Wanted to share some reflections here. These past few weeks have BH been quite a time of renewal for me. I know most of what we talk about here is our struggles with porn and masturbation, but I recently made a choice that I believe is strongly related to this issue. Recently, I decided to stop drinking alcohol. My drinking habit has been a large source of stress and anxiety for me for a long time. It was something I had spoken to my family, to my rebbeim, and to my therapist on multiple occasions. Funnily enough the answer I got from each source was very similar. That my level of drinking was "normal" and within the recommended range for adult men. That as long as I was doing it in the evening really it was fine. That the fact that I could "control" my drinking meant I did not have a problem. But, it was the very fact that I
had to control my drinking that produced such strong feelings of stress and anxiety. Controlling it really meant that I was always subconsciously wrestling down an inclination to drug myself with a depressant chemical. As I came around to making my decision to stop, many of the reasons I rationalized to myself on why I drank fell away. That I like the taste, that it relieves my stress, that it's fun etc. The simple fact was, I wanted to numb myself and experience my life less.
So much of my attention has been put towards working on P&M that it is surprising to me that of these two habits, drinking is the one I have dropped first. It wasn't a shift that I was expecting or even one that I thought was possible. The sheer magnitude of my stress had made even thinking about not drinking just about impossible. I want to share a beautiful drasha on the month of Elul that I heard recently which has really helped this shift. The Arizal explains that the passuk discussing arei miklat "אִנָּ֣ה לְיָד֑וֹ וְשַׂמְתִּ֤י לְךָ֙" contains the roshei teivos for Elul. As I heard it explained, it is noteworthy that this is actually the only explicit reference to Elul brought by the Arizal, although of course the Torah is replete with hints to Elul. Much of our usual thinking about Elul is a time of pressure. With Tishrei around the corner, there is a huge inspiration, but also a huge pressure to improve ourselves. This pressure can cause us to overlook perhaps the central aspect of Elul, which is that it is a time of refuge. When someone must flee to a city of refuge and makes it, there is a sense of relief he has in getting there and knowing he is safe. This is a feeling we should have when we enter Elul. We have made it through the year. It is a time to just be where we are and connect with Hashem.
When I look back on the past year in a holistic sense, I actually am amazed by how much I was able to get done in the various spheres of my life BH. And yet, those strivings came with a cost. I became a less healthy person. I became someone who was frantic and anxious, someone who was occasionally and unfortunately too often embittered. I arrived at the gates of this Elul in a heap. I was too tired to keep all of the different plates spinning. So tired that really the only thing I could do was give up in a certain sense on forcibly constructing the life I thought I need to be living and to just ask Hashem to teach me how to live because I honestly do not know how. If you were to ask me six months ago what I thought my Elul would look like, I would probably given a perfectionist vision of me exerting myself in all areas of ruchnius, studying morning and night around a full time work schedule, davening with perfect kavanah etc. Instead, what I have experienced is a clarity on how to live firmly within my limits. A clarity on how much healing I need in my mind soul and body, and enough headspace to actually take steps towards that. It has become clear to me that I have been ill, and for a long time I was so scared of being ill that I only wanted to run away from it instead of getting better. BH I finally want to get better. It seems so obvious that if you are in pain or sick the thing to do is to identify and remove the cause! And yet for so long I haven't even tried to figure out what the causes are or admit that I was unwell, perhaps because I thought it was impossible to get better. It became obvious to me in this reflection that I no longer want to drug myself with alcohol. I no longer want to be so strung out. All I want to do is that which I am capable of doing, and to live in a relationship with Hashem. I thank Hashem for providing me with this month of refuge to heal. I think perhaps the highest form of "shteiging" and the best preparation for Tishrei I can do right now is to become healthy. The simcha and sense of I relieve I feel when I think about the path of recovery I have started is something I have not felt in years. We should all merit to become healthier and more whole people this Elul and move into Tishrei with a renewed sense of self. Thank you for reading if you made it through this whole thing