shomer wrote on 16 Mar 2009 17:03:
I would readily concede that the steps are very effective at combating addiction. I would tend to think, however, that their effectiveness lie more in the group nature of the meeting rather than anything inherent in the steps themselves. Boruch did, however, making a convincing argument otherwise and has convinced me to approach the steps with an open mind. I owe it boruch and to myself to give the steps a fair shake, so I will be reading up and attempting to implement them.
I have never done the group meetings but I have done the 12 steps on my own. I can tell you from my own experience how fundamental the steps were to my own growth. It gave me a framework for growth, which is crucial for anyone trying to grow. Meaning, in the past when I tried to break free from addiction, I would focus solely on the addiction itself. I had no particular plan as to how to fight and deal with myself. I just did it. But the 12 steps gave me that framework. You start here and then go here and then etc. This made it easy. It also gave me a bit of excitement in my growth. Every day was something new. Every day I worked on something else. The other important part was that the 12 steps introduced new concepts that I never really made part of my breaking-free. There was never a general focus of changing my life until the 12 steps came along. The concept of let go and let G-d is such an integral part of breaking free that it is close to impossible without it. The focus on davening became more ingrained in me through the 12 steps. But it is not just davening, you learn to beseech Hashem in a very real way. Fixing the addiction is not about getting one away from the aveiros but from creating a new person within yourself. (it is important to look at the Jewish version of 12 steps
here. A lot of my inspiration came from the jewish version. But the secular version is mostly the same thing with different formulation. )
I must admit that I am only 40 days clean coming off a 3 month downfall, and I therefore do not have much of a say in this matter. However, my point is that in a short time span of 40 days the 12 steps have changed my life. It has given me something that I never had before. There were many times in my life when I broke free and came back. I even went 6 months last year till this past succos. But this time is totally different. My entire focus changed. My whole life is different. I continue to work on the basic principles that I learned, together with major initiatives in avodas hashem. Hashem has removed my desires for P. (I hope it will never come back). I continue to daven to him to prevent those urges from coming and if Chas Shalom they do come I should not fall. The 12 steps help us focus on davening for every aspect of our avodas hashem as we let go and G-d.
So even if you feel that the group setting is not for you (which you may grow into), if all it does is help you understand the principles of the 12 steps then you have done a lot for yourself. But, it is important to understand that you need to live this every waking and sleeping moment of your day. Breaking free should be at the forefront of your mind. It is not just 2 hours of your week. This is not a class that you attend twice a week. This is your life now until you begin to feel internal change. Wherever you are you should review the step that you are holding on. You need to internalize each step. It should become a part of you. At this point, I am not as focused on the 12 steps anymore but uprooting me addiction is a constant avodah. I have no urges but I still work on uprooting inner emotions. I work on creating negative feelings with my past so as to never remember that I actually enjoyed it (see yesterdays' chizuk email about this). I continue to work on teshuvah as we know there are 20 principles/levels of teshuvah.
Good Luck with your new journey. Please keep us posted on your 12 steps