Numbing yourself
prevents you from confronting your issues and keeps you from finding
resolution or peace. We are born equipped to experience a
complex array of diverse emotions. Many of us, however, are uncomfortable
confronting our most powerful emotions. We may shy away from delight and
despair, and deny life’s colors by retreating into a world of monotone gray.
We may numb ourselves to what we are truly feeling. It’s easier to suppress
our emotions than to deal with them, so we may momentarily turn to pleasures
such as alcohol, food, sugar, shopping, and too much television. We may even
numb our hearts. While it’s normal to temporarily seek distractions as a
means of coping with intense emotions, numbing yourself prevents you from
confronting your issues and keeps you from ever finding resolution or peace.
When you are numb, there might be no pain, but there also can be no joy or
healing. The activities that numb you may seem
harmless or pleasurable, but using them diminishes the quality of your life.
Numbing yourself so that you don’t have to feel intense emotions can often
satisfy a surface need while blocking your awareness of a deeper need. You
may find solace in food or shopping when what you really need is spiritual
nourishment. The less you feel, the less alive you feel. Your feelings add
vividness to your experiences and serve to connect you to the world around
you. It is possible to disavow yourself of numbing behaviors a little at a
time, and once again, taste life’s rich flavors. When you sense that you are
engaging in a particular behavior simply to deaden your emotions, stop and
ask yourself why. Examining the feelings that drive you to do this to
yourself can help you understand what is triggering your desire to
emotionally fade out. With each numbing activity that you cut out
of your life, you’ll find yourself being more aware and experiencing a
greater emotional acuity. Senses once shrouded by the fog become sharp and
acute. Traumas and pain long hidden will emerge to the forefront of your
consciousness and reveal themselves so that you can heal them. You’ll
discover a deeper you — a self that is comfortable experiencing and working
through intense emotions with courage and grace. |
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