dov wrote on 10 Jun 2011 21:32:
I am happy to be powerless over lust till the day I die. All the things I am 'missing out on' will have to stay that way. That is what recovery means. You gotta feel you are giving up something, no? Otherwise what is the big deal.
Torah says this. Rebbi Akivah had to give up his life - his students had a hard time with that, he explained what I am saying but in a religious way. If we are supposed to innately want to do only what Hashem wants and not desire the destructive stupid stuff at all, then what are we giving up for Hashem in b'chol levov'cho?! So having the desires and knowint that they are still alive in me is no ma'yloh, at all. It is unnatural and not the avodah that Hashem wants from me. Sort of how the Tanya explains "Halevai I should be a beinoni" - that's not good enough?
Have a great Shabbos!
Dov,
Thank you for your perspective on this. It took me five readings over a week, but I think I'm finally getting it.
For me, "to stop" isn't the hard part. Once upon a time, I could not help myself, but now I think I can - I've not "fallen" in years. It's the fear of what is potentially inside, and
caring enough about it, at all times. And building on having stopped the external actions (active pursuit and acting out), so as to internalize the cessation into my eyes and thoughts. I act like a recovered person, I see like a recover
ing person, and I think like a battling person. Don't read too much into that last sentence - the word choice is pathetic. This leads me to believe I'm doing something wrongly. But there is a wealth of material on here that I'm wading through, with some excellent tools and responses.
I'm not sure if I make sense there. :o
Anyway, thanks for helping to clear up my thinking.