Our need for sex and lust is just that.A deeper need.
When we are tempted to act out,we must understand that this is a reflection and a revelation of what is going on in our hearts.A need for security.For love.For freedom from loneliness.To feel alive.
Our hearts desperately want to fully connect to life and people.
But we are afraid.
So our brain goes in what's known as "fight-or-flight mode".You got to defense mode.A safe place.
Sex.
THe answer is of course to connect to our heart and these fears and insecurities and learn how not to run and hide.But to trust.
p.s. this might've been my deepest post yet.
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Dear everone (and Uri)
Thank you all for your care and concern and most of all your love. I am sure it will make you all happy to know, that yesterday was Sunday which is my hardest day, as I am usually alone in the office. Well, yesterday by the time I had finished with the Chizuk email and reading through all your replies I could not even THINK of looking at anything inappropriate.
Uri, I am impressed with your depth, but even more impressed that you were able to express it so well. I printed it out and I “learnt” it on the way home from work yesterday. I didn’t have much to add to it, until this morning when I listened to a Shiur about Chanuka from Rabbi Akiva Tatz.
www.simpletoremember.com/media/a/chanukah-oil-wick-n-flamed/ I quote from the Shiur :
Darkness brings a natural fear. Not the fear of being attacked but the fear of being alone. One who is spiritually developed does not fear being alone. On the contrary he feels a tremendous thrill in being alone. The Greeks extinguished that. Western culture is afraid to be alone. The Jewish idea of meditation is not to switch off and relax but to switch on the real mind and connect. We are supposed to do this at least three times a day.
Which made me think: Why do I/we find daavening so hard? It is because we are so uncomfortable being alone.