For many, drinking, using recreational drugs, watching adult
content, occasional binge eating (Thanksgiving. Hello?) and/or smoking a random
cigarette here or there are ways to relax, unwind or have a bit more fun on the
periphery of everyday living. Even when these behaviors occur in occasional
excess they may or may not indicate that something deeper is at play.
When picking up or acting out becomes an immediate reaction
when things don’t go our way, we are taking steps over the line that separates the
normal from the maladjusted. If and when these behaviors become our go-to when
life “hands us lemons,” red flags being raised would be an appropriate
response.
You see the transition from occasional add-on to outright
necessity pivots at the coping mechanism stage. There’s a clear shift if and
when that pint of bourbon is the answer to all of life’s challenges, large or
small. Many people turn to a substance or behavior when the “worst” happens,
but a select few start out that way only to justify use and abuse at every turn
in life’s pathway.
Normal people come equipped with a mechanism that through
experience gives them the ability to deal with life on life’s terms. In
addicts, that mechanism seemingly got misplaced in the process and thrown out
with the proverbial packaging. Motivated by perhaps our most severe defect of
character we flee from problems instead of trying to deal with them. It is in
our nature to mentally cut and run when times get hard even though we remain
physically present; we love the pain and the pity far too much to actually pick
up and leave most times, but we practice the utmost escapism in the midst of
the situation.
After setting down the bottle, figuring out to whom we owe
apologies and setting about a course of action to make things right with anyone
we have harmed, we must begin to formulate positive coping mechanisms for the
first time in our lives.
What we’d previously felt were coping mechanisms weren’t in
any way actually helping us cope with anything. “Coping with” and “running from”
are apparently two very different things, (who knew?!?) although we didn’t seem
to know it at the time. In order to deal with life on life’s terms, we must
seek and develop healthy means by which to do so.
These healthy choices can and do include turning to our
Higher Power, turning to a positive support group (Twelve Step, faith- or
belief-based or otherwise) or recovery program, meditation, seeking wisdom from
those we respect, exercising, reading, journaling or any number of things that
help us work through the problem constructively instead of burying our heads in
the sand and waiting for the storm to pass.
Actually dealing with problems is difficult at first.
However, an addict is uniquely positioned to handle most any circumstance with
which we are confronted. The things to which we have subjected ourselves have
toughened us immeasurably. We truly can make it through anything if we simply
give ourselves permission.
The same is true of you “normals.” We all tend to be exactly
as tough as we make up our minds to be.
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