Hey, Nostr…

This is an #introductions post, but it’s not my first npub.

I’ve become quite close with many of you over the course of 2023. I consider a number of you to be real friends.

But I haven’t found the courage to open up some of the personal struggles I’m facing. Partly out of shame, partly out of the fear of validating my failings by putting them in writing.

But what I do know is the love and support and kindness that exists among this crew, and I’m feeling like I could really stand to lean on that energy a bit right now. I’m hopeful that, even through this anon account, there’s room for friendship, freely given.

I’ve struggled with a range of compulsive/risky/addictive behaviors for a long time, but it’s gotten harder lately. It’s the devil I’ve danced with since my teenage years, and it’s been especially difficult lately to align my active behavior with my heart, intuition, and personal goals.

I believe I “trained” my neural pathways to lean on various dopamine/reward pathways in times of stress during my adolescent development - or, to be honest, from a much younger age - and these mental habits have become deeply ingrained.

It’s not one specific “addiction” the way that people often struggle with, but my tendency to fall into patterns of substance abuse and other ego-inflating activities goes through cycles, which I’m just beginning to understand come from very deep, old parts of myself, and it feels like things have been escalating farther outside of a level of baseline acceptability lately.

I can point to various moments of trauma or conditioning that led me to try to self-soothe in these ways, and I’ve developed compassion for the parts of myself that are “trying to help” even in self-destructive ways.

But I’ve had a harder time with everything lately than I have in a long time. I don’t feel able to share this with my partner, but I am recognizing that it may be too much to handle on my own. Because I’ve tried for years. Self-imposed rules aren’t enough, because they don’t heal the broken parts. And I’m afraid that I’m risking the things I hold most dear, including my loved ones and my own self-worth and self-respect, if I don’t find a way through this.

I know some of you have faced things like addiction, trauma, loss, and personal failures. And I’ve seen the beautiful people that you are. I know and recognize that beauty in myself too, but I’m continually undermining my own happiness and fulfillment. I’m learning to pray again, to turn inward and connect with myself. But I’m also deeply stuck enough that I keep ending up in those patterns that hurt my heart and betray my soul.

I don’t even know if anyone will see this. If the default relays on this client have wide reach. If my VPN is effective or if I’ll dox my identity here.

But man… I sure could use a few kind words, advice, or encouragement from others who have been in a similar place before. If you’ve read this far, I already deeply appreciate you. You’re probably one of the friends I’ve made this last year 🫂

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I'll pray for you brother. Take comfort in the word and let God take the wheel. Jesus will make the burden light, we can't do anything in our own, it's his will that guides us.

Be well.

First of all 🫂🫂🫂🫂

I really think you should talk to your partner. It’s not fair for you to have to hide your struggles and it is not fair that that other person doesn’t know you’re struggling internally.

I know nothing, but that’s a strong gut feeling I have.

You’re not alone 🫂🫂🫂

Hey Paulo, thank you 🫂

There’s a part of me that wants to share, that hates the dishonesty and loneliness around my favorite person in the world. But there’s also a real possibility that opening this book would do irreparable damage to the relationship, or that I might do more harm than good, at least at this point in time. I’m hoping to come forward from a stronger place.

But the paradox is trying to manage something alone and “getting better first” is much more difficult, and I know that. You’re also completely right that it isn’t fair to either of us. It’s another layer in all of this…

Really appreciate your support 🤍

Yeah, I understand what you’re saying. I have that same tendency too of trying to fix things on my own first.

I do think that it is a risk you need to take, though.

🫂🫂🫂🫂🫂

🫂🤍

you are not alone 🫂

sounds trite, but it's true

🫂 It doesn’t sound trite. It’s exactly why I felt I could reach out here. Thanks Ava 💜

Wait wait! Is this Loki? We missed you! Love love the insights. If you’re not Loki, we are still excited to have you back 🫂

Everything is going to be okay friend 💜

Not Loki, just a fren. Appreciate your support 🫂

🫂

Hello anon! It seems like you are having a hard time, and your personal struggles look real to me. I am not sure what words could be said to help you on your journey in life, but getting through each day and making minor adjustments toward better is a great start. It will not be easy, it will suck and make you feel bad, but you have the power to overcome all of these and think yourself later for taking the steps in the right direction. This is a first huge step, recognizing what your shortcomings are. The next step is to start chipping away at them. Force yourself to do what you inherently know is good for you. Don’t set goals that are far off in the future and effort. Small steps each day, don’t set final goal, just one day at a time! I know you’ll be able to do it, you’ve already got this far! 🐶🐾🫂🫂🫂

I appreciate the humanity of this post. Although I cannot comprehend the issues you have in particular, I do know that you are not alone. Everybody has some sort of struggle in their lives that they need to overcome. Talking about them is the first step of many. Just know that you are not alone and overcoming challenges is a slow process and it is not a race to the finish line. Good luck fren.

Oh and sorry the nostr:npub137c5pd8gmhhe0njtsgwjgunc5xjr2vmzvglkgqs5sjeh972gqqxqjak37w for replying to your comment instead of the OP.

Little boomer energy there.

Not a problem at all. It felt logically aligned and was a great reinforcement of mine 🐶🐾🫂

You’re completely right. I’m hopeful that opening up, reaching out, and learning to ask for help even in a small way like this can move me in the right direction. Thanks for your reply 🫂

🫂 appreciate your encouragement, Fishcake. Thank you fren 🤍

🫂🫂🫂

🙏🫂

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🫂❤️

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Hey bro. Been there and worse.

Praying kind of works, but meditation is what you need.

That and going out, talking to strangers, and being in touch with nature, under the sun.

Do these things, and you will be way way better, trust me.

Thank you 🤍 very sound advice. I’m glad it sounds like you’ve worked through some stuff and come out the other side. Meditation for sure (and probably some therapy). 🫂

🫂 many of us are working to become better versions of ourselves, I'm sure.

I personally have fallen off the horse many times, but I forgive myself and I'm finding it easier to get back in the saddle.

Hey 🫂 appreciate your supportive reply

Life is difficult. Luckily very few paths have not been walked by others willing to share their experience and lessons.

I’d suggest starting down your journey by reading this introduction to the twelve steps and twelve traditions.

https://www.aa.org/sites/default/files/2022-01/en_tt_contents.pdf

following on, you can continue with the rest of the book, located here-

https://www.aa.org/twelve-steps-twelve-traditions

You may find that while its focus is alcohol, its principles can be applied to many of the issues you described. The struggle of life will always exist, and you will need to lean on others as you have here, especially your loved ones, to keep you on the path you choose to walk.

Austin, thank you for this. I’ve explored the 12 step concept (in a very preliminary way) a few times and recognize the value. Been trying to implement the first stages in an organic way recently, but I think what I’m coming up against is that trying to work through it solo is extremely challenging. And I completely agree it’s applicable to any range of dopamine-inducing behaviors. Thanks for replying 🤍

Well, sounds like you need to lean into step five, admitting to yourself, god(higher power), and another human being, the exact nature of your wrongs. Another human being means in person, face to face- exact nature of your wrongs means not doing what you did here, which is generalized, but specific.

I’d suggest this person be your partner.

Or, join an AA group, start to go, and lean into the group instead of being solo. AA will most likely accept you, but this process of growth will always be extremely difficult, and you will probably fail attempting to grow alone, so you must share your experience with another human in person and lean on their compassion to achieve the growth you desire.

Have you tried what some people might call slightly more esoteric things like Shamanic assisted meditation or biomagnetism or reiki? They sound odd to some people but I found really interesting as found it opened up a lot of memories from past and really helped ditch some negative behaviours. I think they help with self forgiveness. Maybe not for everyone but still very interesting experiences

Hypnosis is something to add to this list

Try a 3-5 day water fast for starters

Fasting doesn’t feel like an intuitive “fit” for me at this stage, but I appreciate it nonetheless and will revisit in the future 🙏🫂

Be careful your mind is not being mined, its a great slave but a terrible master. Fasting sets you free

I feel ya. This could be my note some days. The past can be hard to deal with in the present. Stay strong. 🫂

Appreciate you Ryan, thanks for replying and for your support 🫂🤍

Sounds harder than it is and heals deeper than you expect: Love & forgiving.

Had to deal with similar issues. In an environment where you feel loved it might be easier. Accept that it’s an issuer right now. When these past situations, where you couldn’t fight it, come up in your mind, forgive yourself. Forgive yourself. Forgive yourself. & Love yourself. And what helped me also was forming my dreams & create goals from them. When the dream is so big, you can’t but follow it. I hope you can free yourself from all physical addiction so at least this is gone and you can focus on your mind. Maybe go for the peaceful life 🤍

You’re not a failure, absolutely not! And therefore being ashamed in front of your partner makes it harder to heal. Instead of a failure, you’re a hurt soul, trying to heal. Allow yourself to heal. Building strength is not made from today to another, it takes time. Give yourself time. 🤍🙏🏼 you got this🫂🫂

nostr:npub1995y964wmxl94crx3ksfley24szjr390skdd237ex9z7ttp5c9lqld8vtf put it so well, you’ve got this and we got you friend 🫂

Franny 🫂 I always appreciate your wisdom. Thank you for the thoughtful and kind support 🤍

“Come to me, all of you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, because I am lowly and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls."🫂

- Jesus (Matthew 11:2:8-29)

This also came to mind for me

🙏 thanks for sharing this, Duncan

Grant yourself forgiveness, embrace self-love, and stay strong 🫂💚💪

Working on all of these, thank you my friend 🫂

🫂 Posting this is a great start, I’m shure… Thanks for sharing!

🫂🙏🤍

I don’t have any great advice for you, but I want the best for you and I sincerely hope you find a way through this. Talking about it out loud seems like an important step. There are a bunch of people who want the best for you and are rooting for you to slay your dragons.

Thank you Zach 🫂🤍 gotta start somewhere

I think you're going down the right path in relying on others and being gentle with yourself, keep going.

AA saved the life of someone very dear to me. Like many addicts they are addicted to multiple things not only substances... shopping, working. I went to Al-Anon meetings for friends/family/partners of addicts, they were useful for understanding & healing myself as much as helping to understand addiction.

Love.

I’m very much considering some form of group work like this. Really appreciate the reply 🤍

Awesome!

And I appreciate you sharing your story.

The world needs more of this.

Thank you 🫂 didn’t even realize people were still seeing this note 🤍

Sending good wishes and sympathy!

I've (professionally) coached folks through some of these challenges and will put a few suggestions in a reply to this post.

I have no experience with drug addictions, so these suggestions can apply to other addictive behavior but not sure about hard drugs. Some folks use them successfully for alcohol but I haven't coached that.

Rather than think that you have to heal past trauma (which is likely an overwhelming thought and tends to make us spin in more unwanted behavior), you can make a plan relative to the behaviors and allow the feelings that come up when the plan and your cravings collide. Simple in theory, challenging but effective in practice.

An example with addictive/emotional eating: make a detailed explicit plan for tomorrow's food. Generally best not to make it super austere, just something you'd like to stick to tomorrow.

Tomorrow rolls around, and let's say that all is well - you've followed your plan to a T - until it's 8pm and you desperately want the snacks that you usually have around that time. Your brain is used to the dopamine hit, your body is used to the sugar, and everything in you is screaming that you MUST have the snacks.

That feeling of desperation is just a sensation in your body. If you sit still for a moment you can start to identify it: tightness in the chest, a feeling like someone is pushing closed the entire upper part of your back, rocks in your stomach... something like that.

Here's the good news: the feeling rarely lasts more than 90 seconds and it's usually around 60 seconds. Your brain will tell you that it's an emergency, that the feeling will surely kill you, but you can learn to just sit and allow the urge to move through you. Don't analyze it (not "this is because XXX"), don't fight it, don't argue with it, don't mock yourself for having it, don't try to distract yourself from it. Just allow it.

Over time - as you practice allowing those urges without acting on them - they start to lose power. You basically re-train your brain so that it stops interpreting the denial of the urge as an existential threat. People who practice this find that they can allow intense feelings even while going about their day, but in the beginning it helps to stop everything and just sit gently with yourself as you let the wave move through you.

If allowing the urge seems unbearable, get curious about the feelings: the sensation of rocks in your stomach - what color are the rocks? what shape? are they round or jagged? And so on. It keeps you in an observer state without resistance.

I've seen this work for porn, eating, destructive relationship habits. I know that it can work for alcohol but haven't seen it directly. The benefits go beyond the dissolution of the habit; you start to develop a kinder relationship with yourself based partly on respect and gratitude for keeping your word to yourself (by sticking to the plan).

The 24 hours in advance is important because you need enough distance from the urges to be thinking clearly about what's in your best interest.

Hard to put into words how much I appreciate and relate to this guidance 💜

For me, it’s not as much a dependence on a particular substance or behavior, but a predilection toward various ones. Learning about the internal states that cause me to reach for whatever that escape may be.

I’ve done some work in the past around sitting with myself in those uncomfortable moments, but I’m out of practice when it comes to interrupting the more compulsive responses.

Thank you so much for your support 💜

In your coaching/experience, how do you usually advise someone with a variety of addictive behaviors? Ie working on the most damaging thing first, or working on “everything” at the psychological habit level?

I advise clients to work on one thing at a time. It can be what you perceive as the most damaging behavior, but you can also choose the one that feels most manageable to tackle.

It may seem odd, but the order doesn't really matter. The skills you develop in one area will eventually help in others. What matters is that you pick one and stay on your own side as you move through those feelings/urges.

Good luck! it's definitely do-able. I probably said this above, but I wouldn't approach this as needing to resolve all past trauma to address the behaviors. That will feel impossible! You can be someone with a rich and messy past who has destructive habits and you can be someone with a rich and messy past who doesn't have destructive habits. It can be helpful to get therapy for trauma (that's not something I do) but addressing your behaviors doesn't depend on it.

Hey, thank you for so many thoughtful and helpful answers. I’ve spent a fair amount of time working with a great therapist on “old stuff” and have some practice with the self-love and understanding methods. Of course, there are significant aspects of myself that still need a heck of a lot more of that.

I’ve spent the last couple of days sitting with some of these impulses and noticing (and note-taking), to try and stabilize and get more present and less reactive to certain inputs. I feel like I’ve identified the stuff I need to change/heal the most, so definitely focusing on those. It’s also stuff I have less experience working with and have only very recently begun to understand better.

Thank you again 🤍🙏🤍

Also -one thing I forgot to mention: the plan should be written down and each guideline extremely clear. Clear enough that following it is a simple yes or no and could be objectively verified.

Figure that when you’re clarifying your intentions 24 hours in advance, you’re tapping into your ability to think in terms of your long-term well being (your future, including how you want to your actions to support your loved ones, etc). In the moment of dealing with the urge for the destructive behavior, it’s almost a different you: your primal or lizard brain is in control. It interprets the impending discomfort as true danger and it will rationalize, justify, wheedle, bargain etc in the moment to get the dopamine hit it thinks you need.

So it’s important that whatever plan you make in advance is so clear that there’s no possibility of blurring the lines in the moment.

🫂

🫂

Accept your current patterns. Don't set hard rules. Focus on building slightly but sustainable better patterns and habits.

Realize that you are blessed in many ways and spend the awkward time every morning counting a few blessings that you normally take for granted. Things like I have 2 legs that work, I don't have cancer or any of 10 other debilitating conditions. I have high intelligence and awareness. These are are blessings that not everyone has.

Also throughout the day focus on awareness of negative thoughts that trigger your addictive behaviors. SLOWLY try to build a habit of reconditioning those thoughts by building a practice of identifying them and pairing/replacing them with a more constructive thought.

Finally, expect yourself to fail and fall often. Plan a mental strategy that is constructive ahead of time for when this happens.

Thanks for responding 🫂 working on the gratitude piece. It’s a hard balance to strike - between allowing room to grow and reducing damaging behaviors. Almost seems like the hardest or most overwhelming task is changing the deeply-set psychological patterns that give way to regrettable actions.

Will be praying, it ain't easy, but you can do it.

Thank you, my friend 💜🙏🫂

We all struggle in our own ways from time to time. We can get through it via our support systems. I'm sure it feels great to get this off your chest and see random acts of encouragement. I would urge you to take the next steps and open up to others either in person or over Nostr from your true self, so that you can begin the next phase of the healing and recovery process, on the road to better mental health. This is a fantastic first step. You've got this. 🫂

Hey Derek, thank you for the support. You’re absolutely right that sharing helps. Acknowledging that this is real is hard, but feels absolutely necessary. And I know you’re right re: sharing in-person. Considering different options/starting points. Appreciate you man 🫂

None of us are getting out of here alive regardless of what we do or don't do. Be kind to yourself and others and everything else will fall into place. Lastly, we all need to find a way to enjoy what little time we have on planet earth.

Training that muscle to be present and kind to the parts of myself that shouldn’t be in the driver’s seat is absolutely my work right now. Appreciate your support 🤍

🫂 be gentle on yourself. your gut/intuition knows the direction. the hard part is following.

the 24hours a day concept imo can be viewed similar to 10 min tick tock next block idea. each block you stay out of active addiction you’re available for this “miracle” that so many experience. bcuz it is a fucking miracle when you take intense pain & pleasure junkies and they manage to change ⚖️

gratefully 🙌 i strung together a few of those blocks and passed an anniversary last wednesday. life today is vastly better than the defeated soul that came in. to celebrate i listened to this pod and connected 🤝 with 🍺 🍷 💉 💊 community.

https://fountain.fm/episode/r4zkUgUIxGrlyxWeUoIW

i’m here to offer support, experience, strength & hope 🫂

TJ, thank you. I’ll listen to this episode today. The day-at-a-time model makes a lot of sense. It feels almost harder to heal the mental habits as it is to change the behaviors that result from those habits. Congratulations on your anniversary - sending love and support to you as well 🤍

Hey, Maybe you don't need to be analyzing every instance in your past that you think might mean something today. How about you look ahead instead? How about you do something different? Get involved with a charity in your town.. Volunteer. Become part of the community fabric. And exercise. Walk out the door, and don't stop for a half hour. Then turn around and go back home. When you finish exercising you get a feeling of accomplishment. That's what you need right now. Go for it!! Don't look back.

🫂🫂🫂

Understanding where you are helps forward movement even at times when you feel like you are going backwards. Eventually when you are in alignment, you will find the path that feels fitting for you. xo Keep us posted!

I feel this very deeply and can relate so much. Our society is broken, our morals are broken, our values are broken. I bet almost every person that is alive can relate to this.

I’ve struggled with lots of addictions and habits.

I’ve turned to pray, and told myself I would never do this actions again, and I have done it again.

It’s a beautiful struggle, it’s alright to cry, to feel like you have fucked up and don’t know where when or how it’s going to get better.

I appreciate you reaching out, there’s lots of caring people in this community.

I’m not sure if I can do anything except to write something. Tell you you’re not crazy, and to keep trying and it’s alright to backslide as long as you keep failing forward.

I can kick somebody for you if that helps. I kick pretty good.

You've made the first step by reaching out. You can get through this. Support from friends, even anonymously can be a help. Don't be afraid to lean on your friends. We're here to prop you up.

Absolute stranger but I wish you strength from everything around you.

Although it can be hard, opening up about it to your partner can be SUCH a breakthrough and blessing, and will (hopefully) only serve to strengthen the bond and increase future trust and communication.

This is at least my experience.

Wishing all the very best 🙏