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Additional tools for recovery
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TOPIC: Additional tools for recovery 49546 Views

Re: Additional tools for recovery 18 May 2012 06:29 #137720

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Carrying the message
151. Call two newcomers every day.

This is as simple as taking someone's phone number when you first meet them, and then calling them up the next day to just say, "Hi, how are you."

On the forum, look out for newcomers. Say hello on their thread, send a brief PM.

You don't have to say (or write) anything long or fancy. The main message, I think, is that someone is out there who cares, and who is willing to help.

--Elyah





Re: Additional tools for recovery 21 May 2012 11:41 #137878

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152. Share your experience, strength, and hope.

In other words share about your past, present, and future. (Don't over-do the experience, though.) Your goal in sharing should be to lift the other person, to leave him (or them) better than you found them.

If you tell them just all about your miseries, you'll just make them more miserable.

It's so easy to focus on the negativity, and overlook the blessings in our life, and I think that's part of what feeds addiction. We need to start doing the opposite (and share that with others), and I think that's part of recovery.

--Elyah

Re: Additional tools for recovery 22 May 2012 16:19 #137999

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153. Give your sobriety date.

Or, state your length of sobriety.

Until I started keeping track of my sobriety, I didn't realize just how sick I was. I thought I had a problem maybe once every month or so. But then, when I signed up for the 90-day chart, I noticed that I had a hard time at first keeping clean for a week (I finally had an accurate picture of my sickness).

Also, stating your sobriety date helps you feel more accountable to stay sober. Sometimes the thought of announcing to a group, "I'm Elyah, and I'm a sexaholic. I've been sober for one day," when I had previously been sober for a good number of months, has kept me sober.

I think there's a lot of discussion on this forum about not getting caught up in counting days. I think, without counting days, there's really no way to tell how you're really doing. True, quality is what counts. But, I think if a person has trouble adding up quantity sobriety, it's a good indication that there probably isn't really any quality sobriety either.

Keep track of the days, but don't obsess about it. Don't think that just because you've broken your record you've made it to safety. Don't think that just because you passed the magic 90-day mark that you're cured (I have now made it beyond 90-days for my third time).

If you're having trouble, don't think one more day of sobriety will solve all your addiction problems. You've got to dig deeper than that, and you've got to pull out as many tools as you can to keep your sobriety. There's a lot more to do for the sake of recovery than just to strengthen your resolve to stay clean for one more day.

And, I have heard people lamenting the fact that they fell after X amount of clean days, and they'll never regain what they had. Such as, "I was clean for six months and then I fell, and it took me five years to get back to the same place." Perhaps I exagerate about that a little. The way I see it, however, is that I used to fall a couple of times a week. I was taking a high enough dose of recovery to stay clean for a few months. I definitely gained something. However, it wasn't enough. So, after a fall, I increase the dose and move forward. I didn't lose the tools I had gained; I just needed to add to them.

--Elyah

Re: Additional tools for recovery 23 May 2012 04:39 #138082

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153:
I agree with every word. 15 days on the Chart for the umpteenth time. 425 days sober.
The Blind Beggar is a character in Rebbe Nachman's story of the Seven Beggars.
If I view a woman as an object, I am powerless over lust, but I don't have to look.
I can guard my eyes.
I want to guard my eyes.
I do guard my eyes.
Why do I say these four lines?

Re: Additional tools for recovery 23 May 2012 16:47 #138131

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154. Quit preaching - tell them about the illness.

Here's what I had in my notes on this one:

Simply put: We have an on-switch in our brains for lust, and it works well. We also have an off-switch for lust, but it's broken.

A CT scan of someone watching porn looks the same as a CT scan of a crack cocaine user.

A little bit of lust creates a craving for more and more, until we act out.

The only solution is not to lust.

I'll add: Bill W. started off trying to help other alcoholics by telling them about his spiritual experience, and that had very little effect (the only one it helped was himself). It wasn't until he started sharing the exact nature of this malady, and his own story of being powerless over alcohol, that he started to keep other alcoholics sober, too.

--Elyah

Re: Additional tools for recovery 24 May 2012 11:33 #138224

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155. Find your own Dr. Bob.

In other words, in case you're not familiar with AA history, you need somone you can share deeply with. It's nice to have a list of phone numbers and to be able to reach someone when you're suffering from a lust attack or just to say hello. But, besides a bunch of new acquantances, you should also look for someone in whom you can share and confide on a deeper and more personal level.

--Elyah

Re: Additional tools for recovery 25 May 2012 06:38 #138316

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156. Laugh.

Sobriety, and life, is supposed to be positive and enjoyable. Although it is necessary to be aware of our problem (or, problems), it is not healthy to obsess about it. One should reflect upon it at certain times throughout the day, but most of the time we should be focusing on, and living in the solution.

Even when we think about our problems, we should not be wallowing in self-pity. Rather, the main focus should be--what positive actions can I take to move forward?

Make an effort to do those healthy activities in life that bring you enjoyment.

Also, here's an abridged version of the Serenity Prayer I saw in a list of AA Slogans: "Lighten up!"

--Elyah

Re: Additional tools for recovery 28 May 2012 19:48 #138369

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Time for yet another summary:

Carrying the Message
151. Call two newcomers every day
152. Share your experience, strength, and hope
153. Give your sobriety date
154. Quit preaching - tell them about the illness
155. Find your own Dr. Bob
156. Laugh

Re: Additional tools for recovery 28 May 2012 19:54 #138370

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So far, that was the end of the official list I received at the Additional Tools for Recovery Workshop.

Finished, but not complete.

I have a few more I wanted to add (and one I forgot, too).

MISCELLANEOUS

157. 12 Steps to Insanity

Sometimes, the best way to appreciate sobriety and recovery is to consider what the opposite looks like. Here is a piece called "12 Steps to Insanity":

12 STEPS TO INSANITY

1. We admitted we were powerless over nothing - that we could manage our lives perfectly. We could also perfectly manage the lives of those around us.

2. Came to believe that there was no power greater than ourselves and that the rest of the world was insane.

3. Made a decision to have our loved ones turn their wills and lives over to our care even though they couldn't understand us at all.

4. Made a searching and fearless inventory of everyone we knew.

5. Admitted to the whole world the exact nature of everyone else's wrongs.

6. Were entirely ready to make others give us the respect we thought we deserved.

7. Demanded that others do our will because we were always enlightened.

8. Made a list of all the persons who had harmed us and became willing to go to any length to get even with them all.

9. Got direct revenge on such people wherever possible except when to do so would cost us our lives or at least a jail sentence.

10. Continued to take inventory of others, and when they were wrong promptly and repeatedly told them about it.

11. Sought through complaining and self-medication to improve our relations with others as we could not understand them at all, asking only that they do things our way.

12. Having had a complete physical, emotional, and spiritual breakdown as a result of these steps, we tried to blame others and get sympathy in all our affairs.

--Elyah

Re: Additional tools for recovery 28 May 2012 21:03 #138373

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R' Elya, profound. Thanks.

Re: Additional tools for recovery 29 May 2012 13:06 #138393

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158. The pre-recovery promises

In the same spirit of the previous tool, here's a piece called, "Pre-recovery Promises." It is adapted from part of the Big Book where some the promises of recovery are written:

PRE-RECOVERY PROMISES

If we are lackadaisical about this phase of our development, we will be amazed before we even get started. We are going to know new anger and a new sense of despair. We will not recognize the future nor wish to open the door on it. We will comprehend the word hopeless. We will know discouragement. No matter how far up or down the scale we have gone, we will see how our experiences will be an obstacle to others. That feeling of usefulness and self-worth will disappear. We will lose interest in selfless things and gain interest in ourselves. Self-denial will slip away. Our whole attitude and outlook, full of despair, will remain the same. We will be unable to handle situations which we used to think we were in control of. We suddenly realized that we were doing for ourselves the things G-d would not do for us. Are these actually real promises? We think so. Unfortunately they are being fulfilled among us, often slowly, often quickly. They will always happen to us if we allow them.

--Elyah

Re: Additional tools for recovery 30 May 2012 12:29 #138516

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Eye.nonymous wrote on 28 May 2012 19:54:


12 STEPS TO INSANITY

1. We admitted we were powerless over nothing - that we could manage our lives perfectly. We could also perfectly manage the lives of those around us.

2. Came to believe that there was no power greater than ourselves and that the rest of the world was insane.

3. Made a decision to have our loved ones turn their wills and lives over to our care even though they couldn't understand us at all.

4. Made a searching and fearless inventory of everyone we knew.

5. Admitted to the whole world the exact nature of everyone else's wrongs.

6. Were entirely ready to make others give us the respect we thought we deserved.

7. Demanded that others do our will because we were always enlightened.

8. Made a list of all the persons who had harmed us and became willing to go to any length to get even with them all.

9. Got direct revenge on such people wherever possible except when to do so would cost us our lives or at least a jail sentence.

10. Continued to take inventory of others, and when they were wrong promptly and repeatedly told them about it.

11. Sought through complaining and self-medication to improve our relations with others as we could not understand them at all, asking only that they do things our way.

12. Having had a complete physical, emotional, and spiritual breakdown as a result of these steps, we tried to blame others and get sympathy in all our affairs.

--Elyah

YEAH!!!
?דער באשעפער לאווט מיך אייביג. וויפיל לאוו איך עהם
My Creator loves me at all times. How great is my love for him?

Re: Additional tools for recovery 30 May 2012 13:59 #138519

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159. Hang out with your own gender

This was actually in the original list under "friendships," and I can't believe I somehow skipped it.

This has many applications.

I hear a common addict rationalization (and, indeed, I have used it myself), IT WOULD BE SUCH A BIG KIDDISH HASHEM if I, a frum (and recovering!) yid, would mingle a little bit here and just say how wonderfully I am doing and even just show everyone (especially the females) that frum (and recovering!) yidden can socialize just fine just like any normal person.

Well, here's a litmus test. How strong is that same desire to be a Kiddush Hashem by socializing with other males? The thought has probably never crossed your mind.

So, whether it's the opposite gender in recovery (note the GYE mechitza), at work, on the street, in the classroom, in your old E-mail contacts, "friends" on facebook (if you haven't deleted your account yet), etc., or hosting seminary students and being such a good example for 'kiruv purposes' (that was my favorite one when I saw someone do it), STICK TO YOUR OWN GENDER!

--Elyah

Re: Additional tools for recovery 31 May 2012 12:25 #138558

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160. Write yourself a letter (and a reply)

I have used this tool in extreme emergency situations when I really needed to reach someone but was unable to do so. I wrote a letter as to what was bothering me and how I was feeling, and then I stopped and read the letter as if someone else had written it to me. Then I wrote a response as if I were writing to someone else.

If possible, it's better to deal with real people, as this tool runs the risk of staying stuck in your own head (which is part of the problem). Nevertheless, I have found it to be very helpful in case of emergency.

--Elyah



Re: Additional tools for recovery 01 Jun 2012 06:14 #138634

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161. Slogans of Recovery

At times when I least feel like reading recovery literature (in the mood for lighter reading), but I know I need to, I pull out a huge list of AA Slogans and just browse through them. I posted a whole bunch of them on this thread a long time ago:

400 AA Slogans (also applicable to GYE)

--Elyah


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