Parvati Magazine February 2014 - Sobriety | Page 6
POSITIVE POSSIBILITIES LIVING
POSITIVE POSSIBILITIES LIVING
HELPING
Versus Enabling
But they have a problem
too.
Unfortunately, too often
these good intentions
end up feeding addiction
and not in any way helping. Because addiction is
based on consumption
and wanting, it is insatiably hungry. It needs attention. It needs to ingest,
to buy, to take, to feed.
It feeds on attention as
well. When we tippy-toe
around it, the addiction
energy feels powerfully
important. When we cry
for it, yell at it, rage at
it, pray for it, plead with
it, fight it, we are in fact
feeding the addiction.
W
Tough love
means being
rooted, clear
and strong.
hen we love a person who has an addiction,
it is so very painful to see their struggles. Ultimately, we too need to admit that we are powerless over the addiction. We want to help. We
see those we love in pain. We want to take that
pain away. But we cannot make changes for anyone but ourselves. It is often hard enough to make
changes for ourselves. We are powerless to make
the changes for those we love.
Often addicts find themselves close to people
whoenable. Enablers are harder to see sometimes
than addicts, because enablers seem kind and
helpful. They are ever willing to help, cover up,
make excuses, clean up the mess, tippy-toe around
addicts. There is a powerful yet very subtle ego force at play with enablers. They are doing
“good deeds”, so they are “good” people, “helping” those “poor souls” with the problem.
Tough love, clear boundaries and a no-nonsense
attitude are the only way
to be around anyone with
addiction. Whether you
are around someone with
an addiction or whether you are questioning
whether you yourself are
an addict, a powerful
tool is to ensure that your
actions and your words
are in alignment. Those
with addictions are used
to spin doctoring, twisting
the truth, or outright lying
to try to get their way, to
try to satiate their feeling
of wanting, to get the hit
their disease needs.
This does not mean we
need to be cold or cruel.
Tough love means being
rooted, clear and strong.
And in fact, these are also
qualities that you can find
in compassionate action.
When we are sentimentally involved, we become
entangled. When we are
compassionate, we are
a clear witness to what
is: present, open, available, but rooted in selflove. We must stay rooted
in who we are and what
we want from our lives,
because we can easily
get sucked into the vortex
of addiction. Addiction
has a gravitational pull. If
we are too close and not
grounded, soon we will
get sucked into the drama too.
We must stand at a safe
distance
from
someone with an addiction,
be present for ourselves,
available to support him
or her, and get on with our
own life. Ultimately, we
can change ourselves.
We cannot change anyone else. Too often our
lives get put on hold while
we focus on trying to fix
the one with the problem,
not realizing that in fact,
we too have a problem.
The journey of a thousand
miles starts with a single
step. Sobriety begins with
taking a step towards self
love, self worth, valuing
yourself enough to let go
of things that drag you
down. People who are
not addicts have the brain
chemistry to know the difference between habits
that are not useful and
habits that are. Addicts
have a harder time with
that and must learn this
discernment. The brain is
plastic and can change.
New habits are possible.
Health, sobriety and a life
that works are possible
for everyone, even for an
addict. Addict or not, we
must be willing to admit
we have a problem, look
at our shadow and embrace the fullness of who
we are.
Parvati Devi is the editor-in-chief of Parvati Magazine. In addition to
being an internationally acclaimed Canadian singer, songwriter, producer
and performer, she is a yoga teacher and holistic educator. Having
studied yoga and meditation since 1987, Parvati developed her own yoga
teaching style called YEMTM Yoga as Energy Medicine. Her current shows,
“YIN: Yoga In the Nightclub” and “Natamba” bring forward a conscious
energy into the pop mainstream. Her book “Confessions of a Former Yoga
Junkie” is a road map to a revolutionary life makeover for sincere spiritual
seekers.
For more information on Parvati, please visit www.parvati.tv.