Hello all,
So far, Day #3 is going well. I easily could have given in to the sexual and lustful impulses for porn, masturbation and phone sex. I had all the opportunity in the world. I am resolved to break free. I try not to let the thought that I failed in the past, bog me down. Bottom line is that I was free for close to a year, and I need to look at mu success as my potential for eternity, not as proof that if it didn't work the first time, it won;t work again. The problem was that I just never took things to the next level. And I hope to get that plateau again and begin searching for the next peek. Because as long as we are living, there is always more climbing to do.
I have been reading through the
SA white book. I have skimmed it in the past, and this time I am going through it more carefully. There is lots of great insight in the book, which I hope t share with my readership.
Allow me to quote a bit:
[quote="SA white book, page 8]
Like alcoholics, we can be "dry" without being sober in a deeper sense. We don't even claim that sexual sobriety will make one feel better immediately. We, like other addicts, can go through withdrawal symptoms when we give up our "drug." Nonetheless, in spite of the questions, struggles, and confusion that we have gone through, we find that sexual sobriety is truly "the key to a happy and joyous freedom we could otherwise never know."[/quote]
Herein lyes the secret to my success the first time, last year, and I hope this attitude will once again jolt me into full recovery. The idea is simple. There are fantasies we all expect from sobriety. We tend to think that all the problems of our lives stem from our addiction; be it depression, lack of concentration, irritability, finance issues, social issues, etc... You name it. Firstly, we should realize that it is probably the above that fueled the addiction. So removing the addiction will not remove those things. And it is true that addiction was probably a catalyst for the above, but once it there, it doesn't go away from the removal of addiction. But...an honest look at things will tell us that having the addiction will make it much harder to deal with the above. And once we remove the addiction, then and only have we begun to pave the path to work on those issues. But it will come with hard work.
More to come. In a bit