ATESHUVA1 wrote on 22 Aug 2011 07:41:
Shalom Aleichem everyone,
This is really tough for me to do, just cause i never thought I would actually have to express my thoughts or feelings about this to anyone or anything and the process would always stay between me and The Aibishter, but I see through my own struggle that chizuk is an absolute must for any growth in this process.
My story starts about 8 years ago when a simple misspelling of a website by my own innocent child self led me to the first of the genre of sites that would grab my life and steer it in the total opposite direction. Who woulda thought an innocent elementary school boy whose soul desire was to bring yiddishe nachas to all those who loved him could be abducted so abruptly to be placed slowly but surely on the path towards utter rishus r"l.
Ever since that first exposure, which in retrospect seems to have been completely out of my control and so obviously controlled by the Yad Hashem, I continued to look for other things in my surroundings that could feed my unrelenting curiosity and subsequently give justification toward the satisfaction of anything my heart would desire. With every year that passed the urges got stronger and the venues with which to fulfill these urges seemed to never end.
Where were my parents during all this? They were doing everything they knew possible to stop my obvious acting out. Putting up restriction after restriction taking away computers from my immediate availability, watching my cell phone usage, monitoring who my friends were etc..(how I think the problem could have, and still can be
successfully fixed among youth is for a different discussion) But no matter how they tried the desires never could be filled except through the obvious choice of evil with which I i think everyone within these discussion boards is familiar with. As I was finishing highschool, my rishus took a turn for the worst, I decided I wanted a way to be more and more like the animals I was so carefully observing, and chose for myself a mate to perpetrate my evil with. Having lived an extended amount of time committing heinous acts that simply put were the absolute opposite of anything a yiddishe relationship should be, there came a point in time where
BARUCH HASHEM I had reached such a low that the only place to go was up. Not a day goes by where i am not thankful to The Aibishter for allowing me to hear the Bas Kol that went out that fateful day and said "its time to do teshuva."
It has been a few years since this momentous time in my life, and recovering has been a
looonnnggg difficult struggle. In my journey to get closer and closer to Hashem and know Him in all my journeys, I have been given the bracha to see small peiros of my efforts. I have been able to feel a part of the very serious yeshiva I attend and excell in the things most important to me in my Avodas Hashem. However, one of the hardest things throughout my growth process has been to find a successful manner to completley curb my acting out and control these desires in an effective manner. Walking in the streets is as scary as walking into the mouth of a lion and having parents who insist that I have my own laptop with unrestricted internet access doesnt exactly help either. Ive had long stints were I really feel as though ive found the guaranteed way to control myself and put the whole struggle out of mind, and for that time I feel like nothing could possibly get in my way of becoming the type of talmid chochom and oived Hashem that I truly desire to be. But somehow, someway, the most cunning creature on the planet, the yetzer harah, has been able to flex his devious muscles and throw me back into my desire seeking ways.
And this is where all you gevaldige yidden come in, I have a computer which has to remain unrestricted for a multitude of reasons, which in it of itself is a difficult nissaion to which i have been able to be minatzeich, B"H, for long periods of time (longer than the 90 days). My real problem lies in the dormant yetzer that seems to wait for my feeling of tranquility from this sin and just then convince me its not so bad to surf around, and the next thing you know....
In short, what is the mindset for the recovered who experiences devastating relapses after what seems to be a real success?
I thank you all for your openness and willingness to share which has motivated me to share as well. While it may take me a lifetime to understand why The Ribbono Shel Oilam wanted this from me, after all i was so young and barely understood the concept of responsibility, but B"H i understand that this is why He created emunah. So that every beriah, no matter how incomprehensible the situation, will always have Him to rely on, that He always does everything for a reason, and it is all for our ultimate good and growth.
Ateshuva1,
your story reminds me very much of my own in many ways. I also got started with this stuff in an innocent way. I also went those periods where I felt I was "there" and nothing could stop me from letting go of the Tumah forever. But then I would fall and fall hard. Just like your story.
Something happened to you recently that caused you to realize that you can't do this on your own. You need the chizuk from other people.
I don't know if you know what the 12 steps are but they are the cornerstone of recovery and I suggest you start learning them as soon as you can (you can find them on the website).
What you discovered is the first of the 12 steps: recognizing that you're an addict and that you really can't manage completely on your own.
Everyone on this site, including me, believed at some point that they could deal with the struggle on their own and that they didn't need help. Some of us, like you, even had long periods of time where we were clean and felt like we had made it. We were "out".
But then, something very scary happened; We person fell hard and within very little time from the new fall, we were back to doing the same things that we had stopped doing months before. And it was very scary because after all the hard work, it felt like we were back to square 1.
Sound familiar? Virtually everyone here had this experience.
No one wants to admit they are an addict. It takes many falls and Siyyata Dishmaya to reach that conclusion. My feeling though, is that you are still not fully willing to admit that you are addicted.
This contradiction is evident throughout your post.
I quote: "In short, what is the mindset for the recovered who experiences devastating relapses after what seems to be a real success?"
Ateshuva, someone who keeps falling again and again is an addict. They are not "recovered". In fact, they might never be "recovered" from the addiction. Addicts usually stay addicts for life. That's why when you fall, you fall right back into where you last were.
The only thing we can do is avoid the triggers and things that cause us to fall.
You want a mindset? "I am an addict who is in constant danger of falling".
If you can't get a filter, get accountability software like webchaver.
Get into that mindset that you are in DANGER. Do you have any idea how many people on this website were clean for a year or two and then fell, all because they thought they were out of danger and could relax? Many, many people. I fell recently after almost 6 months because I thought I could live dangerously. Guess what? I'm not willing to make that costly mistake again.
The sooner you internalize what I'm saying, the better. It's not a question of if; Everyone learns this at some point. I just want you to learn it as soon as possible.
Please listen to all the people on here who have lots of experience.
Love,
KH