Is it ok for me to go to confession when I’m feeling like this and I’m not 100% sorry for sinning? Somehow it seems wrong to me. I keep waiting for contrition to come, but instead I seem to be moving in the wrong direction.
Let’s focus on the idea of being 100% sorry for sinning. Generally speaking, contrition is required for a valid sacramental confession, but a person does not have to be 100% sorry for having sinned in order to go to confession. Rather, a person only has to be somewhat sorry. Whatever is lacking in terms of ones contrition is made up for by the grace of the sacrament (so even if one is, say, only 3% sorry, the power of the Holy Spirit provides the other 97%, perfecting in the person whatever is lacking). This is one of a number of reasons why dealing with sins in a sacramental way is better than a non-sacramental way.
Note that this is why a priest does not require people (during confession) to convince him that they are 100% sorry for their sins. They only need to indicate (in one way or another) that they are at least somewhat sorry, and the act of going to confession in the first place usually serves as a sufficient indicator of this. It is only when a sin comes up in confession to which a person expresses absolutely
no sorrow over that a priest has grounds for withholding absolution (because it would be invalid due to a complete absence of contrition; the Holy Spirit does not elevate zero contrition to 100% because that would be a violation of a person’s freewill - God does not force his mercy on the unrepentant). Even if an totally unrepentant sinner recites the Act of Contrition at the end of confession, this is not a true expression of his belief and therefore becomes a statement of hypocrisy rather than an indication of authentic contrition (and therefore the sacrament would be invalid even if the priest says the prayer of absolution). Of course, I’m not suggesting that you, littlerose1, are unrepentant (i.e., I don’t see such a strict mentality in your OP, and I’m glad to see that you eventually made it to confession), but rather I’m only bringing up this aspect of confession to try to cover the different nuances of this topic.