dov wrote on 18 Oct 2012 03:30:
Far from criticizing you, I just suggested that the reason you see 12-step fellowships as being based on the power of shame at 'failing', might be because you feel the need to succeed so acutely, yourself. So the shame of failing is a big deal to you. That'd be projection.
I see. I do feel the need to succeed. I think you do too, and I think anyone on gye does, or else they would just resign to the fact that they like masturbating and the sin and the mitzvos would simply coexist.
But I think in my case the desire to succeed is exceeded by the desire for a challenge, and also the desire for truth. I knew I was lying to myself in the 12-step program, I knew that the material was arbitrary and of dubious origin, that the quality of each sponsor is different and not well understood etc. So I quit the program despite the fact that without the commitment I started acting out again. I stand by my decision because the 12-step program is not the solution to the problem of frum people doing porn.
And this is not about you. It's your repeated representation of SA to others that I am criticizing, for the sake of others who may come to see things a different way. You do your thing, and I do mine.
As I said before, I am interested in a general solution, not in being the guy who has been sober the longest and has unique insight in the problem and the guru that can heal others. My goal is to establish something that anyone can pursue on their own. This is very different from your goal which is I think to help one person at a time, correct if I am wrong, and I would think also to continuously work on your 12th step.
With the benefit of cognitive skills I have observed that people come to the forum and try some half measures (all of them except SA,) and they usually include surrender, i.e. let go and let G-d. This is a partial improvement, but eventually leads to two things: the guy understands that he is not doing enough, and
because of the surrendering behavior he rationalizes more and more that this is a disease and it is not his fault.
The reason he does that is because since he doesn't have the skills to stop and if he is not a tzadik he is worthless SA must be right!
Therefore I can see with my cognitive skills that GYE is basically a gateway to the 12-step program. In fact, it is a bit of factory of true addicts. It's a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Nobody should claim that enrolling in the 12-step program comes for free. Rather, it has a large impact on a person's life. For example, if a single man is in SA, when he gets married if the girl asks "do you have any addictions" he would have to say "yes." And again, the quality and details of each sponsor are unique. Not everyone has Dov as a sponsor, even if Dov were perfect. Many sponsors have been sober for a couple of years. Further, it can be easily observed by going to SA meetings that people relapse. I saw people relapse after being sober for a year or two. And if a guy is married I think his wife wants to know that he does not see himself as a sick person, because who is to say when a sick person has been healed? She wants to be married to a person who makes choices, and she may put up with someone who makes some choices that she does not like (it happens every day to everyone.) Further, the 12-step program goes on forever. Further, driving to meetings costs money. Further, the approved literature for SA was largely written by non-Jews. Et cetera. Et cetera. Et cetera.
Since I have seen what cognitive skills can gain for a person, I just can't avoid explaining to people what they are getting into.
But I agree that if a person does not want to see the reality and does not want to try cognitive therapy because he somehow knows better, then he is better off in SA.
I'd be happy meeting you over a bagel and a cup of coffee and talking about anything any day - I doubt we'd end up arguing. For you are sincere, and I think i am, too.
I do not consider arguing a problem. I am not afraid of conflict. I am not attacking SA members, I am attacking the cognitive errors.
Still, I should be careful with people's pride. The Torah says "you will rebuke your friend" but not to the point that his face starts turning colors. People have pride and I think I have to do a better job of protecting people's pride.
And incidentally, the power of the group part of AA/SA is just a tool - perhaps a very important one - but far from the ikkar of recovery.
I agree, because I recover without the group.
But there's a video on youtube where Dr. Twersky says that a therapist can do nothing for an addict without a support group (he has never done cognitive therapy but I was told that he has heard good things about it.) And the group often holds hands and says "keep coming back ..." for a good reason. I think everyone knows that if you stop going to meetings while thinking that you are powerless you'll start acting out again.
In SA the group is not the ikkar, but it's indispensable because you cannot recover if you are not sober. With cognitive skills you can recover even if you are not sober.
And tools are never the answer - they are all only half-measures standing on their own. Yet people like to grab onto a couple of the tools and pretend they are the Entire Deal. Nu. So people do lots of goofy things, me included. That's what my sponsor showed me, and that is how my other mentors saw it, too.
But as you know, "Half-measures availed us nothing."
The only full-measure, I was shown, is the honest relationship I grow to have with my own G-d.
The group gives us the opportunity to learn how to be honest even when it hurts - or how else will we professional self-liars ever become honest with ourselves? Being a little more honest, we eventually become able to have a real relationship with our own G-d. And as many tzaddikim have said, being able to say "Elohai", and really know it is a big deal.
And any Yid or goy can do that just fine. It is integrity, and it is what the 12th step means when it reads: Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these steps..." (italics mine)
Admitting that I will fail without the group, admitting that I am powerless, is not honesty because desiring sex more than Torah is not a fault. It is your prerogative. It takes work to appreciate yiddishkeit more than porn. If you do not want to do the work it's your loss. You are not doing G-d any favors by keeping the mitzvos. G-d doesn't need your mitzvos because he can have anyone he wants doing that job.
Is that a christian concept?
I hope not...
Yes, it is. The belief that I am honest by admitting that I want porn more than I want to love G-d is a Christian concept.