hoping wrote on 14 Aug 2009 05:35:
I must say that I have not spent much time over the past days thinking actively about my addiction....Once I started focusing on this, I was shocked to realize how little I do that is not self-centered. I am truly embarassed with myself.
Three points of feedback that may make this climb easier for you, Hoping:
First, let's all recognize that what you are doing is so beyond tremendous. This is Torah
in action. This is what they mean when they say "lo hamedrash ha'ikkar, ella hama'aseh". Addicts, in particular, can learn tons of Torah (and what seems like real mussar) about chesed (means
mashpiya), ratzon Hashem (rather than
mine), and shiflus (my will, kovod, comfort, just isn't as
important as my gut
tells me it is) and still we can be amazed at the awareness we get about ourselves and the change we see in ourselves over time from simply putting it into
action. This is making it
real to us and a good thing to be mechavein when we say "ki heim
chayeynu ve'orech yameinu".
Second, these changes take lots of time, cause they are
real changes. And that makes them very precious, so it's worth the wait.
Finally, the initial self-recognition I have when doing this kind of "work", can be negative, as you describe. But it seems you were not fooled. You recognized "how little you do that is not self-centered",
not that you a truly selfish
person. It's natural to be self-centered, especially after years of pleasing ourselves with lust and mas++ - but now
you are going
up the ladder. Your
direction is toward giving.
That makes all the difference, really. When chazal say that it was as though klal yisroel brought the korban pesach on the
10th when they just went to
collect the animals(Rashi there), they mean just this, I think.
In this respect, the direction you take defines you much more than where you are coming from does. So, again, for me to worry at all about how selfish and self-centered I am is just another way to comfortably slip back into my selfish and sel-centered thinking. Yow! How tricky. But this is what makes real life so interesting
.
a really refreshing activity
oh, yezz!
The one thing that I grapple with is the conention that I should not Daven for myself. I understand that it promotes a self-centered attitude, but I really do need Hashem and I feel the need to ask Him for my needs. How do I rely on Hashem without asking for His help? If someone can explain this I would be truly grateful.
This is a langeh arichus (my middle name, perhaps!). But here goes, be"H:
It's not that the etzem
davening for myself is bad for me, but that it is an exercise of the wrong muscle. it is still a good thing, just not what I really need most. I need to be outward focused. As Reb Yaakov wrote, it needs to be tempered in a realistic way. Practically speaking, this attitude explaines a chazal that is, I believe, addressing the basic outward tefillah attitude, but of course, for
average people (I tweak these things for an addict like me and need a lot of syata dishmaya to do that!): We all know "One who davens for his friend (first), will be answered
first." What does Hashem want from us? To daven for our friends first so that we are answered ealier? To "use" our friends' tzores for quicker service? That can't be what is going on here. It seems to me that they are just telling us like it is. People, even really great people, tend to be rather selfishly motivated. It is even OK sometimes, as was said above: "Chayecha kodmin". For an addict, though, this is
not so simple. Per all tikkun hamiddos hadracha in the seforim, we need to go a bit toward the self-
less extreme in order to get better. I feel this is obvious, though admit it's difficult to apply. Chazal are showing us that Hashem wants us to
use our very selfishness to work on our selfishness! It's actually genius. It's the way to start. The next "stage" is truly being focused on my fellows' needs, and "if I'm answered first, so be it, that's
Hashem's business, not mine".
As far as
not asking Hashem for my needs at all, well, I admit it's rather extreme. I ask Hashem for my needs all the time, but I ask Him for them so I can be a better father, husband, yid for him, to help others, not make a chillul Shemo c"v, etc. But the key is to really try and be honest about it. If we can't ask for our needs for these
reasons, the honest thing to do (which is really just as good,
I think) is to ask for our needs and ask hashem to help us
want to ask for them for a
giving goal, one day. Nu. It's the direction you are going that matters most, not where you are nor where you are coming from....
And you are obviously going UP!