Welcome, Reb inbox!
And no, I'm not being sarcastic by calling you "reb." By coming here and posting, you've already taken a huge step forward. You've made a decision to truly try to deal with this issue in your life, instead of continuing to fall and feel guilty, vow not to fall again, fall again, feel guilty, etc. etc.
And please don't worry about how you'll sound, or whether you're writing well enough. Just talk to us. For me, one of the things that helped a lot was reaching out and opening up and posting, posting, posting.
We've been there. In different ways, in different levels of severity, different situations, but...we've been there. And while I was trapped, I told myself that I couldn't help it, that I needed this, I even, at times, told myself that hashem would understand. I convinced myself that what I was doing was healthy, that it wasn't completely destructive, crazy, and ridiculous.
laagvokeles wrote on 31 May 2011 02:17:
Now u are a shloim mazel and your wife has .... if thats the case than man u have huge nisayon and only hashem can help u (in my eyes).
Reb Lagvokeles - I hear your point, but here's where i disagree with you: There are no external, subjective measures of what is beautiful and what is to be pitied. Someone can have a wife that everyone else smirks at, but he's attracted to her. And he's the lucky one, laughing at them. And as yo pointed out, someone can have a beautiful wife, and not enjoy being with her.
I think that, especially for a lot of us here, we can get caught up in "whether or not she's pretty," when in fact, the real question is, "am I attracted to her?" which is a very different question.
Are you following my train of thought?
Now, Reb inbox, I absolutely hear you, and I cry bitterly at the thought of you being married to a girl that you might not have been interested in! That by itself can lead to many problems. I do have some ideas that may help you, though I'd hesitate to mention them outside of the married guy's forum. Feel free to send me a PM (private message), and I can share my thoughts.
However, I need to point out a few mistakes that it sounds like you're making. And don't be embarassed, because they're the same things we all said, in one way or another. And my pointing it out can't make you change those things, but it can offer you an opportunity, if you want to take it. By the way, I don't pretend to be high and mighty. Any knowledge that i gained from others here, and from my own experience, I paid a bitter and expensive price for. Feel free to read my story, if you're interested (the link underneath this post is my thread).
One thing that you keep mentioning, again and again, is this feeling that we have a right to have "this" b'heter. Now, first of all, I should point out that "this" is usually intended to mean a way to have a release. You're turning it into an expectation of having a supermodel wife. And no one has that, not even the husbands of supermodels. Furthermore, one thing that i learned is that it is possible to survive without this, entirely. Is it an enjoyable experience? Yup, absolutely. But realizing that it's not necessary, made my life a far happier place for me to inhabit.
1200inbox wrote on 30 May 2011 20:57:
...I started looking around how my chaverim have pretty women and they enjoy them selfs and how I can not satisfy me like they do so that caused me to start watching porn...
First of all, we have no idea. Most of the times, the dream lives we think other people are having, aren't quite as great as we think. Rabbi Reisman points out in his book (pathways of the prophets, I think, came out a couple of years ago) that we think our wives are the only ones that criticize us. We're wrong. :D
More important, though, is your statement and feeling that "that caused me to start."
Nothing caused you to start. There may have been things that pushed you in that direction, but
you made the decision, and still do. And you have the ability to make a different decision, every day, every second.
On a different note, you hit the nail on the head when you said that, "I look at my self as such a fool that I don't believe in my self anymore."
You're right - we can't trust or believe in ourselves in this situation. If there's one thing that certainly true, and the 12 steps and the torah agree on, it's that we're powerless. Ain aputrupis l'arayus. Call it what you will, if you rely on yourself, you're in trouble. You need to ste yourself up beforehand so that you don't have to face this battle head-on. Then you can start accepting the idea of giving the battle over to God, which I certainly haven't mastered yet.
I do find that avoiding the struggle is far easier than fighting it, and is far better for the long-term. And the more distance you get from the issues, the more clearly you're able to see things, and it becomes easier to make more improvements (it also becomes easier to assume you've foxed the problem, which often is NOT the case).
hatzlacha, and again, welcome!