There are techniques which are common in what's called CBT or Cognitive Behavioural Therapy. It basically is the idea that our patterns of thought affect our moods and our being. And if we can change those patterns then we can have a positive impact on our well-being.
When being engaged in this struggle it's important to remain optimistic. Being optimistic will give you greater energy, help you avoid falling, and if you do fall it will help you to pick yourself and keep going.
Don't fall into the thinking trap of the three P's:
Permanence: Pessimistic people think that their failure is permanent. This demotivates them and prevents them from continuing the struggle. Optimistic people recognise that while they may have failed now with hard work and diligence they can beat it. It is not a "permanent" failing and they can succeed. This energises them to keep up the fight and eventually succeed.
Pervasiveness: Pessimistic people assume that failure in this one area of their life means they are a failure in life as a whole. This demotivates them and prevents them from continuing the struggle. It also prevents them from participating fully in all other aspects of their life which reduces their overall well-being which then in turn makes it even harder to succeed in this struggle.
Personalization: Pessimists blame themselves for every time they fail whereas optimists apportion blame on causes outside of themselves. Optimists are therefore generally more confident. Optimists also quickly internalize positive events while pessimists externalize them.
Applied to this struggle:
- Permanence - The struggle isn't permanent. There are a number of people on this site who have had great struggles but have succeeded. With effort you will succeed.
- Pervasiveness - Just because you struggle in this area it does not mean you are a bad Jew in everything that you do. This is a particularly strong perception in the Jewish community. Yes many of us struggle with this. But we can still be successful in other aspects of our lives.
- Personalization - Don't blame this all on yourself. Yes we must accept responsibility for our actions, however also recognise that this is one of the greatest challenges of our generations. No other generation that has ever lived has ever had to live under such constant bombardment of sensual imagery and with such ease of access. We live in a very difficult environment.
Additionally when experiencing negative thoughts there is a thought process to go through which can help turn your thought patterns around. It can be usefully remembered with the mnemonic ABCDE:
A = Adversity - This is the event causing your negative thoughts. Whether it is a fall, or you've been reflecting on past behaviours.
B = Belief - These are the current beliefs that you have about this event. (Think the three P beliefs I listed above)
C = Consequence - This is how you feel as a result of your beliefs interpreting the event.
D = Disputation - This is where you become a good Jewish lawyer! Argue with yourself and dispute those erroneous beliefs that you have. E.g. It isn't permanent and you will do better, it isn't pervasive and you do succeed in other areas, it's not personal and you live in challenging times.
E = Energization - This is the end result how you feel now that you have successfully disputed the beliefs that previously had. Hopefully this would result in a more optimistic mindset which will make you more motivated to keep on with the struggle and to eventually succeed!
If you want more information you can look on wikipedia here:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Learned_optimism