Translate

Thursday, 21 January 2010

Overcoming Addictions

Addiction is the number one disease of civilization, and it’s directly and indirectly related to all other diseases. Besides physical addictions, such as the addiction to food, tobacco, alcohol, and drugs, there are psychological addictions, such as the addiction to work, sex, television, shopping, appearing young, suffering, anxiety, melodrama, perfection. Why are we addicted to all these things? We are addicted because we are not living from our source; we have lost our connection to our soul. The use of food, alcohol, or drugs is essentially a material response to a need that is not really physical at its foundation. Drunkenness, for example, is really a forgetting of personal memory so we can experience the joy of the non-personal, the universe.

What we are looking for is pure joy rather than mere sensation, or even oblivion of sensation. Self-destructive behavior is unrecognized spiritual craving. All addictions are really a search for the exultation of spirit, and this search has to do with the expansion of consciousness, the intoxication of love, which is pure consciousness. Over and over, people have tried to overcome their addictions through psychological and behavioral methods or through medication. None of these offers a permanent cure.

The only cure for addiction is spiritual. We hunger for the ecstatic experience, which is a need as basic as the need for food, water, or shelter. Ecstasy, or ek-tasis, literally means stepping out. True ecstasy is stepping out of the bondage of the time-bound, space-bound world of materialism. We long to step out of the limitations of the body. We long to be free of fear and limitation. We hunger for the oblivion of our ego so that we can experience our infinite Being.

-Deepak Chopra, M.D.

2 comments:

  1. The author mentions at the beginning that addictions are related directly or indirectly to other diseases. What I'm having trouble working out is does the other disease come before the addiction? Is one causing the other? If that is the case rather than treating the addiction can we treat the disease and the addiction will resolve its self?
    I agree with the posting that we are looking for "pure joy" In my western culture I'm bombarded by images of my entitlement, and how it should be immediate, for a price of course.
    I agree with some of this but find I have more questions than answers

    ReplyDelete
  2. Yes, Chopra believes that our 'wounded spirit' is the cause of dis----ease. That addiction is a symptom of our hurt. TJS

    ReplyDelete