We are gonna try to have some fun with this one, sir...
You wrote:
I just acted out and in need of chizuk....So what can I do differently?
- Come up with ways to manage workload better, in order to have less work due in same time frame.
- Set expectations of clients more appropriately, so that stress level is less.
- Workflow for keeping track of tasks needs improvement.
- Reach out to more GYE people, earlier (Had two phone calls, so +1)......
The question on my mind, is how do we square this type of hindsight and taking steps to prevent future episodes with the Twelve Steps' "obsession of the mind", "we will act out again", "G-d can take it away", etc. That seems to be discounting taking these (practical) steps and to focus rather on spiritual steps.
How about this for a bad intro:
"You may not like me that much when you finish reading this, but I still like you!"
I bet you actually need very
little chizzuk right now. We are usually very clear about what's important in life and what is not, right
after we act out. Acting out has a way of returning our sanity to us (for a short while). Problem is, it's a very uneconomical method of staying sane. Kind of like needing to bash myself in the groin :o with a 2x4 every few days so that never forget how
sweetit is to actually feel
comfortable. Oh, boy. Of course, I've been there many times.
Maybe you are different that I, but the only thing I really feel I need after acting out is for someone
to make me feel better. 'Feeling better' is not recovery and has nothing at all to
do with recovery. Sure, it happens to a person in recovery (after the common initial hellish period), but that is a side effect - not the goal. We are in recovery to stop acting out, period. Even if it makes us miserable.
Typically, our only motivation for actually stopping is that
we cannot afford doing it any more. Not that we really, really don't like the way it makes us feel afterwards, or what it does to our wives, kids, or anybody else. Iyov was OK with G-d and accepted it all - till he got an illness in his
very own body (look at the meforshim there). That was too much. We don't usually consider getting the help we
really need until the stuff we are doing finally hits home and we cannot afford to do it ever again, even
once....but we know full well that it's hopeless and that we eventually will, anyhow. In other words, that we have to.
That's powerlessness. It is not a religious or bechirah issue. it is not open to discussion. It is just a fact. We know we will do it again because
557 times so far, we were absolutely
positive we would not - and then we did. Only when it gets too expensive and we can't afford to do it again, do we finally come to our senses (556 times too late!) and admit in shock, "I can't stop! Why didn't anyone ever just
tell me that?!"
Then - if we are addicts - are we ready for
starting recovery.
OK, so to get back to your thing: Where is the place for the spiritual answer, if the practical techniques are an effective weapon against lust obsession and the acting out habit?
My answer is this:
When these practical methods are actually working for you for six months or a year, then we can talk the question over. Till then, it does not seem that they are working. And if they are only working occasionally, then they are not working at all.
As they say in dog training, if your dog does not always come when called, then
you do not have a dog! Still friends?
PS. None of what I said will make any sense to a non-addict. If it really makes perfect sense to you, then I fear you may have the same chronic, progressive, and destructive (often fatal) disease that I have. But there is a refuah, thank-G-d. And it is not chizzuk - it's learning how to accept and live with the truth. And it is a miracle.