Hi REM,
First off, I read through your thread last night and you are awesome. Although I'm new here, I've been trying to work on this area for a while. It's vicious, the way falling and restarting messes with you, makes you feel hollow. At some point you feel like a fake, and rebooting feels even faker. The fact that you kept trudging on no simple feat.
Much respect my friend.
Re your post: Excellent point!
Thank you for pointing that out. As you said, the rest of the post is for me more than anyone else. There won't be anything new from here on out, but ain't that the point?
1) My filter:
It is so important. Having weak moments is normal, and a filter has the power to slow you down enough to give pause.
It's that simple.
(ps. goal of the week complete. computer filtered, loopholes closed)
2) Know your triggers, plan accordingly:
For me, right before going to sleep my thoughts would wander. It often didn't lead to a fall directly, but rather nudged me onto thinner ice. I started learning" a very small amount before going to sleep, actually because I just wanted to fit a specific low key limud, or study session, into my day. At first I would make sure to understand what I was reading, but by now I'm just quickly reading it through. I considered giving it up since as far as Torah learning is concerned, it's barely productive. But I realized that it has helped me control a trigger, so I still do it every night. Don't think I've missed one for close to a year
Also using the bathroom/being bored with my phone is a big one for me. I downloaded the gye app and spend way too much time on it, no joke. It helps, but I need to pull back a bunch. I still plan on using it to avoid the triggers, to keep myself posted and thinking about my own progress, and, most importantly, to hear whay y'all have to say.
3) Hitting Bottom: There is a difference between feeling guily and wrong, and having your stomach turned inside out. I had one really bad week that ended with a binge which left me shaken. Very shaken. I realized how much I'd regressed as a person and an Oveid Hashem, and it got me questioning who I am and my life trajectory. I signed up for GYE and fell that evening. That was the last wakeup call. The cognitive dissonance was ripping me in half. I was devastated.
The next day, when I calmed down an iota, I sat down for two hours straight and wrote. I looked over what I had written from previous attempts, which was pretty depressing. I remembered the feelings of "This will be the time. I am prepared!" as I went through them. And the falls. Really depressing.
I wrote a story at that moment. It still hits a chord, even after rereading (and editing!) again and again. I captured that feeling of deep despair and the need to change, sprinkled in some hope. I have it saved somwhere, accessible when I need it. I'm sharing this because that horrible feeling fades from memory after a couple of weeks, and something that reminds you of it emotionally in any small way provides real motivation.
Thank you REM for nudging me to write this
Cheers!