iLoveHashem247 wrote on 07 Jun 2023 20:24:
Dov wrote on 07 Jun 2023 19:38:
iLoveHashem247 wrote on 07 Jun 2023 18:16:
Finally accepted that I am an addict. I said so in public at the AA meeting last night.
Not sure how that applies to alcohol, perhaps I am an addict to addicting things perhaps when I can’t get my fix, and I am not working on it, I reach out to escape to other things…
Not clear on that yet
But just like porn or M or drinking, or drugging it is an escape from facing the realities of my life
I grew up with everything other than the free will to make my own decisions
Currently on my way for an intake to get a therapist and deal with the source and root of all that troubles me
It's so great to finally get something related to the help we really need. I pray your intake therapist is honest, objective, and most of all has siyata diShmaya.
I presume the AA meeting you attended was an open one, rather than a Closed AA meeting where only alcoholics are invited.
The question you are mulling over of how it applies to alcohol, is unclear to me. Care to explain what you mean?
Thx
Amen
כן יהי רצון
the question regarding alcohol is
“Am I addicted to weed and turn to alcohol when I can’t get my drug of choice, or am I an addict in the general sense?”
as in, whenever I am feeling like I am overwhelmed with my life I turn to something that will numb my pain with a preference for one drug, but not discriminating when I can get my hand and others. I never have, nor am I interested in using opiates or cocaine, or other such hard drugs.
The first step of alcoholics Anonymous does not read "powerless
against alcohol." Instead, it reads "powerless
over alcohol." And it's not a word game, but very specific and clear. Even more important, it's honest: what defines an addict is what effect the drug has on the person when they use it. Bill w asks this question of inquirers, in his big book. (I paraphrase) "Can you drink alcohol successfully? Then you aren't an addict." He refers to it as drinking like a gentleman. Normal people, non-alcoholics in other words, can drink successfully. They never wreck their lives by starting to drink. Because they don't end up having to overdo it. But alcoholics drink when they're really not supposed to, when it does them harm. They waste time drinking when they have no time to spare. They start drinking when they can't really afford to get drunk and end up drunk anyhow. The people in their lives go through hell because of their drinking. They destroy their integrity one piece at a time because they have to hide their drinking and lie about it. It's not something they can do and keep living normally, at the same time. And the same thing applies to sexaholics. Even if a sexaholic person (such as myself) is an otherwise good, frum person: He or she cannot engage in erotic adventure successfully. Practically every time the sexaholic tries to do that, trouble ensues. Either the person deepens their double life because of the hiding and lying they need to do, or they go way overboard and frequently surprise themselves. "Last time, right after it came out, I felt
so sure I would never
ever do this again... How the hell did I end up back here again...or worse?" A sexaholic tries to do teshuva, and it never works for him or her. Every time the sexaholic tries to do teshuva, they end up on a super high, a high that really only makes them bored when things are normal! And leads back to a feeling that they need more sex adventure, eventually. (I posted about this on guard your eyes nearly 15 years ago. The post was called 'the nuclear reset button', and guard reposted it many, many times in his chizzuk newsletters, of old). Teshuvah only works for normals. It does not work for addicts. In the end, it just ends up
reinforcing the cycle after a brief respite. Oh well. Chazal already told us
Derech Eretz kodma laTorah, and they were right. Recovery is before Torah and anything like religious avodas Hashem - It's referred to in the second step as 'sanity', for this reason. And it's not the same thing as sobriety, at all.
The addict's problem is not drinking/using the drug as you keep implying in your posts. The defining thing
isn't that the addict keeps using and can't seem to stop. That's only what gets our attention that something's wrong. Everybody has temptation and many (even non-addicts) have very poor willpower. Many normal people are immature and just don't know how to say 'no' very well. But what distinguishes the addicts are: 1- he or she cannot successfully drink/use, because using the drug has a different effect on them than it has on others. The only solution to that is complete abstinence from the drug. There is no other answer. An alcoholic who comes to Step 1 has admitted that he cannot moderate his drinking. He gives up on every being able to learn how to moderate his drinking. He knows, finally, that he can never afford to drink ever again and surrenders alcohol. Same with a sexaholic exactly. A sexaholic realizes that engaging in erotic adventure is just not going to work for him or her. Whenever he or she engages in a little erotic adventure for any reason, it ends up taking over his marriage bed, bathroom time, study time, etc, and it will be done to an excess he cannot afford...until that same horrible bottom is hit yet again. We need support from other real live human beings who are sober, in order to succeed with this. I am clean for 26 years and go to meetings on a regular basis where I meet many other people who I've become friends with who are sober for many years, as well. In the beginning, those associations are absolutely essential and there's no way to do that by Zoom, on the phone or any other nonsense. I need real people that I can see otherwise I don't believe it's possible. And no matter how powerful Hashem is, He never gives us the power to use lust (erotic adventuring) successfully or for the alcoholic to drink successfully. We remain powerless and never get that power at all. Hoping to get the power to be able to drink a little bit ever again, means the alcoholic hasn't surrendered alcohol at all, yet. Same for the sexaholic. If I'm hoping that one day Hashem gives me the power to be like most normal people and purposely excite myself a little bit, watch a little bit of porn, etc, all that means is that I have not surrendered my drug yet. I'm powerless and over the drug. Not
against it mind you, but
over it. That's the only point of Step 1, and that is all powerlessness really refers to.
2- We have fallen in love with using the drug and obsess about it in our minds and hearts when we are bored, too happy, too sad, worried, etc, and need a reprieve from that obsession. For this we need a miracle. And as Bill discovered and wrote about in his Big Book, so have we sexaholics found out, that: Hashem
does grant us a daily reprieve - if we really have surrendered our drug and sincerely want to let go of any mental obsessing about it - and that reprieve is contingent on our maintenance of our spiritual condition - which brings me to the third problem an addict has:
3- We hate way too much of life. Too many things destroy our inner peace. We are, in some things, insatiable, unsatisfiable, entitled, self-centered, and arrogant. Of course, non addicts have these same problems, too. All the mussar sforim are full of these things. But addicts seem to need a little bit of a different approach to reach the place where they make peace with G-d's will, in other words with life on
life's terms. Reality is a tough one, for us. We tend to need a spiritual approach that most normal people don't really need. We need to connect to something a bit higher than most people need to connect to, otherwise we're down in the cesspool. Others don't quite have that experience. And that's what steps 2-11 are mostly about.
Have you ever wondered why 11 of the 12 steps don't even
mention alcohol? Why there is no place anywhere in the Big Book of AA
any instructions or suggestions at all for how to quit drinking? None. And none of the 12 Steps work on quitting drinking.
Step 1 addresses the first problem alcoholics have, above. It's the surrender step
regarding the drug. Steps 2-11 address the second and third problems above. They are the Steps
regarding real life.
Any questions? I have privately messaged you before that talking this over on the phone will make a lot more sense than writing back and forth. There's just too much more detail to explain and too much more to talk about in terms of
application of any of these ideas, to do this justice in writing. So far, that hasn't happened. And so far, you've gone to alcoholics Anonymous meetings instead of meeting other chronic masturbators, in person, in meetings. Maybe I'm wrong about that. I'm just basing it on what I see you wrote above. Popping into one meeting and making a grand admission is something, but it's only the barest start. Sexaholics Anonymous meetings are safe for serious people. What changes and makes the big difference when we actually meet our peers who do the same things we do and admit it openly on a regular, ongoing basis, isn't that we get to finally face other people. It's that we finally face ourselves. Until then, we rarely do face ourselves truly, no matter how honest we think we are. Maybe I shouldn't have thrown that last bit in because it might be an annoying thing to hear. But I'm happy to explain what I mean by that. Just not here in writing. It would just take too much time and wouldn't get clear in the end, anyhow.
Hatzlocha ❤️