Addiction is displaced longing – we all have a longing to be “at home” with ourselves, comfortable in our own skin, and to be loved. Often because of early childhood stress or abuse, lack of safety, or unmet developmental needs, we look to satisfy that longing in other places. Those other places can take the shape of a daily Starbucks coffee, a cigarette, a glass of wine every night before dinner, a closet full of shoes, marijuana a few times a week, checking Facebook every hour, a string of unfulfilling relationships, or the need to be constantly pushing for success. There are so many ways it expresses itself.
We can do this for decades before realizing that what we are really looking for is unattainable from external sources. It all comes back to acknowledging the pain, hurt, discomfort, or emptiness we’ve been carrying, then developing the capacity to give ourselves the love, time, and space we crave from other sources, and opening to receive that love and support from those who can provide it to us.
Dr. Marc Lewis, author of The Addicted Brain, says it this way: “Addiction is a neural mistake, a distortion, an attempted shortcut to get more of what you need by condensing ‘what you need’ into a single, monolithic symbol. The drug (or other substance) stands for a cluster of needs: in my case, needs for warmth, safety, freedom, and self-sufficiency. Then it becomes too valuable, and you cannot live without it. But one thing cannot be all things. And that’s why, in the long run, addictions do such a lousy job of fulfilling needs – if they fulfill them at all. At the same time, many addictions, and certainly addictions to drugs, dash real opportunities to fulfill those needs elsewhere. That’s why addictions are such a poor bargain.”
From a yogic perspective, we are all addicted to our finite identity, the egoic personality, the known small self. We attach to this as “me.” But at some point in one’s yoga journey, the awareness comes that we are so much more than that. The practice of yoga and meditation can reveal to us that we are all connected as One Being, existing in a sea of universal energy, responding with our finite selves to the great creative consciousness as it flows through us, informs us and connects us. When the small egoic self experiences separation from the larger creative consciousness (existing within and externally), it sends a spiritual distress signal seeking a replacement for that connection. This can manifest as any addictive substance or behaviour.
Over the last five years, I have been developing and teaching a Kundalini Yoga-based recovery program called “Beyond Addiction: The Yogic Path to Recovery”.
Early in 2012, I had the good fortune to teach the four-weekend program in Vancouver in concert with Dr. Gabor Maté, author of In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts: Close Encounters with Addiction. I learned so much from him about addiction, compassion, and the human condition. It has been remarkable and gratifying to see people transform, experience their spiritual identity, and gently release the emotional patterns that kept them addicted to an unhealthy behaviour or substance.
The program includes dietary and nutritional guidelines to balance brain chemistry and glandular function; yoga and meditation practices to cultivate relaxation, awareness, concentration, spiritual awakening, and inner strength; and a safe, loving group environment to support personal healing and transformation. The program is open to anyone interested in re-routing unhealthy habits, as well as health professionals, social workers, educators, people in recovery, and yoga teachers. We are also training Kundalini Yoga teachers to be able to facilitate the program. If you would like it offered in your workplace or centre, please let us know.
The Beyond Addiction program includes specific guidelines for a variety of addictions. Here are some of the recommendations for those of you ready to replace smoking with positive health and energy.
Let me know how you do!
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