***COMMENT: This whole next paragraph is a key one. Besides that, on a technical note--when there's an important sentence (or paragraph) already underlined and a word within that sentence (or paragraph) is especially important, I'll write it in all caps. You may have noticed this above. ***
Men and women [turn to pornography and masturbation] essentially because they like the effect produced by [it]. The sensation is so elusive that, while they admit it is injurious, THEY CANNOT AFTER A TIME DIFFERENTIATE THE TRUE FROM THE FALSE. To them, their [sexaholic] life seems the only normal one. They are RESTLESS, IRRITABLE and DISCONTENTED, unless they can again experience the sense of ease and comfort which comes at once by taking a few [glances]—[glances] which they see others taking with impunity. After they have succumbed to the desire again, as so many do, and the phenomenon of craving develops, they pass through the WELL-KNOWN STAGES OF A SPREE, emerging REMORSEFUL, with a firm RESOLUTION not to drink again. This is repeated over and over, and unless this person can experience an entire psychic change there is very little hope of his recovery.
***COMMENT: It's time for the red onion, green onion analogy:
What's the difference between a red onion and a green onion? Just the outer skin; if you peel off the outer layer, they're both white underneath. The same is true about addicts. Some people turn to sex, some to alcohol, drugs, chocolate cake, overtime, gambling, or just plain Web surfing. It's all just the outer layer, a superficial difference--the specific addiction is really just a symptom. If you peel off the outer layer, beneath it you'll find Restlessness, Irritability, and Discontent--the famous RID.
So far, does this resonate with you at all?
This RID is what fuels the addiction, no matter what the addiction. (And this is why the same program that helps alcoholics has also been so successful in treating so many other addictions). The addiction itself is really just a pain-killer; it makes us feel good (acting out actually hasn't been our problem, it has been our solution.)
What lies beneath the RID? Our EGO--we expect everything and everyone to meet our expectations and to act according to our wishes and our plans. But they don't. So when our ego comes into conflict with the world, the result is RID.
Do you ever feel this in your life?
Beneath our ego, however, is yet another layer. It's our true, G-dly selves. It's that part of us deep inside that wants to be accepting, loving, giving, and forgiving. It's that part of us that yearns to be helpful--to give rather than to take. We all have such a deep and lofty core and we have tapped into it in our lives, sometime more so and sometimes less so.
Can you remember such moments?
This program will give us tools to peel aware the outer layers and to activate this part of ourselves more regularly. ***
***ANOTHER COMMENT: The above paragraph described the stages of addiction, a vicious cycle:
1. Spree
2. Remorse
3. Resolution
Do you identify with this?
One problem here is the "resolution." We make a resolution--we promise ourselves never to act out ever again, but we don't actually change our actions--we don’t actually do anything differently. So the cycle keeps repeating itself. ***