Addiction

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Hand-drawn art by Rupali Bhuva
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It seems that a believed thought (most often unconscious) underpinning addictions goes like this: ‘something outside of me can make me feel complete/happy or whole’.

Experiencing external phenomena continues as one tries to find what will resolve this incomplete feeling.  There may even be a conscious noticing of that natural pull towards internal rest, peace and harmony. Yet mind can simultaneously run the idea that the outside world is the source of ‘solutions’.  So the search for happiness continues in the outside world; hence substance abuse has its place. 

The best that substances can do is shift your attention away from persistent thoughts into some level of oblivion for a while; promising a temporary holiday from the habit of believing thoughts.  Even having a cigarette can have the association of shifting mental focus. 

Mind works to seek its own resolution; energetically being pulled back to source - whether desired or not.  Thus, mind is drawn to that break in believing the same thoughts again and again and the capacity for addiction is created.  

Mind is finding a way to break the electromagnetic circuit created by repetitive thought in the brain.  Using a mantra proves much more effective but it’s not as interesting to the personal ‘I’.  It is not social. It’s not a ‘story’ for the ‘I’ thought.  Managing thoughts internally instead of through external means (substances) can break a self image and ….well, that’s not too attractive to the ‘I’ who still believes that the outside world is where solutions lie.

It is rare that a substance itself is addictive; generally the body does what mind instructs.  Mind imagines that the body needs a cigarette, but, mind has told the body that this is the case.  Mind uses the body for its own purposes. The body is no more than an exquisitely functioning bag of flesh and bones.  Body does not get addicted, but mind does.  Almost all substances are not addictive in and of themselves.  It is the alignment of a substance with the pain of identified thoughts coupled with the promise of a mini distraction for mind that are the ingredients of substance addiction.

All sources of pleasure have the capacity to be sources of pain. Sooner or later it is seen that there is a very thin line between pleasure and pain.  Both are no more than concepts believed to be true, believed into your experience.  Let it be seen that the effort of running a concept reveals itself as exhausting and somewhat unnatural.  At this point, the attraction to pleasure and the avoidance of pain are two sides of the same coin and exercising either becomes a futile endeavor.

Believing you are a separate individual will give rise to the belief that you are your habits, tendencies and personality.  This can cause great suffering.  Building upon this illusion, mind can shift from one intense connection to another; from cigarettes to food, alcohol to AA meetings. 

Let the personality be addictive – you are not your personality. You are not addicted to anything.  You are not involved in any of this. As long as you run the thought that you are your personality then the ‘I’ has something to fix and something else to do.  This will keep the ‘I’ story going.  Analysis around addiction can be explored…only to be rejected when seen as more intellectual garbage about an ‘I’ who never existed outside of imagination anyway.

So, what to do?  Know that whatever ‘I’; story is running it can never bring you anywhere. You are not an ‘I’ story.  You are nothing that can be named.  There is no ‘I can’ or ‘I can not’; there is no ‘I’.  You drink alcohol, you don’t drink alcohol – this is lifestyle and nothing to do with what you really are.

There is nothing to fix - just observe and stop placing so much effort into the thoughts that are ‘all about me’. Rest in the knowing that you are beyond all of this.  Substances are needed to simply change an idea in mind, an experience that happens.  Do not be concerned with any of this. It takes an ‘I’ to participate, and you are not an ‘I’.

Seed Questions for Reflection

How do you relate to the notion that the body dos not get addicted, but the mind does? Can you share an experience of a time you were able to feel that you were not an 'I' story? What helps you rest in the knowing that you are beyond the 'I story'?

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Add Your Reflection

19 Past Reflections
AN
Dec 19, 2024
Just wondering what is the authority here in proposing that body is not addicted. Parsing out these splits and judging what is real and what is not. I agree with others here who respectfully disagree. Sometimes we need to rest in humility prior to making all encompassing statements. Certainly there is a lot the mind contributes to dealing with addictions.
EL
Sep 21, 2024
Addictions can be relationships, substances, activities … anything that feels like “ I’ve got to have more…

The expression “everything in moderation “seems to fit here.


An addiction or behavior is separate from who I am… understanding the desire to repeat any given thing sheds light on what the underlying cause may be..low self esteem, insecurities, desire to erase life events by numbing the senses, and I think you got the idea.

MO
Sep 13, 2024
Hmmm. I don't think I agree with the premise, "Body does not get addicted, but mind does." Chemical dependency is very real in the body and in the mind. There is no separation of the two. The only Hope is Higher Power.
CA
Sep 11, 2024
My being finds peace in taking care of my family, working, self-care and holistic heath. I read and love to take care of my dogs too. I enjoy music and play guitar. Exercise is important to me at my age. Thank you for sharing . Life is short.
AR
Sep 10, 2024
lost my elder brother to addiction. An intelligent successful person. Even when his body was broken down he would subject hiself to it. 'Cheating' uopn himself. His body was fighting the addictiion and must have been screaming at hi to 'Stop'/ But the mind was gripped, a slave to it. Saw the vacant look in his eyes during the last few breaths. The 'I' was shinning forth in all innocence.
DD
David Doane Sep 13, 2024
I am sorry you lost your brother. I am glad you got to see his I shining forth in all innocence.
EM
emgardner
Sep 10, 2024
tempus gracefully

in a world that rushes
cell phones, emails, busy places
hard to resist
the urge persists

but if we slow
our frantic pace
in a deeper space
contentment grows

hearts and minds
once confined
open wide
peace to find

in slowing down
we come alive
every moment
we can thrive

embrace this way
savoring life, day by day
in this mindful dance
joy, and true expanse

© E Mill Gardner
Milton, 2024
BA
Sep 10, 2024
We are not born addicts. We are born into a pure, spacious, boundlessness of unconditional awareness that has no name. The further we get from this as we learn more and more about the game of living in this world the greater the opportunity for addictive impulses. Fortunately, the spaciousness never leaves us and we can learn to go back to it. This breaks down the addictive impulse.
AW
Sep 9, 2024
I found myself reactive to this passage. Whilst I honour, practice and aspire to mindfulness I know it to be a huge privilege, denied to many, and the many the most vulnerable, so often trapped in the addiction of unhealthy relationships, food abuse, alcohol abuse, substance abuse etc. Obviously there is a spectrum of addiction and the author is talking about fine tuning for those already towards the sunny end of it, but never the less, to not acknowledge the privilege of those who find themselves on the sunny side lacks compassion. The lack of warmth and understanding made me feel uncomfortable, as all elitism does. In addition, I know from personal experience and years of being an holistic therapist that addiction does not all come from the brain. For example an unbalanced microbiome can cause craving which can become addiction.
KE
Kersty Sep 10, 2024
Oh my goodness...you said so very eloquently what I felt most in my heart.
FL
Flower Sep 10, 2024
Still missing the point and need to judge it. It's only elitism because you filter life through that. It's only privilege because you filter life through that. You are still addict yourself needed to insert yourself into this message for it's wrong, when simply accept you gave witness and your words and judgement are an unnecessary addiction
JP
Sep 6, 2024
Our mind gets attached and addicted, not our body. The desire to eat sweet or fried foods arises in the mind, not in the body. We have five senses: smell, taste, touch, hear and see. The mind may make harmful choices and cause problems for the body. Mind is the cause of physical problems. So it is up to Buddhi, the intellect, to discriminate between what is helpful and what is harmful. Discretion is the key that opens or closes our mind's doors. Mind is the cause of freedom or bondage. We need to make wise choices for our physical, mental, emotional, relational and spiritual well-being. It took time for me to go beyond my self-centered ' I story'. I have been practicing the path of going beyond "my my, me me" walls and embracing my "us us, us us" self. Walking on this path creates a deep sense of oneness, a sense of unitive consciousness. Practicing mindfulness in different areas of my everyday life helps me walk on the pilgrimage of my life. It creates and sustains joy, love,... View full comment
GA
Sep 6, 2024
The radical realization that I am not an I or that I am not my body came when I was introduced to A Course in Miracles. It taught that nothing in itself has any meaning. A cup is just a cup. But when I look at that cup memories flow through my mind about when I acquired it. Perhaps it was a gift from a loved one who has passed. Now even though it no longer is function able I can’t let it go. My mind has created an attachment. When I sit silently, following my breath, I realize there is something within me beyond thoughts and even death. It is observing, breathing, moving. Recently the small inner voice said “you are spirit, not a spirit, spirit”. When I asked what that meant the voice explained “that little ‘a’ separates and there is no separation in Spirit, all is One.”



DD
Sep 6, 2024
My view seems to be pretty much the opposite of the view of Jac O'Keeffe. For me, there is no mind-body split. Mind-body is a unity, a continuum. I don't see mind as the boss in charge of body and using body for its own purposes. There was a time that I thought mind and body were real and separate and the two of them together made 'I'. That changed, and I awoke to seeing 'I' as real and as the only real. For me, 'I' is not ego or personality. 'I' is real and is essence, and mind-body is 'I' in form, is an experience of'I'. If anything exists in imagination, it is mind and body, not 'I'. Mind-body is what gets addicted. I agree that nothing outside of 'I' can make 'I' feel happy or whole. I'm not beyond the 'I' story; I am beyond the story of mind and body being two separate entities that comprise 'I', and beyond seeing 'I' as imagination. For me, 'I' is all that really is, and mind-body comes and goes.
SH
Sep 5, 2024
Yes yes yes …. 🌹❤️