committed_togrowth wrote on 21 Dec 2022 07:27:
Had some pretty interesting reflections today. I found myself towards the end of the day in a state of nisayon. The causes to me were clear, it was the effect of external circumstances that were significantly depressing me and draining me. On the drive home from work I was mentally flipping through possible ways that I may be able to tune out of these negative feelings. Maybe drink some alcohol. Maybe look at something inappropriate. Maybe listen to something inappropriate. I turned on the radio and found a station playing rap music. I thought I might empty my emotions into whatever kind of music was playing, but within seconds I turned it off. It just wasn't me. The total lack of resonance brought me to reflecting on my identity.
I realize that I have a foot in two worlds. One is the world of my pre-religious life. In times of loneliness and weakness I hearken back to memories of old girlfriends and friends that validated me and made me feel seen at different parts of my life. Memories of the partying, the wildness and ego, drawing on vain values to create a sense of self-worth. I miss the comfort that that world had and some of the people, and in my heart I know I can't and will not go back to that period. Dwelling on it is a sort of misdirected nostalgia. The other foot in in the world of avodas Hashem. My goals in learning. My davening. Visions and dreams of the type of family I want to raise, what kind of person I want to be. Standing between these two worlds I find myself feeling deprived of a past world I can never re-enter and yet unable to dive into the next one. I realize I have stranded myself in the middle, neither here nor there.
There is a truth to who I am, and it does not exist in this no man's land. The problem is, I don't understand who that true self is. I am disconnected from it. It's a weird feeling, but lately I have been switching to a third party view of myself in any given moment and wondering who this person really is. I am trying to connect this person back to how I felt what I was five, or when I was twelve, times when I felt a more true and salient identity and I marvel at the gap between myself now and who I was then. And, this lack of self-understanding leaves me without the tools I need to align myself and draw satisfaction from my life. When I look at my daily external actions, what I pour my life energy into, it looks like I am trying with all my might to enter the world of avodas Hashem. All I do right now is work and learn, I fight so hard for learning opportunities, I toil in learning Hebrew and Aramaic, I am desperate to be able to learn a blatt gemara. I try my best to daven with a minyan whenver possible, and I am doing everything I can to make it to yeshivah, start dating, and G-d willing start a family. But, there is a gap between the external way in which I invest my energy, and my internal feeling of connection to that mission. I wonder if this is a normal part of growth, that the external manifestation of my desire is coming from a deep place, but my everyday internal world has not yet caught up. I still want the old world and often do not draw nourishment from the new one, so I look to the place where I can find grounding and nourishment in my solitude and existential ambiguity, which is pornography, which is in truth poison. I have not thought about my struggle with kedusha in this perspective before, but I think this gap between my internal and external mode of operation, and the transitional point at which my identity currently sits are a fundamental cause of my difficulties. Not sure if this will be intelligible to anyone, but thank you for reading regardless. And by the way in case you saw my last post on this thread, that situation was resolved, and so I deleted the post.
Wow. Just wow. As a late Baal Teshuvah there is so much I want to say to you and ask you…this is a similar feeling to me, having lived for more than 50 years in the party world and now living in Hashem’s world. I need to gather my thoughts. Thanks for this truly amazing post and the opportunity it just gave me to address my similar issues. What a bracha that you wrote this.