Having Just Watched The Film 'Dont Look...
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.A partner's masturbation is often very disturbing and hard to deal with for some people. I'm sorry if you are in this position.
Masturbation is often classified in the 'recovery from abuse' literature (I studied it in Psychology) as self-medication. Hate to say it, but it may do him some good. It's hard to work out why. Men don't have sexual thoughts after orgasm. They switch off. Masturbating may bring about this state in him and deliver him from the mental confusion he is in (temporarily). By far the most likely reason is probably an intimacy issue. Sex is often tied to intimacy. He probably finds intimacy difficult, thus sex with someone else difficult, and he resorts to masturbation to solve this.
He won't see it as abuse, because at the time it was happening he didn't know what abuse was and it was encoded as a normal act. It is very very common for the abused to blame themselves. Perhaps it attenuates the idea of having been compromised by a loved one (ie it was your husband doing something he wanted, not something he was being forced to do).
It's pretty important that you treat him with compassion. There are ways out. He must receive counselling and you may consider joint counselling. He should sever contacts with his sister. Good luck.
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