hoping wrote on 21 Aug 2009 03:57:
It should be easy for me to realize how I am helpless without Him, yet I still spend much of my day acting like I am in control.
How can I feel that there is any honesty in my surrendering myself to Hashem when I cannot even get myself to daven to Him like I should :'(.
Dear Hoping,
Yeah, but:
1- We are sober 2day and that's enough reason 2 dance, no matter how bad everything else is going, period.
1a- It is absolutely
fantastic that you are sharing this rather than just brooding over it - yow! (What were you doing a year or two ago?) I wish
I shared
more than I do - living would be even easier than it is!
2- W/all very due respect to the hopingmeister (sorry), i'll remind you that while you (and I) have been spending the past 20, 30, whatever, years - y e a r s - practicing being focused on how well everybody else (including Hashem) is doing taking care of our needs - so much so that when we feel they are not doing a terriffic enough job of it we self-medicated by using lust and fantasy, etc to fill in the gaps...why do we expect real improvement on a deep level after a relatively short time? No guilt here, no blame here, at all. Only room for love here. But may Hashem help us both look at things w/more realism and acceptance...real improvement does take real time - and it is worth every minute. As Will posted well below, you
are in this for the "long haul".
So...i'll review some quotes:
"it should be easy" - maybe it's not so easy after all...and that's OK.
"any honesty in my surrenderring when..." - let's take it
easy here, shall we, brother in recovery...you obviously have
some honesty!
"
get myself to daven to Him
like I should" - how do
you/we know how Hashem wants you/us to daven to Him today? Maybe He "desires" the quiet pain of a davening that "seems it isn't what it should be" - our success in gadlus is empowered by our struggle in katnus. Besides, "get myself to..." reminds me of the times where I felt I should have the power to decree my moods and abilities. Those days are over - I need to remember (see R/TzviMeyer) that much of our abilities and moods are min hashamayim. Actually, the source of self-blaming for stinky moods and for lack of success in aliyah actually stems from ga'avah (and that's a
big "program-yesod" I was struck with early-on, BH! - the great sefer "chovas hatalmidim" (in english now, FYI) deals with this quite a bit from a chassidish/chinuch perspective).
3 - Many folks in recovery - particularly frummies like us - report that they feel as though they are going through a davening and avodah "dry period" in early recovery. For me it lasted nearly three years. Am I trying to scare you away? No...but it took me a long time to learn to have patience with myself, humility enough to accept my limitations, and maturity enough to start taking the more responsible
small steps, rather than beating myself over the head with only the
big steps!
So - read Battleworn's "The Torah Approach" and other material and you'll see that when we talk about "recovery", we really mean big, deep and real changes in how we live with emunah and stuff like that. If we had any "fakerai" (is that
real yiddish?)
at all in our davening and avodah
before recovery, I believe we can (and
should) expect a rather severe, visceral, automatic aversion to fakerai, in recovery. Particularly if there is fakerai in the
core recovery tool: davening and avodah. Everyone has some dishonesty, fakerai, if you will, but as recovering addicts we just can't tolerate it very well. B"H for that. There
are specific aitzos to improve davening. But that's not the point, really. For me, the ikkar is to stay in sobriety no matter what and to pour our hearts out to Hashem in whatever way we can, as often as we can. The real improvement in the davening and avodah happens mimeilah, in my experience. Just don't make the mistake of dropping tefillos, if you can, nor of despairing, c"v.
"Hoping" this was helpful, and - easy does it.
Love,
Dov