Boruch Hashem, I am now 554 days clean.
Interestingly, my wife went to Mikva a few days ago, and we were together for the first time in 23 days (but who's counting!
). Since then, things have been much more difficult for me than during the previous 23 days. I know this is a not uncommon phenomenon, but go figure!
Although Google is on "safe search" and K9 is on a very strong setting, today something came up in a Google search that I was tempted to click on (I really shouldn't have done that search to begin with, but that's another story). Not wanting to throw 554 days of sobriety out the window, I thought that maybe I could click on it, quickly covering the screen before it came up, just to satisfy my curiosity as to whether or not K9 would block it.
Realizing that I was treading on very thin ice, I held myself back, and called my wife to put in the K9 password. I then added the site in question to the blocked sites list, so, even if K9 previously would have allowed that site (b'Ezras Hashem, I'll never know), it won't allow it now. I also specifically blocked one of the words that had been used in that Google search, so I won't be able to do that particular search again.
Normally, when I ask my wife to put in the password to allow me to quickly modify the settings (usually to strengthen them, but occasionally to fix the settings in a way that legitimate sites don’t get blocked), she does so without asking any questions. In this case, though, for reasons that are too complicated to go into, my wife wanted to know which site I chose to block. I told her that I don’t think that’s fair, in light of the fact that I controlled myself and didn’t even attempt to go to the site. Then I had to go out to Mincha, so that ended the conversation. If she still wants to know, maybe I’ll say “You know very well what kind of things cause me temptation – does it matter which particular site out of thousands it was?”
I realize, of course, that filters alone, or together with monitoring software (I have both), are not the total answer, but, man, would I be toast without them!