workingguy
Thank you!
You took the words out of my mouth.
I have been reading about our "strugle" and am convinced that for myself, and it seems yourself too, there are two things at work.
One - is lust, which as you wrote, can be triggered by images, whether in real life or online.
Two - is emotional pain, which then prompts me to seek comfort, which in my case is through pornography/acting out etc.
(This reason for falling is much more prevalent for me than lust.)
I have been reading a lot about self-destructive behaviour, and finally found an answer to a question which has bugged me for ages.
How is it that when I am about to fall, I can tell myself all kinds of logical reasons not to fall, but my urge to fall overrides them?
I had put this down to weak will power.
But after reading, I found out that some people really feel emotions strongly, and when in this emotional low state, the urge to seek pleasure is actually an urge to remove deep emotional pain.
So this overrides all logic.
It is why people repeatedly fall.
(And I have been so confused as to how I managed to stay clean for seven months but then fell, really confused.)
So what I read is that people, and this really describes me, can stay clean for a period of time by denying their emotions.
It is like a kettle which continually boils, at first the physical lid of the kettle keeps in the steam.
But eventually that steam pressure is too great and the lid gives way...the steam (emotions) pour out at once and we get overwhelmed.
I am now working on "Mindfulness" to try and counteract this.
Not something I have done before, so I will report back on how it works for me.
The article which prompted this line of thinking is in the link below.
I found it after an internet search, as this last time I fell was so confusing.
Most things felt as if they were going great for me in life, yet I fell, and that really confused me.
But I was suppressing emotional pain which then boiled over.
www.psychologytoday.com/gb/blog/beyond-self-destructive-behavior/201601/mindfulness-in-the-treatment-self-destructive-behavior