in_ardua_tendit wrote on 08 Mar 2021 17:38:
Still, though, my addiction has control of me. I take action, even, to get around my phone filter. I don't apply the tools that I know could help me to overcome an urge. I didn't get out of bed until 10:30 this morning because of this. I feel like garbage, although it's not all so bad - I had coffee, and water, and breakfast, and I would still like to get some things done today.
This attitude is fraught with danger. Rabbeinu Yonah writes that the prerequisite to avodas Hashem is for a person to be aware of his own chashivus. Otherwise, if a person views himself as a piece of garbage, then there would be nothing holding him back from indulging in his bad desires; why should he put forth effort to fix himself if he feels he’s not worth anything?
No one ever conquered a nisayon overnight; it’s a process of falling and rising multiple times. In a famous letter, Rav Hutner writes to a person who was struggling with difficult nisyonos, that we are under the mistaken impression that Gedolim were born great. Quite the contrary-- what made them great was their nisyonos.
Hashem understands the great challenge of self-control. He relates to you on an individual level and realizes how hard it is to win this battle. He knows the emotions you experience when you want to give in to your desires. He feels your pain when you sway back and forth and are torn over what to do. Since He created the challenge and put it in the world, surely He understands better than anyone else how difficult it is to overcome.
By realizing Hashem’s unconditional love for us, we can experience the most comforting feeling in existence. Regardless of how far we have fallen, Hashem still loves us and cares about us. He loves us and values us unconditionally because we are His creations!