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Addiction to Thinking by
Margaret Paul, Ph.D.
Randall
sought my help because he was stuck being miserable and had no idea how
to get out of his misery. In his life he had experienced moments of
great joy and sense of oneness with all of life, but those moments were
infrequent. He wanted more of those moments but had no idea how to
bring them about. The
problem was that when Randall did have those brief moments of true
connection, he immediately went into his mind to try to figure out how
it happened. The moment he went into his mind, he lost the connection
that he so desperately desired. Randall’s
ego wounded self believed that he could control the connection with
Spirit with his intellect - if only he could figure it out then he
could control it. The last thing Randall wanted to do, which is what is
necessary to connect with Spirit, is to surrender his thinking. Randall
was deeply addicted to thinking as a way to not feel his inner
experience. Thinking was his way of controlling his painful feelings,
such as his aloneness, loneliness, and helplessness over others and
over his spiritual connection. This
is called “ruminating.” Ruminating is obsessively thinking about
something over and over in the hopes of finally coming up with the
“right” answer, the right thing to say, the right way to be to have
control over others and the outcome of things. Ruminating is also a way
to have control over our own painful feelings, which is what addictions
are all about. His
feelings were so terrifying to him that he could only stay with his
feelings for a few moments before he was back into his head -
explaining, figuring out, intellectualizing. He was
so terrified of the soul loneliness and aloneness he felt that he had
learned to avoid these feelings with his mind. Yet until Randall was
willing to feel his painful feelings, which had been there since
childhood, he couldn’t stay out of his head. As
long as his intent was to control his pain rather than learn from it,
he would not be able to move into the spiritual connection he so
desired. Our
feeling self, our Inner Child, is left alone inside with no one to
attend to the painful feelings. It is only when our desire is to learn
about how we may be causing our own painful feelings that we open to
our inner experience. Our
desire to learn also opens the door to our spiritual connection, which
we cannot feel when our intent is to avoid pain with our various
addictions. In
fact, when he was no longer abandoning his Inner Child by going into
his addictive thinking, he no longer felt alone within. Connecting with
himself allowed him to connect with Spirit more and more of the time. Rather
than getting there through thinking and trying to control it, he was
getting there by being present in the moment with his inner experience
- surrendering to the moment. Randall found that while he could not
control others and the outcome of things, he actually did have control
over his misery - by choosing the intent to learn rather than
protecting against pain. While
he couldn’t control Spirit, he did have control his own intent, which
eventually led to his being able to connect with Spirit. ~ ~ ~ |
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