- from the womb into the world on December 1, 1952,
- from the pall of substance abuse into sentience on November 11, 1996,
- and again from the pall of substance abuse into sentience on October 16, 2010.
"The first principle is that you must not fool yourself — and you are the easiest to fool."
Among all of the individual particulars on which problem substance abusers may differ, I have noticed three common cognitive factors we all share:
- a powerful store of resentments,
- a powerful store of anger and fear,
- and a withering ability to suck all of the habitable atmosphere out of a room into the black hole of our own self-absorption.
We fool ourselves believing "This should never have happened!" We fool ourselves believing "This isn't fair!" We fool ourselves believing "I've got to get even!" We fool ourselves believing "I deserve better!" We fool ourselves believing "my views (or problems) are the most important."
Really? Who says? All of the fore-mentioned presumptions are objectively absurd.
Oh, and there's another cherished core belief most of us are loathe to let go of: "This is so bad I can't stand it!"
The truth is, we can stand it. We just don't want to. And it's better if we just go ahead and stand it—we might learn something valuable. Even if we don't, we're better off ceasing to lie to ourselves in this way. Because the truth of the matter is, we can stand it.
2 comments:
I am in favor of whatever helps people cope. I write here about the things that help ME cope.
Yes, we can.
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