Please chaver, bear with me in this.
Many have said that the major source of unhappiness is
low self-esteem. At face value it seems to make perfect sense, for we frequently look down on ourselves and the solution should obviously be to instead look more
positively at ourselves,
increase our self-confidence and aim
higher instead of throwing ourselves down into the gutter of self-loathing. This entire model has been repeated so often that people accept it as absolute and applicable to all. The result is ego-building exercises (you are a somebody), esteem-building exercises ("You are great!"), and then careful practice with
healthy humility rather than our knee-jerk self-bashing.
But it's strange how nothing in the program seems anything like ego-building. It talks of converting our
knowledge that we are crazy, into true
acceptance through
public admission that we are ill and different than normal people: by walking into a real live meeting (without a bag on our heads) together with other safe people and saying, "Hi, I am ____ and I am an alcoholic/sexaholic, and I obviously cannot manage my own life, etc." When we do step 1, we are saying that our very
best thinking we could actually do got us exactly in this very mess. In trying to manage our 'problem' (lust and other people), we came to see we are failures...therefore we take step 2, which addresses
not our need for sobriety at all, but our ned for
sanity and health of mind. The steps are
only geared to addicts. Then in step 3, we - even though we have always been frum (but sinning) people - finally break our gayvoh and admit to goyim and yidden alike that we really have
not had a relationship with G-d that actually
works in real life. For we have always ended up having to resort to our drug in order to tolerate life. That's what we meant when we felt inside that we 'couldn't live without it'. We loved it - let's admit it - and depended on it deeply, took big risks to keep and use it, at great emotional and often financial cost (mesiras nefesh). And now we humbly embark on the road to finding a relationship with our G-d that actually works. A true 3rd step. How? By working steps 4 and 5! We agree to face the fact that all our emotional problems in life
are of our own making. That's a hard pill to swallow, but we do. Then in steps 6 and 7 we agree to let our defects go and ask
G-d to remove them...cuz we admit that with all our Torah and all our therapy and all our bechira - we haven't the power to remove the great stumbling blocks: our arrogance and self-centered fears. And on it goes: our weaknesses are responded to with yet more dependence on G-d every step of the way.
And none of the literature talks of 'finally getting
control of dinking/lusting' - for all real 12 step programs know that the first step means we need permanent abstinence from our drug, whatever it happens to be. And acceptance of that seems so much like 'admitting defeat'! Like surrender. And yes, it is
exactly that, if you ask any alcoholic. Incredible how I heard on the news this morning,
Mr Sasson, the father of those 7 children killed in a fire in his house R"l while he was away. In the hesped, he admitted out loud what all addicts learn in recovery: "The
only way to survive such a tragedy and go on with life, is total and unconditional SURRENDER!" Those who suffer loss and
cannot go on, remain bitter precisely because they do not
surrender to reality - they fight it inside. They feel they must. Like giving up is totally impossible. Apparently,
knowing and
accepting are two very different things, indeed. Wow. At any rate,
self-acceptance as we really are seems to be the overall thrust of the first 5 steps, rather than self-appreciation or ego-building. Hmmm...
[No wonder plenty folks twist the program into something else that sounds much more attractive than all that. They say the steps are all about fighting lust rather than learning how to live without our drug. About getting sobriety rather than getting sanity. Gevalt. Or they say that it is all about getting [i]control[/i] over our drinking/lusting - as if we chronic drinkers will
ever be able to control lust the way normal people can! See our arrogance? But we are plotzing to follow anyone who tells us we are really 'too good for all that stuff'. And similarly, many frum people see 12 steps and recovery as 'a crusade against sin' and teach that recovery means vigilance and constant focus on
kedushas habris. Even though all that really means that, at the end of the day, all we are thinking about all day long is sex and our sexuality. But that's secretly what people are attracted to! Sex sells, period.]
* * * * * * *
Rather, I have come to believe that often sadness self-disgust stem from quite the opposite: having an inflated expectation of our selves and our abilities. Our pride tells us we aught to be like that tzaddik we 'worship' or like 'such-and-such' a Chaza"l we have read or heard spoken of. Our pride is telling us things that are crazy. That we are
not like children playing in the toilet water compared to these great men. Our pride tells us we should really be like them. No wonder we feel failures! Instead of working on where we really are holding, we shoot for the stars. Gevalt, what disgust that leads to. Your thread here is called: 'Disgust Cancels Lust'. Well, our self-disgust
feeds lust like gasoline on a fire! And it is precisely our gayvoh that causes such self-disgust.
We see the great people and over-inflate ourselves like chometz, into creatures we really aren't! Then we condemn ourselves for not measuring up.
And believe it or not, we porn-users do the very same thing with the porn we watch, as we do in our fantasy regarding madreigos of Kedusha:
we expect our sex ought to be exactly like that, over and over...our poor wives do not stand a chance! Fantasy is fantasy, is fantasy. No matter if it's in Torah and madreigos, or if it is in sex or business success. We have many reasons we condemn ourselves as failures in many areas of life - and they are all based on prideful self-inflation.
Yes, we each have unique gifts - but in the
overwhelming number of areas in life, we are mediocre. That is torture for us.
I will never be one of the Gedolei Torah. That was torture to face, after coming back from yeshiva in EY and being pumped up with stuff to the contrary by some of my rebbis...at least that was the way
I heard their encouragement. Accepting
that truth, that our greatness is not like those I worship and have been told to worship and whom everyone admires...is a very hard thing to do. So most guys run! (And sex fantasy is a very cheap and powerful way to feel some grandeur indeed!)
Ideas like, "
Mosai yagi'ah ma'asai l'ma'asei avosai?," and "
Kin'as sofrim tarbeh chochma" simply cannot be used successfully by most people us in these doros. So for us they are nahriskeit...actually. And repeating them to impressionable youth is probably assur, I feel. Knowing how and [i]when to
apply Torah concepts is far more important than knowing Torah concepts themselves. That's why the Gemora says "gedola shimusha
yoser milimudah!", and very few talmidim ever get that!
Indeed, we each are unique and outstanding in
something. But removing that subtle but impossible burden of 'measuring up to someone else', is possibly the greatest gift we can give ourselves to restore self-esteem. All the fantasies and lusts for 'madreigos' will dissolve - for they are really
not tayvo for Kedusha - they are tayvos for
recognition. For
being able to say about ourselves in our hearts that "I am like such-and-such a tzaddik." With some humble self-acceptance we will finally start to be
ourselves and approach Hashem accepting who we really are. Finally, Hashem will be face to face in our shemoneh esrei with very the same person
He knows we are, instead of with a person who thinks he is someone else! It's a beautiful homecoming.
Reality is a great place to start avodas Hashem from. The Maggid said it is actually the
only place to start it from. It is what the tzaddik meant when people asked him if he would be just like his Rebbe if he could, and responded: "Nope. Hashem already
has one of those: the Rebbe! Rather,
I am gonna be
me, for
that's what Hashem wants." And what R' Yisroel Salanter meant when he told his talmid, who said that he wished to have R' Yisroel's middos, R' Itzeleh's yir'as Shomayim and R' Shkop's brains - "No, no. Davka
your middos and
your yir'ah and
your brains is what Hashem wants!"
We see that our great tazdikkim have incredible sensitivity to lust and schmutz. They are like delicate instruments that do not tolerate the slightest blemish. R' TzviMeyer (whom I love very much) sometimes feels like he should go to the mikvah again after just going out into the street. That's because is a tzaddik. He is like the mirrors in the Hubble - and I am like a tefilin mirror.
Did you know that the mirrors in the Hubble telescope are ground to a distortion of less than 10 nanometers over the entire parabola? (no, I am not a geek, I just looked it up!)
But my eyeglasses function perfectly fine even though they have far greater distortions! For
my eyes are not at that level. If I demanded such perfection in the grinding of my lenses, I'd be prideful. And I'd need to see a shrink. Same with expecting to copy the tzaddikim. It's gayvoh and leads to one thing: nuttiness. Or what R' Yaakov Kaminetzky zt"l would call, 'not being normal'.
One good thing to see that few realize, is that when Rabban Yochanan ben Zakai blessed the talmidim, he said, "May you take Hashem as seriously as you take people (meaning even the goy standing over there!)." And the talmidim said, "That's all? Chas vesholom to feel about Hashem the way we feel about mere people!" His response was, "Oy, halevai. Teida - know - that you do not take Hashem nearly as seriously as you take even the goy standing over there, and you hide in shame from him, not from Hashem."
Now, to whom was he speaking? The dregs of the yeshivah? Nope. He was talking
to Tanno'im. And he was telling them that human nature - even for the great tannoim - is to take a goy watching us far more seriously than we take Hashem yisborach. It's just the truth. The sooner you admit and accept it, the sooner you will be able to start working on changing it. But if you are flying about in 'madreigos', then you are never likely to work on what you are really lacking in. The seforim called 'Bilvovi Mishkan Evneh' by R' Itamar Schwartz Shlit"a are all about developing the simple realness of a relationship with G-d. And so is the 12-step program. Neither are about Torah or religion, but rather about derech Eretz/sanity (as R' Schwartz clarifies in his hakdoma to the English version of 'Da Es Atzm'cho".)
The Halocha is that a cow without a single blemish but with a head or single leg that is too big for the rest of it's body, is posul. Same here. I need to accept who I really am and grow all aspects of myself in an even fashion. If I put onto myself madreigos that are not mine at all - like becoming upset when seeing a woman and recognizing that I realize she is pretty - or getting worked up that I have a thought of sin - creates a mountain out of a molehill. It creates the problem. That is why many have told me that even though they gain so many great tools on GYE but they get much worse by hanging around here and focusing on tahara and perfectionism against schmutz. They end up fighting sex and desires all day and all night...and it just grows in their minds even more. And to their surprise, when they leave GYE, they have far fewer falls. (Thats for some people, not all.)
Making women and their images 'the enemy', just gives their images more and more of our own power! It
creates the enemy. But in reality, women are just: people. Real, live people. Hashem loves women just as he loves men - he even cares for and gives life with great love to the goyim - even to the shiksas dressed immodestly in the street. The Kotzker (I think) said that if one wrestles all day with dirty people gets all covered with mud from head to toe - even if he wins! Instead, we in SA usually just surrender women we feel attracted to and their images. And if we find ourselves thinking about them and obsessing over them, we just pray for them. Not for them to 'do Teshuvah and dress normal', but for their health, for their husbands to be well and treat them right, for their children not to have tragedies or get sick, for them to discover the relationship Hashem wants to have with them - yes He even wants to have a relationship with the pritzusdikeh shiksa, for he knows that she knows no better and rachamov al kol ma'asov. And Dovid hamelech prayed that Hashem get nachas - joy - from every single one of His creations including lions, rabbits, the sky and fields - and even from the shiksas.
Getting more normal goes a very, very long way.
I am not judging you, but your post just reminded me of these issues when you went into what this tzaddik does and what that tzaddik does. And underneath that is an expectation of these things from ourselves - otherwise why try to do them?
And I feel this answers what you were asking in that post.