 17 with son, Andrew.
She says: “I told Paul it was his although
there was some doubt in my mind. After I
gave birth I tried to stay faithful. I wanted
sex with him four to five times a day, but
the attention from him wasn’t enough.
“When the pent-up sexual frustration
became too much, I’d go elsewhere and
get validation through sex.
“I cheated on him three times in six
months, then fell pregnant again.”
Devastated and unable to look after
another child, Seyi made the decision to
have her baby terminated.
She says: “It wasn’t fair on the child to
have them. I didn’t know whose baby it
was so I didn’t tell Paul. I wanted our
relationship to work but we split up when
I was 19.”
Seyi’s heartbreak made her sex addiction
go wild. She says: “The only cure for my
loneliness was sex. I had five guys I
could meet with for sex when I wanted
and was also sleeping with strangers. I’d
go to bars and easily pick one up. Being
good in bed made me feel worthy.”
By 22 Seyi had caught chlamydia twice.
Going out almost every night while her
children were looked after by friends and
family, all she could think about was sex.
She says: “Between the ages of 22 to 30,
life was a blur, my addiction had taken
over.
“I was sleeping with five to six men, or
meeting strangers for sex at bars weekly.
I fell pregnant again at 26. I felt I had no
choice but to have a termination. I got
drunk and had sex After the procedure.
“I don’t know how I managed to keep my
job as a management consultant. I took
lots of sick days when I craved sex and
couldn’t face the office. I even slept with
a colleague.
“I was evicted for not paying rent when I
was 29 and had to send my children to
live with my family.”
While staying with a friend Seyi saw the
documentary The Secret, about the laws
of attraction. She says: “I knew I had a
problem but never stopped to think
about being a sex addict. I realised I
needed help.”
After quitting her job to concentrate on
her recovery Seyi, then 31, went to an
addiction meeting.
She says: “There were six others there
and when I listened to their stories it
cured my nerves. I didn’t stop craving
sex straight away but cut down slowly.”
Since August 2009 she has been celibate.
She says: “I’m so proud of myself. I’ve
craved sex but the programme lets me
know the trigger signs.
“I don’t plan on having sex any time
soon. If the right guy comes along and I
feel I’m in a stable, loving relationship,
I’d feel safe to do it. I have my children
back living with me and feel I’m no
longer a sex addict.
“I’d hate to think where my life would be
now if I hadn’t sought help.”
Despite her recovery, Seyi lives with the
guilt of her addiction. She says: “I could
have passed on STIs, I had two
terminations and my kids didn’t have the
attention they deserved.
“I’ve now trained as an inspirational
speaker and happiness advocate. At
workshops and seminars I can help
others understand what sex addiction is,
where it comes from and recovery.
“Being celibate has given me my life back.
I want to help others do the same.”
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