Dear Strugglingguy,
Not to discourage you from your good work in any way, but I feel there is something I need to say. This board and the entire idea of the group, is to foster recovery through direct working of the program. To me, that means, as I have tried to make clear in the calls and everywhere else, writing and spending time just about every day with written or other concrete work on the step one is up to at that time, and progressing from step to step. It's not really much of an investment, actually, and almost never actually takes up as much time as we'd otherwise be wasting screwing up. Really.
In addition, I have tried to make it clear that working the program this way requires another ingredient for success. Namely, being sober one day at a time. If I act out, I remove my
need for salvation. I do not need the steps - in other words,
I do not really need G-d, yet. If I have my drug, I don't really have what I truly consider a
problem because when the going gets tough, I can always just take off my pants. That is the way it is for me, at least.
I struggled with going in circles for years and only needed to do this when the results of my messing up got to the point that I had enough, for real. So I bear no derision for anyone who has not really suffered much at the hands of their own acting out yet...that was me for many spiritual, innocent, and painful years.
So, this is the intro for my response to your previous post describing what you have done numerous times as seeming to be like the steps.
StrugglingGuy wrote on 27 Sep 2010 15:42:
Chevra and Dov-
Not to sound like I am smarter than the system or the expert on the 12 steps, but when looking at the 12, it seems to me that I have done many of the steps (esp. on Yom Kippur) - I have met with a counselor and admitted everything I do, I ask Hashem over and over to remove my lust because without Him, I am done.
So what does it mean that working the 12 steps takes time? Do you mean hashkafically that (there is an inyan that) Hashem wants us to daven for this OVER AND OVER? I get I understand that the whole thing is a process but dont we already do all these things in shmona esray?
[Not to get away from the theme of this forum but I have been struggling very recently]
Again I am trying to learn, not be skeptical...
Very nicely said, and all I can really say is that no, this is
not what 'working the steps' means to me. We have
all done stuff like you describe before many times with no real change in our lives - so how
could it be anything like the big deal all those addicts make about the steps?
No. The thing all the 12-step-recovering addicts in the world are making such a big deal about, is different. It is different
because it is
different! All those times we have done the steps and ended up exactly where we were before,
we did it by ourselves. It was out own brains that were working it all out. A blind man leading himself. Now that's really nuts, no? We hid the full truth about ourselves - in order to get better...? Not going to work. And when we did tell it to others, it wasn't to other people who were
real to us. It was usually to someone we really had nothing to do with in the
rest of our real lives. Who didn't know the face we were projecting - so they wouldn't really be able to really see what big fakers we were. Hey, it's embarrassing! And if we
did open up to someone who knew the 'normal' version of us, then it was usually a person who had
no clue about addiction, lust struggles, insanity, whatever.
My version of recovery - what
I needed - was (and is) to get together with other men who think, tell, live, and know the exact same lies
I do, want the exact same things that
I want, who see me with my stupid, trance-like, salivating expression that I get while I stare at the computer searching in true desperation for that perfect, sweet, image that I
need - cuz they know it themselves. I get together with men like that, who are crawling out from under their own wreckage with no pride at all, and let them hug me. Goyim, Jews, whatever. I get to know these men and get together with them weekly and share myself, make relationships with them, and we get to know each other. We get better together, while we watch many of our number fall to the wayside. Nu. Better them than us....
So where I come from, the 1st step is done in our hearts, of course, but in order to have a better chance to actually believe it, we write out as much as we can remember of what we have done that got us into some trouble as a result of lust compulsion and desire throughout our lives. Then we review it with a sponsor and then we share the entire thing with a group of other addicts - the guys who really understand us. They may still be sick, but they are in recovery and understand us, and that's priceless. On the other hand, advice to a struggling lust addict that is not based on personal pain and success, but based on a mussar sefer or a shmooze is often dramatic and beautiful but totally useless, it seems to me. We need to do the work
ourselves if it is to be real enough to actually
work. I have never yet met a single person who actually got sober from 'inspiration'.
Second step - real writing and real work - not just thinking in generalities. Same for each of the other steps. We get mushy and generalize the ideas, watering them down into the same useless mush we have always watered Torah ideas down to - and that's why they do not lead to change. That's gotta stop. Writing it for ourselves - not to impress anyone else - and sharing with others, is the only way i know to make it real.
Love you and miss you!
- Dov