Sexual trauma often leaves a deep imprint, not just on the body, but on how a person relates to themselves, others, and the world. For many sexual abuse survivors, addiction becomes a survival strategy: a way to escape, to disconnect, or to manage pain that words alone can’t describe. Behaviours that may look like “acting out” are often attempts to self-soothe, feel something, or feel nothing at all.
At Addiction Therapist London, I work with individuals seeking to understand the link between their history of trauma and their struggles with addiction, including sexual addiction, substance use disorder, alcohol addiction, and compulsive sexual behaviour. Therapy offers a confidential, compassionate space to make sense of complex patterns and begin the work of healing not just controlling behaviour but transforming what drives it.

The experience of sexual trauma can take many forms:
These events may be remembered vividly or buried beneath years of emotional numbing. But their effects often show up in the present, sometimes in ways that feel confusing or out of proportion.
Common coping behaviours include:
These are not character flaws. They are intelligent adaptations developed in the absence of safety. And like many strategies developed under threat, they can become harmful when the threat has passed but the body and brain still respond as though it hasn’t.
Experiences of sexual trauma, emotional trauma, or early developmental trauma can influence how a person relates to desire, consent, pleasure, intimacy, and control. Some people describe feeling hypersexual, others experience reduced or absent sexual desire, while many notice fluctuations over time. For some, these experiences reflect enduring aspects of identity; for others, they function as adaptive responses, ways the psyche and nervous system protect against vulnerability, exposure, or further harm.
Clients I work with sometimes describe:
Addiction whether involving substances, compulsive sexual behaviour, or other repetitive coping strategies can develop when these internal states become difficult to tolerate. In this context, addictive patterns often serve to regulate distress, numb emotional pain, or create a temporary sense of control. Therapy offers a space to understand these patterns with compassion, supporting longer-term integration, emotional regulation, and a more grounded relationship with self and others.
You may not use the word “trauma” to describe your history. That’s okay. But you may recognise some of the following:
These patterns often stem from adverse childhood experiences, past trauma, or unprocessed events from adulthood. In many cases, they are linked to post-traumatic stress disorder and can overlap with substance use disorder or compulsive sexual behaviour. Regardless of origin, they can be transformed.

My approach is trauma-informed, relational, and individually tailored. This means we move at your pace. You will never be pushed to disclose more than you feel ready to share. Therapy is not about re-exposing yourself to pain, it’s about creating safety where none existed before.
Depending on your needs, therapy may include:
Where appropriate, and with your consent, I also collaborate with trauma-informed psychiatrists, GPs, sexual health specialists, and psychosexual therapists to ensure your care is safe, integrated, and clinically supported.
In my professional opinion, the behaviours we label as addiction, whether sexual behaviour, substance abuse, or compulsive behaviour, are often rooted in experiences the nervous system never fully recovered from. Clients frequently tell me they’ve worked on the ‘symptoms’ for years, only to discover that their deepest healing began when we gently addressed the parts of their story, they’d never felt safe enough to tell.
When the trauma is sexual, healing often includes rebuilding your relationship with touch, boundaries, pleasure, and safety. This is a sensitive process and one that can only unfold and understood in a space of trust.

You may benefit from this work if:
Some clients come to therapy unsure if what happened “counts” as trauma. Others know but have never spoken about it. Some have repressed memories that return unexpectedly; others carry the weight of unacknowledged pain every day.
You do not need a label to begin. If something changed how you relate to your body, to intimacy, or to yourself — that’s enough.
Sexual trauma affects people across all genders, orientations, and backgrounds. For many, the trauma is compounded by layers of silence especially where religious, cultural, or family systems have reinforced shame or denied the reality of abuse.
I work sensitively with clients navigating:
No part of your experience is too complex or “too much” to be held in therapy.
My private practice offers a discreet, professional setting for high-quality psychological care. I offer sessions in person or online, and I work with clients across the UK and internationally. With over a decade of experience as a psychotherapist specialising in trauma, sexual behaviour concerns, and addiction treatment, I understand the layered, often hidden nature of this work. My clients come from all walks of life, each carrying untold stories and reaching a point where they are ready, at last, to begin speaking them.
You may still be trying to make sense of what happened. You may feel that the past is over, but the pain remains. Or you may have been managing well, until something recent stirred everything back up.
Wherever you are in your process, therapy offers a way forward. This isn’t about fixing you, it’s about helping you reclaim the parts of yourself that were never broken, only buried.
If you’re ready to explore how your history, whether childhood trauma, sexual assault, early trauma, emotional trauma, or childhood abuse may be shaping your present, I invite you to reach out for a complimentary confidential 15-minute consultation.
Book a complimentary consultation or a private therapy session.