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TOPIC: Hello, I'm new. 2141 Views

Re: Hello, I'm new. 28 Dec 2009 18:39 #39085

  • Kollel Guy
Someone wrote something on the subject in a different thread. I wrote there that it was the scariest thing I ever heard.
I officially changed my mind.
This is.
This is beyond insane!
You mean to tell me that even after all the work and struggling to escape this hell it can just fester and build up inside, and then one day when your 70 just randomly blow up like the Chernobyl nuclear plant???!!!
I'm sorry, but I refuse to believe this one.
No way man.
Not me.
Not this lifetime.
I got enough to deal with as it is.
If you guys want, YOU can do the festering thing, all by yourselves.
And if these are the facts - do me a favor and don't enlighten me.
I'd rather live a lie.
Last Edit: by olyjay.

Re: Hello, I'm new. 28 Dec 2009 20:12 #39117

  • sci1977
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Welcome to the forum.  Everyone here will make sure you are notalone.
Good luck and put it all in G-d's hands. 
Last Edit: by yankybp.

Re: Hello, I'm new. 28 Dec 2009 20:21 #39120

  • kedusha
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Kollel Guy wrote on 28 Dec 2009 18:39:

Someone wrote something on the subject in a different thread. I wrote there that it was the scariest thing I ever heard.
I officially changed my mind.
This is.
This is beyond insane!
You mean to tell me that even after all the work and struggling to escape this hell it can just fester and build up inside, and then one day when your 70 just randomly blow up like the Chernobyl nuclear plant???!!!
I'm sorry, but I refuse to believe this one.
No way man.
Not me.
Not this lifetime.
I got enough to deal with as it is.
If you guys want, YOU can do the festering thing, all by yourselves.
And if these are the facts - do me a favor and don't enlighten me.
I'd rather live a lie.


I'm with you, KG.  This goes against what Duvid Chaim has told us about living the 12 steps.
Just as an alcoholic needs to avoid that first sip, a lust addict needs to avoid that first slip.Slip today? No way! ;)Fall today? No way, Jose'!
Last Edit: by blahblah123.

Re: Hello, I'm new. 28 Dec 2009 20:27 #39121

  • bardichev
kg

chillax

sorry for being so blunt

FIRST GET TO 70..THEN WE WILL TALK!!
Last Edit: by bdo894.

Re: Hello, I'm new. 28 Dec 2009 20:40 #39128

  • Kollel Guy
Bards has a good point - again.
I still stand by my rant though.
Last Edit: by gye21b.

Re: Hello, I'm new. 29 Dec 2009 00:31 #39252

  • the.guard
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As far as what Yosef wrote about it getting worse, I want to clarify what he means. This is something Dov explained to me once. It's not that it gets worse, just we get much more SENSITIVE as we recover. While we were in active addiction, only the hard-core stuff would turn us on, but as we recover, even a billboard or a silly picture of a face can make us go to pieces.... This is a sign of recovery, and is very understandable. Since we are addicts, we will always be affected by triggers, and the more we recover, the less it takes to get us nuts. This is actually a Bracha from Hashem in disguise, because it forces us, as we make more and more progress, to cut down our access to stimulation more and more. For example, while we may have been able to watch movies when we began to recover, we will find that as we get more sober and put more distance between us and the addiction, we can't even watch innocent movies... The slightest thing can trigger us and send us into a deep spiral. The up-side to all this, is that we slowly become holier people, more and more cut off from lust. We really have no choice if we want to stay sober - and alive!  :-\
Webmaster of www.guardyoureyes.org - Maintaining Moral Purity in Today's World. We’re here on a quest ; it’s really all a test. Just do your best and G-d will do the rest.
Last Edit: by danielz.

Re: Hello, I'm new. 29 Dec 2009 00:33 #39253

  • the.guard
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To Yosef, I just want to offer some Chizuk on your recent fall:

One of the most meaningful things that we can take out of a fall (particularly after a long clean streak) besides for brushing up on our defenses and strengthening our barriers, is simply the humility that we get when we realize that in spite of how well we were doing, we were able to fall - just like that.

This humility renews our connection with Hashem. The more we feel how much we NEED Hashem's constant mercy and help each day, the more connected and dependant we are on Him. And this kesher is so precious to Hashem, that sometimes He brings a Tzadik to fall for that reason alone.

Similarly, we quoted Dov recently in a Chizuk e-mail:

I cannot accept that Hashem brought you through this problem just to get you out of it so you could just move on from here as though nothing happened. He could have protected you from getting into the problem in the first place, no? To quote Rav Noach Weinberg,"He found a way to get your attention", probably because he was missing you a whole lot. This IS your trip, not just an accident He "saved" you from.

And that is perhaps why Hashem sometimes brings us to fall, even when we are doing so well. Hashem gave us this disease because He wanted our attention. And like you said, maybe we start to get too complacent and self-confident after a while, and we begin to lose this precious kesher with Hashem... So He starts missing us again and wants to get our attention back - and BAM! - we fall and cry out to Him for help once again. After doing so well, we are shocked back into the reality of how dependant we really are on Him every moment. And this realization causes us to need Him more, which causes us to connect to Him on a deeper level.

And that is HUGE.

Keep up the great work!
Webmaster of www.guardyoureyes.org - Maintaining Moral Purity in Today's World. We’re here on a quest ; it’s really all a test. Just do your best and G-d will do the rest.
Last Edit: by cheesyfries.

Re: Hello, I'm new. 29 Dec 2009 05:39 #39282

  • Kollel Guy
guardureyes wrote on 29 Dec 2009 00:31:

The slightest thing can trigger us and send us into a deep spiral. The up-side to all this, is that we slowly become holier people, more and more cut off from lust.
R' Ychezkel Levenstien said that when he goes to Tel Aviv, even if it's in a cab with curtains covering the windows, it takes him 2 weeks of work to get back to normal.
The Gr"a said, that even hearing the sound of a ladies shoe would damage him.
Last Edit: by koko248.

Re: Hello, I'm new. 29 Dec 2009 21:31 #39675

  • Yosef
Dear Guard,

Thank you for your Chizuk on my recent fall. It certainly is humbling.

As to those who were in any way upset by the wording of my post - please accept my sincere apology. As it says in the Big Book, pg.103, "...we have stopped fighting anybody or anything. We have to!

Yosef
Last Edit: by progressivegiraffe51.

Re: hello, i'm new 29 Dec 2009 22:43 #39713

  • loi-misyaeish
Oh yeah, kolel guy. The sounds of horseshoes coming down the street has a big effect on me. Once i thought i heard a horse coming down the road, i just saw two un-tzniyusdik ladies walking in perfect rythm. The world's gone crazy today!!!
Last Edit: by cheerfullynx31.

Re: Hello, I'm new. 29 Dec 2009 23:15 #39742

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Wow! To share my guts once more on this: (no airbag needed)

"Kol hagodol meichaveiro - yitzro godol mimenu" has been darshened to pieces by everyone who asks, "does that mean that Rav ____, a gadol hador, is just platzing to watch far worse schmutz than any of us?! If that's what this gets me, who needs it?!" (to paraphrase KG)
And of course, it's absurd.
The poshut p'shat that sits best with me is that the Y"H of a gadol is "greater" in terms of it's currency - it's job is to distract him from his true avodas Hashem with a false (for him, or perhaps lesser) avodas Hashem. It plays to a higher standard. It's gotta be K'negdo.
Another simple way that resonates with me today though it's a bit drushy, is that if one thinks of himself as greater than his friend (shemachazik atzmo legodol meichaveiro) he will have a much more deadly YH. The self-adoration (or belief in the 'positive press' of others) will open him up to worse nisyonos and/or less siyata diShmaya in them, for he chooses a path from which recovery is possible only through humiliation. (B"H there is a way out for everyone! As for me, I hope I have been humiliated enough...but there's probably always room for more gayvo, like dessert, right?)

Now, I see the above chazal as all about the YH, and not necessarily about the chronic, progressive and fatal disease of addiction. But especially for those of you who see them as one and the same: why the hard time about the addiction actually progressing in some respect as we get better? Chazal tell us that our YH does, too!
Afraid? No need. We've got our Best Eternal Friend on our side 100%.

Per the first derech above, lust can dress itself in the garb of a greater respectability because we never did it to be bad in the first place! I accept that AA/12&12 are correct when they write that we are misguided in our pursuit of lust, sex, alcohol, heroin, the excitement of chronic gambling, crime, raging etc. It's a sickness and we are not evil because we are each ultimately looking for what Hashem, and Hashem alone, can provide us: Wholeness through connection to Him. And that goes for the 'lowest' prusteh goy addict, as well, for I've seen them get better, too.
Karl Jung - perhaps the true father of AA for he sent the first drunk on record (Roland) to find a spiritual answer for his alcoholism - wrote this exact idea to Bill W., years later.
 
L'havdil, the RMB"N and many others explain the cheit of odom haRishon as being so close to l'Sheim Shomayim that tzaddikim have said that for us it'd been an act with higher kavonoh l'Shem Shomayim than we will probably ever be able to acheive in this lifetime! Sounds to me like he did something that felt quite natural: self interest - but was dead wrong. It was destructive for him. Like us, when we act out on our lust.
But what do I know?
"Off the 18-wheeler and fine on this tricycle!", "I do not particularly care exactly which "lav" suicide is. I'm not interested in it for other reasons...and you are probably the same."
Last Edit: by freepanther01.

Re: Hello, I'm new. 29 Dec 2009 23:22 #39751

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YOU KNOW TONZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! And alot of what you said i wanted to say too. But of course my rebbi got there first.
Last Edit: by lookingupwards70.

Re: Hello, I'm new. 31 Dec 2009 03:31 #40313

  • Yosef

There are so many issues being raised here; I've needed some time to collect my thoughts before responding. Although I haven't yet told my story here, and I will - I think that I should leave that for another time. The point now is whether you want to think of sex addiction as Dov calls it, a "progressive" illness or as Guard calls it, an illness that renders us increasingly "sensitive" albeit vulnurable to sexual stimuli - the phenomena exists and needs to be dealt with. If I can't accept, as Dov says, that this is a progressive and (potentially) fatal disease, then what am I to think when saying: "G-d grant me the serenity to accept what I cannot change..."

Although I fell about a month ago it would be more accurate to say that I fell four months ago because thats when l started conveniently "misinterpreting" conversations that I was having with my sponsor. I ended up convincing myself that he was encouraging me to take a risk that I was in no way ready to take. By doing that, I re-opened what seemed like a tiny pesach and it was through that "tiny" hole that I ultimately fell into a drunken binge.


When I fell 36 days ago, it wasn't only that smaller amounts of the same stuff made me crazy, it was also that I thought nothing of venturing into far riskier territory - in fact I felt compelled to. Afterwards, I thought, "oh this is just me again...my unique craziness - until I shared my experience with other addicts who are clearly greater than I am in chochmah. Sharing at a face-to-face SA group and over the phone with people was tremendously comforting and healing for me. It wasn't scarry to have my experience validated and corroborated, on the contrary it was normalizing and reassuring. I need to know the reality of my illness, because that is my greatest protection against this happening again. My greatest weapon against a "nuclear meltdown" "at 70" is ACCEPTANCE and SURRENDER to the reality of my illness now - as opposed to denying it. My illness just gets fat on nutients like denial, rationalization, dishonestly, and self-will, anger and all my other defects.

The fall was B"H very good for me. I have had, as Guard and Dov both mentioned a re-connection with Hashem. But what I think is helping me even more right now (not wanting to sound irreligious) is a new appreciation for why people who have been sober much longer than myself are more frightened that I am to act out. I doubt that even people with alot of sobriety would have taken the risk that I did because they've already been through this learning experience and they understand the stakes better than I do. I guess Hashem knew that my bottom needed to be lowered a bit for me to take this more seriously.

Halavei, I should redo the sixth step where we ask ourselves if we are "entirely ready for Hashem to remove these defects of character". I certainly was not entirely ready, and I'm still not entirely ready - but I am more ready than before. I have the chance now for a more solid sobriety not just in days but in essence. I know a little better, hopefully what powerlessness really means. I have no weapons of my own to fight this. I can only merit to be mekabel the light of Chochmah and Sechal through restriction and contraction of my "intelligence, will, strength and power". The negation of these illusions are what gives me the Ultimate power. I"m only something when I realize that I'm nothing. Isn't that the good old Jewish way? Becharvi Ubekashti says Onkelos and Rashi don't mean with my sword and bow, they mean with Tefilla! The same idea is expressed in Telhillim: "For I trust not in my bow, nor shall my sword save me, but rather in those who praise the Lord all day long"

Thank you for letting me share

Yosef
A gratefully recovering sexaholic




Last Edit: by David65.

Re: Hello, I'm new. 31 Dec 2009 04:57 #40330

  • habaletaher
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Hi Reb Yosef,

I can't imagine the pain of falling after so long, and I respect you so much for getting back up here, and getting back on the road for recovery.

There is a gemara that I think gets to the root of your point with the Y"H getting stronger and stronger the longer you abstain. The gemara (End of Succah, and this is a paraphrase not verbatim) says that in the times of Mashiach, the Y"H will be slaughtered, and everyone will see it and cry. The tzadikim will see it as a huge mountain, and will cry in joy, wondering "How could have we conquered so high a mountain?" The reshaim will see it as a small piece of string and cry in shame and pain, saying "How could we not conquer such a tiny piece of string"

So which one is it? Is the YH a huge moutain or a tiny piece of string?

The answer is it depends on the person. If every time the YH puts out the smallest stumbling block, a little piece of string, the person falls, then the YH never needs to grow, never needs to become more challenging, more sophisticated. But if the person climbs over each stumbling block, the YH must get bigger, strong, taller, more tricky  to try to trap the tzaddik and eventually he becomes a huge mountain.

In this way, for the regular sex addict, all the YH needs to put out is a computer with no filter and bam! he ensnares him...

But the person who has been working on himself for a long time, can walk by one of those with ease, so the YH needs to be much trickier. He needs to be patient till that person is out of their daled amos, perhaps in a different city, perhaps jet lagged, perhaps feeling lonely etc.. and only then can the YH even try to get that person.

So the YH does grow as the person stays away more and more, but in a subtle way...

In any case your strength really impresses me, and one day at a time, but you should soon be well on your way to reclaiming that incredible accomplishment you had. Kol Hakavod!!!

Haba
Last Edit: by livelyrabbit39.

Re: Hello, I'm new. 31 Dec 2009 13:42 #40453

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Reb Yosef, I am so impressed with the wisdom and beauty in your posts. We need guys like you on GYE. Perhaps you'd even be willing to moderate an anonymous phone conference along the lines of what Duvid Chaim is doing? See this page...

After all, as we see in the Big Book, the addicts of AA often found that if they did not make the purpose of their recovery to help others as well, they could do everything else in the 12-Step program, but sooner or later they would lose sobriety. And the reasoning behind this is that if our whole recovery is only self-serving, we can easily get confused with doing what we feel like doing, which is also self-serving. However, if we are continuously thinking of others, it keeps us on the right track as well.
Webmaster of www.guardyoureyes.org - Maintaining Moral Purity in Today's World. We’re here on a quest ; it’s really all a test. Just do your best and G-d will do the rest.
Last Edit: by Aryeh25.
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