Asher Sears
His real life struggles with desire By Sandy Jones
ple’s stries twine
STORY
Asher Sears grew up in a non-Christian home where both parents worked in the gaming industry in Reno, Nevada. His mom would make dinner before leaving for her graveyard shift, leaving Asher and his sister to have dinner alone, then fend for themselves until their dad got home. Most evenings their dad ate his dinner alone while watching TV in his bedroom. Working in casino marketing, Asher’s dad always had posters and calendars from various cheerleader and other similar groups that he would have autographed for Asher. Asher says of his father, “He would be inappropriate with my mother in front of us… I’m sure that’s what he learned from his father.” In public, Asher’s father was quick to point out beautiful or scantily-clad women. As Asher reflects back on these times he feels he was being trained. When he was 14, Asher found his dad’s pornography videotape collection. Asher remembers his raging teenage hormones, and resolutely shares, “I can still remember those images from almost 30 years ago; that really solidified the path I was on.” Left alone so much, and with cable movie channels at his disposal, Asher looks back on the softcore pornography as something that only added fuel to the fire. Asher spent his high school years “chasing girls.” Graduating with a 2.5 GPA he says he always claimed, “I was bored. I never really wanted to put in the effort, but now that I think about it, it was mostly because I was never focused on school. I was always focused on girls.” During these early years Asher and his buddies weren’t old enough to buy pornography, but they sought it out, even picking up stuff they had found on the side of the road. He’s quick to add that the girls who’d known him through school could never get past the “brace-faced, glasses-wearing, chubby little kid” he’d been, and that even when thinned out and playing football in high school, things didn’t bode well for him, until he went to college. He met his first college girlfriend in marching band. He played trumpet. She played saxophone. He admits that she was a “good country girl” who kept things proper. During this time he met a girl who was dating one of his friends and who made it clear she wanted a physical relationship from him, and nothing more. He thought he’d hit the jackpot! The two eventually started dating, and he broke up with the saxophone player. Looking back he confesses, “I’ve regretted the way I
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handled that; she didn’t deserve that. That’s a part of my recovery.” Asher dated the new girlfriend off and on for about two years. During one of their break-ups she informed him she was pregnant. As a non-believer he encouraged her to have an abortion, and when she refused, Asher dropped out of college at 19 and married her. Asher attempted to join the military to support his new family but couldn’t pass the eye exam, so he started a new job. He remembers those early days: “I would get a job, end up getting fired, and move on to another job.” Eventually Asher turned to car sales. After work, a bunch of the guys would go to the strip clubs. One evening Asher returned home from one of these trips and his wife could “smell it” on him. Thinking it would fix the problem, she bought him a pornographic magazine subscription. It was about this time that internet pornography started to spread. This deepened Asher’s growing addiction. When their son was 4½, the couple divorced. Asher was now a single guy. Due to his work schedule, he didn’t have his son often, so he was “on the prowl.” Asher eventually realized, “This is not who I am. I’m not a player. I took a step back and realized that I wanted something different.” Asher’s sister was working at a restaurant with another employee named Ashley. She thought it would be great if Ashley and Asher met, and she introduced the two of them. He and Ashley started to talk, and they both agree, they fell hard for each other. When she became pregnant, he was calmly adamant about getting married, saying, “We knew we were going to get married at some point in time, just maybe not quite that quick.” Asher fast-forwards to life as a baby Christian and recalls the night of the “fashion show.” He admits, “I’d just given my life to the Lord essentially and didn’t know what I was doing was wrong. It’s what I’d been doing my whole life. I had grown up in it.” Asher and Ashley remember the next few years differently. Asher continues, “What I do recall is that in my own struggle, as I grew and matured in my faith, coming to know that it was wrong and was not what God wanted for my life. So I struggled with it. Greatly. I lived under a shroud of shame.” He added, “I was serving in children’s ministry. I was serving in men’s ministry. I was doing all these things and I thought to myself, there’s no way I could ever come clean about this. What will they think? What will they say? So I lived in silence. I would cry out to God to take this from me.” Ashley continued to tell him he needed to get some help. Asher found a faith-based, 12-step program at a local church that offered a pornography addiction module. He thought it was perfect. It wasn’t at their church, so he was able to attend these meetings with anonymity. No one there knew him, and he didn’t have to fear what they might think of him. Continued on page 20
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