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CHANGE YOUR LIFE IN 2020

Discussion in 'Rebooting - Porn Addiction Recovery' started by Fenix Rising, Dec 31, 2019.

  1. Fenix Rising

    Fenix Rising Fapstronaut

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    For many of you who are still suffering out there with your addiction a whole thing of a new year can inspire you to make change in your life like I did on the 1st of January 2019.
    When new year arrives, don't make just one resolution, change all of the shit that needs changing in your life. To recover and to build your life from addiction takes a lot. You've got to make a lot of changes. Getting out of addiction takes a lot of guts and courage. You've got to become a warrior and fight for it.

    2020 is a very special year, a beginning of a new decade. A time to make a new beginnings. It's ONLY YOU who can change your life! YOU are responsible for your THOUGHTS and your ACTIONS and the consequences of those thoughts and actions. That's all you can control. Realize that you want to live a fulfilling life more than you want to jerk off to some pixels on your screen and make a decision. Experience the miracle of life as it was meant to be lived. Sure it's gonna be hard, but "what comes easy won't last long, and what last long won't come easy" so start today! Happy new year to all the Fapstronauts out there. Make 2020 the year you will look back upon in a decade and say this was the year I've started to change my life for the better!

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  2. Newera54

    Newera54 Fapstronaut

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    I am so here for this! In 2019 I got to about 50 days a few times, but I never got to 90 days. I have made a list of habits to release and habits to develop so that this year I can make it to 90 days and beyond. I finally joined this community in hopes that becoming a member here will also help.
     
    Fenix Rising and randomname3 like this.
  3. fapequalsdeath

    fapequalsdeath Fapstronaut

    let's do it bopyzzz set those counters to 0 and do itttt
     
    Hesychast and Fenix Rising like this.
  4. Fenix Rising

    Fenix Rising Fapstronaut

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    Hi fellow fapstonauts,

    it's a big day for me today, a day I couldn't even dreamed of not so long ago. A year has passed since I've risen out of 25 years long addiction to make the first step on the road to permanent recovery and what a journey it has been so far. I'm not gonna bore you with obstacles I encountered along the way (you can read more about them in my journal if you wish to do so), but if I had to summarize the path in one sentence, I'd describe it as a walk out of hell towards normality.


    You can't walk through a fire and expect not to get burned and not being greeted by the daemons from your past and present. There is no way around it, but as Winston Churchill has put it »If you're going through hell, keep going« and you'll get out of it eventually. As the phoenix, the old you has to dance and die in the nest of fire in order to allow a new you to arise from the ashes, tested and purified by the flames of pain. This was my first lesson learned: Expect and accept the suffering in advance well before you step on your path to recovery. Most life changes are uncomfortable, but breaking out of addiction means experiencing hell.


    The second most important task I can think of is to look at and honesty evaluate your current life, identify what has been going so wrong that you need to numb your emotions and pain with addiction and start addressing it alongside abstention. Addiction expert Gabor Mate wrote: "Don't ask why addiction, ask why the pain... Not all addictions are rooted in abuse or trauma, but I do believe they can all be traced to painful experience. A hurt is at the centre of all addictive behaviours. It is present in the gambler, the Internet addict, the compulsive shopper and the workaholic. The wound may not be as deep and the ache not as excruciating, and it may even be entirely hidden—but it’s there. The effects of early stress or adverse experiences directly shape both the psychology and the neurobiology of addiction in the brain.”


    There is no shame in seeking professional help If you have troubles finding the root causes of your ills. Reaching out and asking for help is not a sign of weakness, on the contrary, it's an act of strength and bravery. My problem has been clinical depression and social anxiety originating from long childhood trauma. Your cause might be different. I tried to break out of my addiction cycle countless times before, but I kept relapsing and relapsing until I finally started addresing underlying wounds covered by my binge PMO addiction. It's crucial not to skip this step. Celibacy only uncovers underlying issue(s) allowing pain to resurface. You have to take care of »your wound(s)« or built-up stress and pain will become to much to bare and you will relapse eventually. I learned this the hard way in 2018 when I relapsed after 6 months of abstention.


    The third step has to be a mixture of determination, discipline and perseverance.


    Determination that PMO is off the table for good. If you can't convince yourself that you're done with addiction for life and truly believe it, don't even bother trying, as your recovery will end up in ashes. I don't want to sound rude, but it's the truth. I'm a living proof where self-dellusion can bring you. I lied to myself for 2 decades, wasting half of my life, before I truly admited that I'm in a deep shithole in a desperate need to stop digging and start climbing out of the hole I digged for myself no matter what.


    Once you have identified the reasons behind your addiction and established your recovery plan which addresses your issue(s), you will have to develop self-discipline to follow the program.


    The plan has to be followed on daily basis as new habits and changes in thought patterns can only be developed through repetition, repetition, repetition. This is where perseverance comes into play. It's easy to follow your program when you're OK, but it's doing the right things on the days when you feel like shit, that counts the most. You have a headache and you haven't slept for 2 days? Tough luck, you're gonna go under that cold shower and hit the gym because your recovery plan says so... this is how your recovery mindset should look like. Do the right things first, self-pitty later if you must.


    The last note is on how we perceive and react to outer events. Wayne Dyer used to say: "If you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change," and Einstein wrote pretty much the same with different words:"We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them." The point I'm trying to make here is that how we perceive and react to our own thoughts matters a lot. Locking yourself into ruminations will do you no good. If you are a glass half empty guy or a girl as many of as addicts are, you need to reprogram your brain on becoming a person who can see something good in everything. Bad experiences can often be the best teachers if you let them teach you. The other thing I'd like to mention is the importance of making peace with your past (letting go). Past is the past, you can't change it, future is uncertain, so all we really have is a present moment. Try to focus your attention on the tasks at hand, rather than ruminating over your past negative experiences, multiplying them in your head and projecting them into the future. Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius wrote in his Meditations that you can only control your own thoughts and actions, so there is no point in worrying about anything else. As long as you do your best in a given moment, you should feel content with yourself regardless of the outcome. Be it a success or a failure. Life with it's ups and downs happens to us. We have very little to no control over how our life will turn out to be. "If you want to make God laugh, tell him about your plans" - Woody Allen. Our lives are profoundly informed by chance and randomness, everything from our relationships, job success, school grades to health are less predictable than we'd like to believe. You can do everything right and your life could still turn to shit. Randomness is the fact of life, so all we can do is to try giving our best in a given situation and learn how to detach our emotions from the events outside of our control and outcomes as much as possible. That's very hard to do and demands constant practice, but it is the only way to find some peace of mind in constantly changing world and society. Why is achieving emotional balance so important? Because a buildup stress and an emotional instability are the two main reasons why people relapse in the times of hardship. Permanent recovery is not compatible with emotional instability. Shit happens, but it's up to you how you react to it.


    That's about all I wanted to write about. If you have any additional questions feel free to ask or visit my journal. Best of luck to all of you who have decided to break out of addiction cycle. Now is great time to do it. For you already on the journey, just hold on, it gets better every single moment, even if you don't feel like it right now. Don't get overwhelmed by the mountain you need to climb. Keep climbing one step at the time. It doesn't matter how slow you progress or how many times you stumble. As long as you keep picking yourself up and continue walking, you'll get on the mountain top and the view will be well worth the efforts. The reward is not in gaining some kind of super powers, but in becoming normal, emotionaly balanced and addiction free man/woman you deserve to be. The better version of yourself. When difficult times come remember these words: "A gem cannot be polished without friction, nor a man perfected without trails" - Seneca. You are diamond in the rough, precious, beautiful and unbreakable, just waiting to get polished so You can shine your light on the world. Much love to you all and make 2020 your best year yet!


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