Paul Summers Jr.
Good God Man!
Obviously, … wait. Nothing is obvious regarding the topic of Spirituality. It is highly individualistic. It is achieved through no certain, easily definable course. It is ever-changing discovery. It is found both in action and inaction.
Spirituality is not religion, it’s different. It is transcendent. Sam Harris, a neuroscientist and author of Waking Up: A Guide to Spirituality Without Religion, explains:
“Spirituality must be distinguished from religion—because people of every faith, and on none, have had the same sorts of spiritual experiences.”
As far as a definition, I’m going to apply how spirituality is used in recovery. Spirituality is the act of being selfless. It’s getting out of our own way long enough to allow a process greater than ourselves to work through us for the benefit of others. To help others. To come to the aid of others. To be of service.
To take part in unselfish acts. Some of these that are the most rewarding: serving our Higher Power, our fellow humans, and ourselves.
For this article, I’m addressing when the act of spirituality comes to being of service, to helping, to connecting.
As addicts, alcoholics, overeaters, and co-dependents, we will probably always want to take back our will. We’ll probably always want to isolate. We’ll probably always want to resist change, especially when it entails happiness – especially when it entails goals which were just completed – especially when it comes to dreams getting close to becoming true. Other times, our disease surfaces just in time to rob us of opportunities like opening up to more choices or doors for ourselves. As addicts, we’ll probably always want to resist that.
We’ll probably always want to cut ourselves off from feelings, or cut out feelings entirely; from interests and from engagement with others – with anyone – sometimes even ourselves.
As addicts we’ll probably always want to run back to what we are familiar with. Or … RUN!
Running away is usually my go-to. I continue to naturally create pathways in which the end result is just to have an escape hatch. My brain manufactures so many different seething, untrue, avenues down which the denial is so believable, I take the side-tracking bait. The end result is always not facing what needs to be faced because it’s not on my terms or on my time or I don’t think I’m ready. None of that is spiritual—they are all symptoms of self-will.
I’ve discovered that I play this game with myself and others where I can’t admit to anyone what I really want. I call it a game because it is tricky; it comes from deep inside. It’s complexly woven into my being, something of a labyrinth, and not always noticeably evident.
I’m either afraid of being selfish; an old behavior I’ve identified as one of my shortcomings—an instigator working throughout my addiction. Or I’m afraid that I’m not worthy. Or, and this is the worst one … this game that I play with myself that I can’t reveal to anyone what it is I want the most … the fear behind it is that I’m afraid I won’t get what I want. It’s as if I’m cursed. The fear takes such a strong hold that it impedes me from trying. But instead of admitting this, I blame circumstances and people and myself. This form of taking control of my will drives me away from being spiritual.
Something happened this morning. I really intended to get some writing done. I’ve been working on this memoir. I had no idea when I began writing this how intensive the work would be, but now I know. I have such high expectations of this manuscript. There’s so much to the process. It takes dedication, involvement, and deep decision-making. My utmost desire/goal is to craft in a particular way because I want it to help people.
The problem was that there was a lot of noise and movement in the house this morning with my kids and my cats. I love my kids, and I love my cats. But some mornings, like today, it gets to be too much. It gets loud and I run out the ability to focus and concentrate. This morning I had high hopes of meeting my goals by getting some much needed editing done. It didn’t happen. I don’t know if it’s the addict disease in my head or just the way my brain addresses things, but my attitude of it was, “There it is! There’s my curse! I can never get what I want.” (** listen to my podcast on self-talk**)
I took a step back to realize that when you live spiritually, there are only selfless actions. It took me a little while to calm down from that and redirect my focus. And here I am writing this. If I can grind my way through the rabbit hole to find a solution, you can too. I suggest that you give yourself that break. Give yourself that time. It will come.
Too many times, way too often and way too easily, I’ll end up in a place of self-hate. I’ll get mad at everyone within earshot. I’ll slam doors. I’ll hide in my room. I won’t tell anyone I love them as they or I leave the house. Wherever I go, I’m right back in self-hate - very familiar place for me.
When we are living spiritually, there are only selfless actions. So I tried acting ‘as if.’ I went through the motions, my next actions, as if I were okay. I made it a point to tell everyone I love them before they left for the day. What changed is that I took into account my behavior and the effect it was likely going to have on everyone if I continued acting upon it. Then I changed it.
Yes, I’m human. Yes, I’m an addict. It takes courage. It takes a lot of courage to accept the freedoms of recovery. Once we do, our choices are no longer made for us by a bottle, by a baggie, or by knee-jerk reactions to circumstances. Even if we want them to be.
Raising kids can be an exception to this at times. But even with raising kids, just have a change of attitude by being aware that raising them is something we get to do in recovery. During my first three months of recovery I was also working diligently on regaining some level of custody of my daughter. I know what the alternative is. I know what it’s like to not get to be in my child’s life and it SUCKED. It was definitely the most difficult time I’ve ever had. There was a lot of pain and a lot of thoughts of giving up.
To any parent going through not having your kids, pondering the act of being committed to living clean and sober one day at a time, let me tell you, you CAN do it. You can! There’s no end to the rewards, even as hard as it is parenting sometimes, it’s so much better than the alternative. If you are living in that alternative right now, I suggest that you take any action to connect with people who are honestly living recovery.
Whether you know it or not, you are helping yourself right now by reading this. Or when you read recovery literature or listen to a recovery podcast. You are on the right path. No one will say it’s easy but it can be simple.
I’m going to close with two things:
1) There are a lot of new beginnings and a lot of unexpected, difficult to define stages of growth, which come with recovery and living spiritually. For some people this is especially challenging. I’m one of those ‘some people.’ Connections, on a spiritual level, are crucial for getting out of our own way. It’s something that I have to work on, that I have to be open to, and that I have to be willing to listen for daily, sometimes hourly.
There are times when I become closed off. I’ll go to a meeting or listen to a podcast, or find a meme or a post on social media, and I’ll be like, “blah, blah, blah.” Eyes glazed over, I’ll have some thought like, “Ugh! More whiney recovery stuff, no thanks.” I’m guessing we all get there at some point. But what helps is to realize in that moment that I’m not in the middle of this recovery thing. I’m hanging out on the edge at that point. It’s risky. I’m risking falling off the edge and losing my sobriety.
2) It’s during those times, I’ve got to look to prayer. I get a lot of practical recovery knowledge from the It Works How and Why literature of Narcotics Anonymous. There is so much great recovery wisdom there. But mostly, I get it from interacting with people. I get a great deal out of going to meetings and sharing about what’s going on with me. Because I’ve heard that we can only get fed by opening our mouths. Because it’s there I find people just like me; just like you.
For many of us, getting out of our own way is especially challenging. Prayer is an action of clarity and direction. There is no right or wrong way. Even if you don’t know what or how to pray, or what to listen for, taking a moment to try it shows your willingness to be open. We can’t be filled with new thoughts, knowledge, wisdom, spiritual principles, if we’re closed off. Will you take a moment to pray? One minute to silently connect with Spirit. Try it for a minute.
<pause for prayer>
I hope that was a nice minute for you.
It’s always nice for me just to stop. We don’t have to be goal-oriented; there’s no place for expectations during our moment of connection with Spirit. Sometimes it’s nice to just take a break from everything for one minute. Life throws a lot at us all the time. Praying, even if to you that means just being quiet for a moment; we all find our own way with praying. And what seems right may gradually lead you to the next right way to do it. The essential component is to have some quiet time to just listen to what our Spirit tells us. Or to just listen to quiet.
Thank you for being open. I’m here for you.
Remember, Be Good To You.