So last night I went to my first 12 steps meeting. Hashem has once again been extremely Good and Kind to me. And I really don't deserve it... but, as they say, I am certainly not complaining and I am only too glad to be able to share with you all, at least until I reach 120, how Good Hashem has been to me, and im yirtzeh Hashem, nismach besimchaschem... I will be only too happy to share in your stories of how Hashem has been good to you.
Dear Yidden, I write this with all humility and sincerity, last night after the meeting, I was looking at a personally very uncertain future with the 12 steps. The meeting itself was really good -- it was a realtively small group with real quality guys -- many of them long timers --- this was no recidivist meeting of guys stuck in the middle and constantly wavering. I was also very open to working with whatever I could of the 12 steps. But I really believed that as far as the steps I would never be able to get past first base.
I had separately and individually, both before and after the meeting, in person and with one, for hours by phone, discussed some of the diffculties I had with the first of the 12 steps with three long-time members of the group and I shared with them that I felt that the difficulties would only increase the longer I continued my fight against addiction, especially the longer I would be an active part of the group..
As of late last night I had spoken in total with three of them as I told you above and each had his own way of essentially conveying the same message. Yes, they had all certainly submitted to G-d in weakness. They did not have any insights at all from their own religions of how to deal with addiction, and nothing made them believe that was even a theoretical possibility. They did not have even the slightest suspicion that they could have found another way, be it therapy or anything else. They had exhausted every option they had come up with only to fail miserably. When they did step 1 and they said that they were powerless, they were making a very powerful personal and totally unqualified statement.
I am not going to speak for others, although much of what I write here will apply to everyone to a greater or lesser degree, as a frum yid who had learned full time in yeshivos and kollel for many years, who had worked on himself with mussar for almost 20 years, and who has been very fortunate to have had excellent Rabbeim, and with my own set of circumstances, I was coming into this from a totally opposite direction. Being totally true with myself, and not looking for any excuses, I was really coming in to the program from a true position of strength. I will explain that in detail soon.
Now many, if not most of you, will say, right away, what's the difference? What's the big deal? Why does everything have to be a debate? Why does everything have to have a pshat? Just go with the program and see if it works.
But that is extremely flawed thinking and as you will see, B"H I was not even tempted to go down, what at least for me, would have been an extremely foolish path. The very reason that the 12 steps work is because the people doing it, are being totally true to themselves. They are not just going with the flow. They are absolutely and totally sincere. They know no chochmos. They believe, absolutely literally, in every single word they are saying, with every fiber of their being. If they encounter any problem with any part of the process, they work it through thoroughly. They do not look for temporary patches and excuses. And so, if I even wanted the 12 steps to work, as they are supposed to, I needed to avoid any and all temptation for chochmos and schtick, for excuses and short-cuts. If it was going to work at all I had to do like them and be no less true to myself, regardless of the consequences, even if it meant that I could never do the 12 steps.
So I asked them how could someone coming from strength, someone who has far from exhausted all his options, someone who is just at the very beginning of his fight, someone fully committed and determined to go it for life with no relapses, how can he make a statement, "I am powerless and cannot manage"?
As an intellectual and theoretical proposition, it's a total non-starter. Who's to say? They, themselves, were far from convinced that I was powerless and had no other options and they freely acknowledged that I might well have other options. So that was out.
From a personal perspective as a personal statement it was also a total non-starter. No statement captures my determination less than the statement, "I am powerless, my addiction has beaten me and I cannot manage".
On this forum, I basically got 2 pieces of advice:
1) Do what you can now, because it's very likely that at some point like everyone else you will bottom out.
2) Look, there are all sorts of interpretations one can find to explain the statement in a way that conforms with ma'amorei Chazal.
If either of those approaches worked for you, well, hey, right or wrong it worked.
But being true to myself and speaking only from my own experience, both approaches were fundamentally wrong.
1) This is going to be long, and long for a reason. Because my circumstances in this respect to a certain degree are quite individual.
11 days ago, I, was a guy who basically thought he was in total control (despite all blatant indications to the contrary) because he had never even smoked a cigarette in his life, because he could drink alcohol, as often and as seldom as he wanted. I had seen that when I really wanted something badly enough, and I wholeheartedly applied myself to it, I could be absolutely single-minded, fearless and relentless.
This guy, me, had, in reality been totally out of control his entire life and I didn't even know it. I, was a total slave to every whim and desire that I could live with yielding to, and by the day the list of desires that I could learn to accept was slowly but steadily and dangerously growing. The majority of these whims and desires were intrinsically perfectly legitimate. Learning, looking up seforim, investigating mar'eh mekomos, researching secular knowledge, lots of intrinsically worthwhile pursuits. But I was totally out of control.
Beyond the basic discipline that came naturally from upbringing and beyond a basic sense of self-respect, I was only able to do what I was in the mood of doing and had to act upon everything that I felt like doing.
This affected absolutely EVERYTHING. I was unable to revise any of my learning. B"H for some things I have an excellent memory, otherwise I would be a total ignoramus. Much as I was capable of davening with instant understanding of the words and deep kavono, 99.99% of the time, my davening was literally nothing less than total oblivion. Same for most mitzvos. No matter how much I learned mussar about torah, tefilla and mitzvos, there was no change at all (at that point in time). I was capable of being extremely disconnected in relationships with family, friends and colleagues, ALL my relationships, without exception, were revolving door relationships. No amount of mussar on bein odom lechaveiro made an iota of difference (at that point in time). Work was a constant spiralling nightmare of unpredictability and unreliability. My finances were exponentially deteriorating and they were a tsunami waiting to happen.
But such is man's ability to fool himself that until 11 days ago, deep down, I really believed that I was really in absolute and total control and if only I wanted to enough... and that was the critical error. Because what I thought was my single greatest strength, if only I wanted to enough was my single greatest weakness --- I could only do things if I really wanted them enough and that was why much as I tried I was so out of control.
Then, and I speak here not of theories and hypotheses but of deep and searing personal experience, I realized that I had gotten so out of control and that I had sunk to such depths, that that Monay night 12 days ago, when it was time for a certain publicly observed mitzvo that was extremely important to me, much as I wanted to break free and much as I had every incentive and enjoyment to be involved in that mitzva, I was imprisoned, hiding in isolation, viewing forbidden material, unbeknown to anyone, my accountability partner included, and much as I tried to break away, the mitzva totally came and went and I was unable to do anything about it.
It was particularly painful because just that day I had been checking through the emails I was getting updating me on every one of my partner's keystrokes and all of his activity on his PC. Well he had been posting right here on this forum and I visited the forum for the first time that very afternoon, and I was very inspired. And where did all that inspiration go? Well, ultimately it brought me to sign up with a vengeance right after I fell, but I'll tell you what it felt like initially. Initially just after I fell, I remembered the inspiration I had had from reading this forum and I remembered how it had given me a sense of detrmination that with that inspiration I would be successful and I remembered it all having failed. So at the time, it felt like all that inspiration had gone, not down the drain, but forgive me, I felt, inappropriate as it was and inappropriate as it is, that all the inspiration had gone right into the toilet bowl.
So what did I do? Well, I have many faults, but wallowing in self-doubt and despair is, Chasdei Hashem not my problem. So, I am going to tell you what I did the best way I know. I will use strong language because I am passionate. But genuinely and sincerely, everyone m,ust find their path to teshuva and with all the strong language I talk only about me. I make no insinuations whatsoever and no attacks, even veiled.
So in my own words I did the one thing that I knew I needed to do. I knew that I needed to do teshuva. Not the motions of teshuva. Not, what for me, with my personality and background, would be a half-baked, temporary let's see how it goes, baby steps teshuva. But a teshuva that proclaimed from the depths of my soul, horeisa derech teshuva l'amcho Yisroel. You Hashem have showed us the way to Teshuva in your Torah. The words of your Holy Torah are Eternal and can be applied ABSOLUTELY LITERALLY, PESHUTO KEMASHMO'O IN EVERY GENERATION if only we do teshuva as you have told us to, Hashem, bechol levovcho uvchol nafshecho -- absolutely wholeheartedly.
I said, somewhere deep down in my heart, Hashem, you have taught us through your Chossid, Rabbenu Yonah, that for frequent and addicted sinners, after a fall, there is no time and no place for charotto -- regret, and that the absolute total focus is to first do a total Azivas Hachet -- to abandon the sin with all one's heart, for life, once and for all, right here and right now. I cannot explain it, other than to say HaBo LeTaher Messayin Osso min Hashomayim, how I even got such feelings. Obviously years of mussar and inspiration do not really ever go down any drainage system. But Chasdei Hashem deep within me I heard the faintest stirrings of a lifeteime commitment with no relapses at all. Of course, I knew that in implementation, it would be not just one day at a time but sometimes as little as one second at a time, but deep down I felt that I was developing a commitment for life.
And so I went out there and did everything that would come to mind. I confessed to my accountability partner. I signed up on this board. I divulged it to the therapist I was seeing for ADD treatment. I built up a fearful array of filters and accountability software which I have further, extended and fortified in these last 11 days. And I put everything I had into the enterprise.
So getting back on track after this long detour, in these last 11 days, all the time I was building and growing my commitment and building and growing my sobriety and I really became convinced that with Hashem's Kindness I would be able to follow through on my internal notions of a lifetime kabbolo. All without the 12 steps, to which I had always been allergic, since I read about them, years ago, and which I thought would never work for me.
And then, my therapist told me to try a 12 step group just one time. And I knew that to ignore the advice of my therapist would hardly be wholehearted, and since teshuva has to be wholehearted I have to do whatever I can, without compromise, being true to my values and beliefs but equally without excuses.
And so I believed that even without the 12 steps there was good chance that if I did my little part Hashem would do the rest and even today, in our dor, He would bring me to a teshuva sheleimo. And I was equally convinced that if I added the 12 steps to the process then I would be almost guaranteed to succeed. Not because there was no other way but because I was being wholhearted about doing my little piece.
And so, what hope of hitting rock bottom? As unbelievable as it probably sounds, I really didn't and couldn't believe that there was any strong likelihood that it would happen, especially not if I went to 12 step meetings and became an active part of the fellowship.
So that was why at least for me waiting for a rock-bottom sounded like a real dud of an idea.
2) The other suggestion, I got on this forum, was to at least in the short-term, find some level of interpretation that allowed for a qualified meaning in the statement, "I am powerless, my addiction has beaten me and I cannot manage". Well, for me at least, this was the worst piece of advice. Imagine for a moment saying, "I am, to a certain limited extent, absolutely and totally convined that..." That's not a very meaningful and inspiring statement to say the least. I am afraid there is not a lot of resonance in saying that to a certain limited extent you are absolutely and totally anything.
Same with powerlessness. Maybe it's just me. But if you are powerless, it means you have NO power. Gorrnishct. Zero. Nada. Zilch. That's certainly what it means to all of the multitudes of goyim who, being totally true with themselves, use the program.
So, again, being true to myself, who would I be fooling if I would say a very qualified, "to a certain specific degree and from a certain specific aspect, I am powerless."? Certainly not myself, because beyond that specific degree and beyond that specific aspect I am actually not powerless at all. Unlike the goyim who had no expectations at all that their religion could help them, as a frum Yid, I have been taught by Chazal, hafoch bo vehfoch bo dekullo bo, that we are very empowered, because everything is in Torah, unlike the goyim who were all at their wits end, I was at the very beginning of my journey and was getting more and more determined and more and more resourceful by the day. So, in theory all of the advice above might have made sense to different people, in different circumstances, but for me in my circumstances it was all totally impractical.
So, last night, in brief, I explained my quandary separately, to my 3 new advisors from the 12 step group, and they understood the issue very well and they were not really able to give me anything useful. Except that they did give me something extremely useful. They were able to listen and they were able to understand. They tried to help with suggestions, ideas and in the case of one of them, even with arguments. But ultimately when they saw, from their own experience, that I was being true to myself and not using artificial excuses, they just accepted it.
So, as I said from the beginning, how could I be true to myself and at the same time give the program a chance. Last night after being open with myself and after being open with 3 others in the fellowship, I was at total impasse. One wise man suggested that I pray for guidance, but I was so much at impasse that I was unable even to do that. (aha, the sharp ones among you grin, he was powerless after all, not really, because I knew, correctly, it turned out, that gam zeh yaavor... I was only temporarily stuck)
And then this morning, terem yikro'u va'ani e'eneh, without my even turning to Him in prayer, Hashem in His Infinite Kindness, showed me the light. I want to share it with you all, but Shabbos is soon upon us.
Yes, this morning Hashem showed me how I could without compromising on any of my sincerely held beliefs as expressed above, davka come from strength and make an unqualified, meaningful and totally genuine declaration, "I am powerless, my addiction has beaten me and I cannot manage".
You should all enjoy a wonderful Shabbos!!!