I really tried to keep this short, but failed.
skeptical wrote:
It seems that we are talking two different languages and have extremely different ideas of what living a Torah life is or isn't...
But I am not using the 12-steps...For the most part, I am using Torah ideas that I have always known. You can have all the knowledge in the world, but unless something clicks inside of you that says, "Enough is enough, I'm going to be honest and do what it takes to get out of this," none of that is going to help. Until one reaches that point, efforts to stop are not real efforts, for what we are really saying is, "I want to stop, but I also want to continue." Until you are ready to actually apply that knowledge, the knowledge is useless.
It sounds to me that you are simply saying that Torah is not what is saving you, but your
sincerity in applying Torah ideas.
Sincerity itself
is not 'Torah', and it is not
in the Torah. I believe it is what the Shaa'rei Kedusha writes is the reason that the Torah does not clearly refer to tikun hamiddos. He says it need not be (and cannot be) shrunk into the Torah because it is the entire underpinning of it! Same with sincerity and self-honesty. Without it, you and I have nothing. But it is in
us, not in the religion, nor in the Torah. In fact, goyim who do exactly what you are doing get better as well, sincerely following what
they call
their bible, as well.
The point is not
which religion or spiritual principles the addict follows (you and I choose 'Torah'). Rather, the experience of many addicts has been that the turning point is our surrender/giving up of following our own old,
preferred principles. Those principles include the ones that tell our hearts that "I sure want to be frum and good and go to heaven, but things are only
really OK if I am having adequate sexual stimulation" - so whatever our religious beliefs are, we will run to get it when we feel like we really, really need it.
Unfortunately, we believe those principles with a pure faith that is at least as strong as our faith in Torah min haShomayim, Moshiach coming, etc. The faith that things are horrible if she doesn't like me. Shekker. The faith that if she is not giving me the sex I want, she must not really like me. Shekker. The faith that our pay should really be higher, that our kids really should be healthier or better, that we should have been better-looking...whatever. All shekker...but until we truly surrender those ani ma'amins, we have pain that can only be assuaged by our sweet porn and sex-with-self. There is just no way out of that, as the AAs wrote:
"
We thought we could find an easier, softer way. But we could not...Some of us tried to hold onto our old ideas and the result was nil until we let go absolutely...Half measures availed us nothing. We stood at the turning point. We asked His protection and care with complete abandon." (5th chapter of AA, p58, 59)
That is the principle of the 2nd step. We have some insanity and can't lose it. We will need a Power greater than ourselves to help us with our pure, misguided faith in some really stupid ideas. You, skeptical, have found a Power greater than yourself and it restores you to some sanity manifested in you not needing the same feeding habits. Same for goyim the world over.'12 steps', 'AA meetings', etc. are all just tools. Men here and there have been finding these answers since the beginning of time without AA, SA, shrinks, or anything. But look at how many are dying every year of alcoholism and sexaholism and wrecking whole families on the way? What
kills me is all the hundreds of frum - very frum - men I meet through GYE and SA who are perverts as I am, but can't stop. Your eitza is that they just will not get better from Torah until they are ready to really be sincere about it. OK. I agree in principle. But it seems that there is a place that - unlike the beis midrash -
manufactures sincerity and sobriety: 12 step groups.
The main difference between AA/SA and the men who discover it on their own, is that they are rare individuals! Like Noach in the mabul. Yet I know dozens and dozens of frum men who are living as you describe: clean for years and with marriages on a new basis, growing, open, honest and fair with their wives and kids, for a change. And they see they could do this only becs they were part of a chevra that openly faces and works on this precious thing
you found: sincerity in spirituality.
All I want to show is that the Torah has no monopoly in any way, shape, or form on that thing that enables people from all walks of life to do exactly what you have been doing. And incidentally, I do believe that the actual principles most successfully sober people follow
are based on Torah - be they christians or whatever, the ideas are found in the Torah and are holy. But the actual gift you found is not Torah, but sincerity. And
that is the equal inheritance and property of all mankind.
Finally, I want to say that I have met many men through GYE who had great delays in getting better precisely because their masturbation and porning habits developed
in tandem with their frumkeit - or at least with their adult version of connection to Hashem. As I tried to explain in the post called "The Nuclear Reset Button", one feeds the other. I'd say that it is asking a bit much to suggest that these guys 'just get sincere' about their clearly addictively-enmeshed Torah ideals. Sincerity is as likely as the
chovush being
matir atzmo mibeis ha'asurim...not likely. What ma'aliusa is there in encouraging people to keep trying that? I see none. So I share this 12 step chevra message, instead of 'Torah'. And in the end, after they are sober from their insanity for a while, these frum Jews will certainly use their newly found sincerity for their Torah, if they want to. That's not my eisek, though, but theirs.