muststopnow wrote on 25 May 2010 12:50:
i've been looking for something like this for a long time and yet, writing this post is very hard for me. [...]
Yep, welcome aboard. If Guard were on duty (I think he's on a fundraising trip), he'd be sending you an official online welcome packet. In the meantime, you could probably find one near the start of other peoples' welcome threads. It shows some nice workbooks etc that help get things started.
I'm one of those hard-boiled guys who likes to put it all out there. [Feel free to read my story at the top of my old "introduce Yourself" thread.] This makes it a good site for ME, but it also means I can be a bit of a rough read for folks a little more subdued in this work. So forgive me if I'm jumping in to a sensitive place. However...
sometimes the most difficult and gutsy moves can be the ones with the greatest power, and the greatest payoff. You mentioned that just registering and posting was tough. So my bracha to you is that you gain from the site in equal measure.
And even more challenging, I'm curious if you've ever checked in with your Rav in how to address this work. Seriously. As embarrassing as some might find it, the input of Daas Torah is important in every area of our life as Orthodox Jews. (You are one, aren't you?) If we can ask our Rav about the purity of the wallets in our BACK pockets (business dealings, tzedaka allocations, etc), why is it so difficult to ask him about the purity of (what's near our FRONT pockets)?
In other words, my own personal opinion (worth what you paid for it!) is to consider the toughest areas to tackle, jump on them, see in hindsight that they're not so tough, and then use that victory to pick off the easy stuff later. And of all of them, having a Rav onboard seems like a pretty high bang-per-buck.
Just a thought. Anyhow, welcome aboard. Keep posting.