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Reviewed by Viga Boland for Readers' Favorite
Reading I Just Wanted Love by D.J. Burr was a revelation. It was also heartbreaking to so intensely feel the pain and confusion of what it is like to grow up gay and "co-dependent." Just what does it mean to be a "co-dependent"? According to DJ, as he is known, co-dependence is "a set of patterns and characteristics impacting a person's interactions with themselves and others." In DJ's case, this co-dependence, nurtured by the dysfunctional family into which he was born, evolved into an insatiable addiction to sex as he reached out time and again for what he really wanted and needed: love. It didn't help that this fragile child, bullied by classmates, was cleverly groomed as a young teen for sex by one of his father's friends. Once the excitement of that attraction for the same sex gave way to shame, DJ spiralled into a pit of self-hating, for which the only relief...sadly temporary...was a constant search for new sexual partners in bath-houses, in online chat rooms, and anywhere else he could find other co-dependent gays like himself.
I have read many pain-filled memoirs over the past two years. I've even written my own. But for some reason, I Just Wanted Love hit me harder than most of the others. Why? Perhaps because I recognized a bit of myself, and even my own children in this book, not as people addicted specifically to sex, drugs or booze, but as addicts of one kind or another. Many of the repeated behavioral patterns DJ describes can be found in those with severely low self-esteem, but they manifest themselves in different addictions: compulsive spending, OCD, an obsession with Facebook, the Internet, cell-phones, playing computer games, all perhaps a way of escaping the painful reality that we are lonely, don't love ourselves enough and are looking for love and fulfillment in things that can't provide any long-term or true satisfaction. Fortunately for many of us, these addictions aren't quite as destructive as was DJ's, but by sharing his story in I Just Wanted Love, DJ has illuminated a very dark and misunderstood area of the human condition.
To finally stop denying the reality of his addiction and come to grips with it, DJ followed a 12-step program focused on sexual and emotional sobriety which he highly recommends. Today, the author is the founder of ABLE Counselling Services LLC where he helps others overcome an addiction he knows only too well. The easy-to-read I Just Wanted Love leaves the reader thinking beyond its specific content. It also leaves the reader with that satisfaction that comes when a protagonist has emerged victorious.