Montie,
While it is always a good idea to do your best to be acurate, the sacrament of reconcilliation is more about examining your conscience and finding where you need to work on your spiritual growth and development. When you find your weaknesses it is easier to find a solution to repair your relationship with God which is the number one reason why you should want to go to reconcilliation. Don’t think of it as a grocery list…let’s see…I had 2 sins of lying, 4 of lustful thoughts…etc. That isn’t what will help you become closer to God. What will help you is to do a very thorough examination of conscience and look at why you did something. Hmmm, how to explain… OK, say I went into confession and confessed that I beat the snot out of my kids (hypothetical folks) 4 times. OK, I know that if I am truly repentant, I will be forgiven. But what happens if I don’t examine why, or what circumstances led up to the beatings…I will do it again no matter how hard I try not to because I have not truly examined my conscience. If I went in after a proper and extensive examination of conscience and confessed that I beat my kids because I was having a problem with my temper, or because I was having trouble separating what my parents thought was appropriate punishment from what God teaches is appropriate punishment and I have the desire to not only stop hurting them, but to submit my will over to God to help me…Then, and only then can I start to correct the behavior so that I don’t repeat the sin. Doesn’t this make more sense? It isn’t about keeping track of numbers, it is about finding a way to repair ourselves and our relationship with God. I confess that when I know I am going to reconcilliation, I usually take a full day if not more to examine my conscience. Maybe this indicates I am terribly flawed, but I prefer to think that it means that I truly want to repair the relationship and sin no more.