nowhere to turn wrote on 10 May 2010 02:11:
I am a regular 15 yr old yeshiva bochur in a top yeshiva in monsey, but has internet at home. Besides for my own problems with watching my eyes and controlling my hotzoas zera that has been with me for years, i noticed something interesting recently. I have noticed my father, a 55 yr old heimishe guy by the computer late at night.
[...]So before i deal with my own shmiras einayim/bris issues, how do i deal with this without destroying my home? ???
Where do I start? I have a teenaged son in a top yeshiva in my town. I'm a heimische guy in his 50s who also likes many kinds of shmutz, r'l. So, you could be my own son! What would I say to him; what would I want him to say to me? And, what options do you have?
I guess I'm posting to give you a father's perspective. First, I feel like a hypocrite when I come home from maariv and go straight to some online shmutz, or when I act out before getting out of bed for shacharis. As bad as it feels on the inside, try to imagine what having my own son in on the joke might feel like. It hardly matters whether he's doing the same stuff online or not; it makes me feel like a schmuk of a father for not giving him the homelife he deserves and that parallels the top school we struggle to send him to.
So, what's the next step here? I don't know, of course, but here are some random thoughts from one guy.
1. You are NOT responsible for your father, or for helping cure your father. You are responsible for getting clean and staying that way, for YOURSELF. Period.
2. You are not obligated to clean up the whole shul or even your father's chevra. That's more than a 15-y.o. should have to take on.
3. You are NOT exempted from kibbud av v'em just because your father is acting like a jerk. This means you are probably NOT allowed to be doing things that will let your mother in on the problem, and it may even mean you can't confront your father, either.
4. So, what options are left here? I'd say:
> take care of yourself: get clean, stay clean, realize how your father's imperfections are simply a human frailty to which you might also succumb if you're not careful.
> take pride that you're tackling this young, because obviously it's trickier after decades like your father has obviously had.
> DAAS TORAH. I hate to say this, but you have GOT to find a Rav to help you navigate this from a Torah perspective. Your family Rav, someone at school, hell I'd even go to ask-the-rebbe at aish.com or something. (There are rabbeim here at GYE, too, if they're willing.) But between the impact on your parents' marriage, on other marriages in the community, on your own relationship with your dad, etc etc, there are Torah values here. If you go to a top yeshiva, you want to live by the Torah. Even when it's uncomfortable to do so. Like now.
> If I were REALLY devious, I'd suggest something like sending an email to everyone in the email schmutz circle. It would say: HI, I'm one of your children. I somehow stumbled into these emails. I'm really embarrassed for you. I know who all of you are, and both your fake and real email addresses. I hope you realize you've got to do something about this sick addiction. Before someone discovers you (whoops, too late LOL). And before they sell you out to your Rav, your wives, and yes your children. You might want to look over
www.guardyoureyes.org and get busy on breaking this non-Torahdik addiction.
IT'S NOT ONLY FOR YOUR OWN SELF-ESTEEM, IT'S FOR THE ESTEEM THAT YOU WANT YOUR CHILDREN TO HOLD FOR YOU WHEN YOU ONE DAY IY'H WALK THEM TO THE CHUPPAH. Note, you don't have to sign this.
How's THAT for hardball?!! (But don't do it before you show a draft to a Rav. The stakes are pretty high.)