Hi there - Welcome!
I know what you mean - sharing about this issue can be so difficult. But that's part of why we're here, because this disease lives in the darkness. And the more we keep it there, the more we twist ourselves to hide our secret, until it effects our lives more and more. (I know Dov already kinda said this, but I started writing this reply hours ago, so I'm keeping it anyway)
As far as what you need to move forward, different people do find that different things work for them. The 12 steps work very well for a lot of people. Some people use some of the concepts from the 12 steps, without using all of them, but I think that the 12 steps are good things to live with, anyway - it's all about bringing hashem into your life in a real way.
Realize that you're far from alone. In various different ways, most of us here have sunk very, very low. What's beautiful is that so many of us have been able to move forward, and grow in a LOT of different ways.
Feel free to read some of my story (just click on the link under my post). One of the things I realized over the time I've been here addresses something you asked:
selfloathing wrote on 13 May 2011 16:49:
heuni memass: Thanks for the little bit at a time advice, but don't you feel like the weight grows with every passing second, minute, hour and day? I once held myself back for 5 weeks, and when I cracked and gave in it was because I felt like there was a herd of elephants jumping on my heart and in my mind that didn't let me work or sleep...
One of the things that leads to this is the fact that, well, we think it should. I'm depriving myself of something, so the feeling of deprivation is going to get worse as time goes on, right? Fact is, it's not true. Or, it's only as true as we tell ourselves it is :D
Another part of the problem is when we
don't live one day at a time - then it feels like we have an impossible task. Here's why - we have the ability to face the tests we're given. And we're given tests each day. But when we want to
stay clean forever, it's like we're trying to face ALL the tests for the rest of our lives,
today. And we only have the ability to pass
today's tests, today. And that feels impossible. And facing an impossible task, day after day, is going to get more and more difficult and frustrating.
You also said:
selfloathing wrote on 13 May 2011 16:49:
ONe question, while we take it one day at a time, I read in a few stories how people slipped back into their old habits sometimes years after they managed to quit.
While I sometimes feel a longing for a cigarette I never even came close to having one (in 5 years), will I be able to get to the low key longing or will this mountain remain one I constantly have to fight like I do today?
To start with, most people aren't born naturally with some desire to smoke cigarettes, whereas some Lust is natural. We, however, are in even more danger from it than most people, because we already well know the path Lust takes us down.
That said, we can make things easier by making sure we're in touch with ourselves, we stay careful, and we keep getting close to people and Hashem. We can reach the point where we don't usually feel the desperation, the white-knuckling, as we call it, on an everyday level.
Have a great shabbos!