From Secrecy to Freedom: My Story of Pornography Addiction, Faith, and Changing My Stars on the Shits Creek Survivors Podcast
Addiction thrives in secrecy. It feeds on shame, isolation, and the lie that if anyone truly knew us, we’d be rejected. That’s why my recent conversation on the Shits Creek Survivors podcast mattered so much. Host Cam created a space where real stories can be told honestly—stories about getting stuck “up the creek,” finding a paddle, and discovering hope on the other side.
In this episode, I shared my journey through pornography addiction, codependency, and the slow loss of identity that comes from living for other people’s approval. What followed wasn’t just a story about addiction—it was a conversation about faith, community, recovery, and the possibility of real change.
If you’ve ever felt trapped in a habit you couldn’t seem to break, this conversation was for you.
Growing Up a Master Chameleon
I grew up as a pastor’s kid, and while my parents and church community were loving and supportive, I placed an enormous amount of pressure on myself. I believed—often unconsciously—that I had to act a certain way, say the right things, and meet unspoken expectations.
Over time, that pressure turned into codependency: caring more about what other people thought of me than what I believed about myself—or what God said about me.
I became what I call a master chameleon. I could blend into any environment, carry surface-level conversations, and appear fine on the outside. But underneath, I didn’t really know who I was anymore.
That loss of identity set the stage for something far more destructive.
How Pornography Took Root
As a teenager, a casual joke among friends introduced me to a term I didn’t understand. Wanting to fit in and avoid being exposed as “out of the loop,” I went home and looked it up online.
That moment opened the door to pornography.
What started as curiosity became interest. Interest became habit. Habit became addiction. And that addiction quietly followed me for nearly 20 years.
I tried to stop countless times. I prayed. I promised God I would quit. But every attempt was rooted in self-reliance. I wanted freedom without vulnerability. Change without confession. Healing without community.
And it never worked.
The Lie of Doing It Alone
Addiction convinces you that you’re different—that you should be able to fix yourself. I told myself I wasn’t hurting anyone else. I minimized the damage. I justified the behavior.
But the truth is this: isolation is where addiction grows strongest.
The enemy thrives in darkness. Shame convinces you that exposure will destroy you, when in reality, exposure is what brings freedom.
That realization came to a head one Sunday morning in church.
The Turning Point: Celebrate Recovery
My church announced the launch of Celebrate Recovery, a Christ-centered 12-step recovery ministry. At first, I dismissed it. I thought recovery was for drugs and alcohol—not me.
But the more they explained it, the more something stirred.
Celebrate Recovery isn’t just for substance abuse. It’s for hurts, habits, and hang-ups of all kinds. Only about one-third of attendees come for drugs or alcohol. The rest come for things like pornography addiction, codependency, anger, trauma, and broken relationships.
After months of wrestling internally, I finally went.
I sat in my car, fighting fear, nearly turning around. Eventually, I walked in and sat in the back row, giving myself an exit strategy. But during a newcomer session, I was asked a simple, Spirit-prompted question:
“Is there anything else?”
Before I could stop myself, I confessed the secret I had carried for two decades.
Instead of rejection, I was met with compassion. Instead of shame, I received grace. And in that moment, every lie I believed was dismantled.
That night marked the beginning of my recovery.
Healing Through Community and Faith
Today, I’m over six years free from pornography addiction. Not because I’m strong—but because I stopped doing it alone.
Recovery taught me that healing happens in community. Accountability matters. Honesty matters. Light matters.
That truth eventually shaped everything else that followed:
Sharing my testimony publicly
Writing my book, The Blueprint of Becoming
Launching my podcast, Unmasked with Wesley Farnsworth
Saying yes to speaking opportunities I never imagined
What I once hid in shame has become the very thing God uses to help others find hope.
Changing Your Stars
During recovery, God gave me a powerful image that became central to my life and work: changing your stars.
In ancient navigation, sailors used the stars to find their way. Your life is like a constellation—every decision, relationship, and experience a star. But what you choose as your North Star determines your direction.
When Christ becomes your North Star, your life realigns. When something else takes that place—addiction, approval, fear—you drift off course.
Change begins with a single step. Not a giant leap. Just one honest step toward the light.
If You’re Stuck Right Now
If this story resonates with you, hear this clearly:
Your addiction does not define you
Your past does not disqualify you
You are not too far gone
And you do not have to paddle this creek alone
Freedom begins when you tell the truth—to God and to someone safe.
Listen to the Full Episode
🎧 Creek Survivors Podcast – Featuring Wesley Farnsworth
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A1cOWeT68f0
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/2PqKz83akYbmTb02PkLenj?si=5f11a8692fa34f4f
Take the Next Step
📘 The Blueprint of Becoming – A practical guide to faith, failure, and finding your way forward
🎙️ Unmasked with Wesley Farnsworth – Raw conversations about faith, recovery, and living honestly
📥 Free 10-Week Group Study Guide:
👉 https://wesleyfarnsworth.com/start
Find a CR Near You: https://www.crlocator.com

