yosefhatzadik wrote on 14 Oct 2012 04:47:
I do not pretend to know if that's right or not. But what of 'falling every 100 days'? I figure the question is this: Is life during their 99 clean days a good life? Is it kedushadikeh and (sometimes even) joyful living? If it is, then I see nothing wrong with it at all! It's geshmak!!
I hear you! I totally agree with that!
What I don't like is to be worried or stressed all the time not to stare, not to take a second look, not to think, not to fantasize... I would like that someday it can be like if I saw a cheeseburger, like maybe is tasty but I prefer not to try it... I mean thats how is supposed to be, to change the nissayon, that your bechira changes when you change... when you oleh beruchnius, if you are in another madreiga this last nissayon wont bother you anymore...
If I will be trapped with the tought that I am an addict, all the time, I feel that I wont see improvement.
What? Who told you that being a recovering addict means living the rest of your life with the constant awareness that you are in fact a sex pervert and cannot control yourself around attractive people, etc...?
That is so
not like it really is.
Sobriety leads to recovery. And recovery means living with the awareness that Hashem is taking an infinitely better job taking care of you than you ever did. In my life before recovery started, when
I tried to take care of me, my best efforts ended up with me running to sex with myself or my wife (or others) to save me. That is just what happens. It's pretty easy to admit, once I look back at my life and write out the history on paper. It's not shaming, nor am I beating myself up. It's just the facts, no explanations, no psychological or spiritual insights are needed - just the facts. I am a little broken. Many people are, too, in other ways. Now it's time to do something about it with Hashem's help instead of going it alone, trying to finally manipulate my own mind right all on my own, or trying (again) to 'do teshuvah'.
Living with that awareness is not to say that I am going to
live in a perverted way.
Quite to the contrary, the admission cleans me
because it enables me to need G-d. To really need Him - not to
say that I need him "because the Gemorah in Kiddushin
says I do" - that's not nearly enough. No. As yeshivah guys and frum yidden we are supposed to know and say all the party lines. But if we are already masturbating our brains out and getting sucked trance-like into sweet porn (and it
is sweet)...then what good is reciting religious party lines? Suddenly wearing a black hat or a shtraimel vs a 'sroogie' is a lot less significant, isn't it...we both get on our computers desperately looking for a shot of the best porn we can find, hands shaking and mouth dry, no? We both end up masturbating ourselves in the bathroom, no? And these behaviors are not really just abberations - they are a major focus of our inner life and self-awareness. They are a major definer of our relationship with Hashem, aren't they? Not
should they be - but
are they? Yup.
Nu. We need help. Derech Eretz
kodmah laTorah.
But I want to suggest to you a possibilty that would be great news:
The fear you describe of 'having to always suffer from the pain of needing porn, fantasy, and masturbation - whether I actually act out or not' is probably really just this: you do yet not know the power of Hashem. So you find it
very hard to believe that He
can really give you the daily reprieve that you want from lust and take better care of you than
you can.
That is what the 3rd step is about.
Hatzlocha, and sorry this was so wordy.
If this stuff makes sense to you, can you put some of these things into action?
- Dov