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  • What is addiction, really? It is a sign, a signal, a symptom of distress. It is a language

  • that tells us about a plight that must be understood.”

  • Alice Miller, Breaking Down the Wall of Silence In the Buddhist's conception of the universe,

  • the wheel of life revolves through 6 realms, each representing a different approach to

  • existing in the world. One of these, the realm of the hungry ghosts, is inhabited bycreatures

  • with scrawny necks, small mouths, emaciated limbs, and large, bloated, empty bellies.”

  • (Gabor Mate, In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts) This is the realm where the addicts of the

  • world reside. For no matter how much the addict consumes, ingests, or possesses, they always

  • want moreeven as they experience a decline in health and a ruining of their relationships

  • and finances.

  • “I lose myself when caught in one of my addictive spirals. Gradually I feel an ebbing

  • of moral strength and experience myself as hollow. Emptiness stares out from behind my

  • eyes.”

  • Gabor Maté, In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts In this video, drawing from Gabor Mate's

  • book In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts, we will investigate the nature and roots of addiction.

  • Addictions can never truly replace the life needs they temporarily displace”, writes

  • Mate. “The false needs they serve, no matter how often they are gratified, cannot leave

  • us fulfilled. The brain can never, as it were, feel that it has had enough, that it can relax

  • and get on with other essential business. It's as if after a full meal you were left

  • starving and had to immediately turn your efforts to procuring food again.”

  • Gabor Maté, In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts Mate defines an addiction asany repeated

  • behavior, substance-related or not, in which a person feels compelled to persist, regardless

  • of its negative impact on his life and the lives of others.” (Gabor Maté, In the Realm

  • of Hungry Ghosts)

  • When thinking of addictions, it is typical to focus on substance addictions. However,

  • behavioral addictions are also common and can be just as destructive to the individual's

  • life. Compulsive social media, pornography, or video game use; gambling, sex, shopping,

  • or even activities such as exercise or work, can potentially turn into addictions, and

  • so as Mate further clarifies:

  • Any passion can become an addiction; but then how to distinguish between the two? The

  • central question is: who's in charge, the individual or their behavior? It's possible

  • to rule a passion, but an obsessive passion that a person is unable to rule is an addictionIf

  • in doubt, ask yourself one simple question: given the harm you're doing to yourself

  • and others, are you willing to stop? If not, you're addicted. And if you're unable

  • to renounce the behavior or to keep your pledge when you do, you're addicted.”

  • Gabor Maté, In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts There has long been a debate as to what produces

  • an addiction. Is it the person or the thing? While some have explained addiction as a problem

  • that resides in people, a more accurate explanation is that addiction is the result of an interaction

  • between subject and object. An addiction arises when an individual regularly craves a change

  • in their subjective, or felt, state of being, and becomes dependent on an object or activity

  • to produce the desired experiential change. In her book Addiction by Design, Natasha Dull

  • Schultz explains:

  • Just as certain individuals are more vulnerable to addiction than others, it is also the case

  • that some objects, by virtue of their pharmacological or structural characteristics, are more likely

  • than others to trigger or accelerate an addiction. Their distinctive potency lies in the capacity

  • to engender the sort of compelling subjective shift on which some individuals come to depend.”

  • Natasha Dull Schultz, Addiction by Design But given that we are, and always will be,

  • surrounded by objects and activities that have an addictive potential, in this video

  • we are going to explore the personal side of the addictive equation and investigate

  • what it is that makes some individuals more susceptible to addictions than others.

  • Gabor Mate spent his career working with hard drug addicts in Vancouver's downtown eastside,

  • and as he argues, every addiction, severe or mild, substance-related or behavioral,

  • is an attempt to find relief from distress and emotional pain.

  • Addictions always originate in pain, whether felt openly or hidden in the unconsciousFar

  • more than a quest for pleasure, chronic substance use is the addict's attempt to escape distress.”

  • Gabor Maté, In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts The forms of pain that lead an individual

  • into an addiction are numerous and varied. Some become addicts as a way to self-medicate

  • depression, insecurities or anxiety disorders; others to cope with highly stressful jobs

  • or relationships; still others to ward off the pain of aimlessness or despair over the

  • meaninglessness of their lives. Gabor Mate asked a 57 year old who had been addicted

  • to drugs since he was a teen, why he continued to use:

  • “I don't know, I'm just trying to fill a void,” he replied. “Emptiness in my

  • life. Boredom. Lack of direction.”

  • Gabor Maté, In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts In many cases, the emotional pain one seeks

  • to escape from through an addiction has roots in the pastspecifically, in childhood.

  • Studies have shown that the majority of hard drug addicts grew up in abusive households.

  • All parental difficulties reflect themselves without fail in the psyche of the child, sometimes

  • with pathological results.”

  • Carl Jung, The Development of Personality Parental influence on the child's development

  • and susceptibility to addictions later in life cannot be overstated. For just as the

  • child in the uterus is embedded in, and completely dependent on, the mother's body, so too

  • in the first years of life, when the brain is most malleable, a child is emotionally

  • and psychologically fused with the parents. A dysfunctional childhood spent bearing the

  • brunt of parental anger and abuse imprints the deep pain of trauma on the child's mind

  • and disrupts brain development in ways that increase the likelihood of addiction. Mate

  • explains:

  • It's just as many substance addicts say: they self-medicate to soothe their emotional

  • painbut more than that, their brain development was sabotaged by their traumatic experiences.

  • The systems subverted by addictionthe dopamine and opioid circuits, the limbic or emotional

  • brain, the stress apparatus and the impulse-control areas of the cortexjust cannot develop

  • normally in such circumstances.”

  • Gabor Maté, In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts But it is not just childhood trauma which

  • makes one more susceptible to addiction. Children who grew up with emotionally cold or distant

  • caregivers are also much more likely to turn to addictions in adulthood. The psychologist

  • Allan Schore called this situation of parental emotional absenceproximal separation”;

  • the parent is proximate, he or she is physically present and satiates all the child's physical

  • needs. Yet due to stress, depression, or other internal demons, the parent does not nurture

  • the child psychologically or emotionally, and as Mate explains further:

  • “A child can also feel emotional distress when the parent is physically present but

  • emotionally unavailablein normal circumstances a child who senses emotional separation will

  • seek to reconnect with the parentShould the parent not respond, or not respond adequatelythe

  • child will be left to his own inadequate coping mechanismsfor example, rocking or thumb-sucking

  • as ways of self-soothing or tuning out to escape distress. Children who have not received

  • the attentive presence of the parent areat greater risk for seeking chemical satisfaction

  • from external sources later in life.”

  • Gabor Maté, In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts But in the modern day, even individuals who

  • were blessed with a nourishing childhood are not fully immune to addiction. For just like

  • during the fall of Rome when the people, en masse, turned to pleasure-seeking to alleviate

  • the anguish brought on by witnessing a dying culture, so too in our day many turn to addictions

  • as a way of self-medicating the despair stimulated by a bleak view of the future of society.

  • Add on the fact that to conform in the modern world is to adopt consumerism as a way of

  • life and to compulsively use technology, social media, and entertainment as a means of escaping

  • feelings of powerlessness and emptiness, and what you have is the perfect social storm

  • that has created a crisis of addiction.

  • “A sense of deficient emptiness pervades our entire culture. The drug addict is more

  • painfully conscious of this void than most peopleMany of us resemble the drug addict

  • in our ineffectual efforts to fill in the spiritual black hole, the void at the center,

  • where we have lost touch with our souls, our spiritwith those sources of meaning and

  • value that are not contingent or fleeting. Our consumerist, acquisition-, action-, and

  • image-mad culture only serves to deepen the hole, leaving us emptier than before.”

  • Gabor Maté, In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts Given the number of people who grow up in

  • abusive or emotionally absent households, coupled with the corrupt state of society,

  • it should come as no surprise that many people turn to drugs, alcohol, and behavioral addictions

  • as a way to cope with life. This turning is not totally irrational, nor ineffective. For

  • addictions do work; at least temporarily; they are highly effective at easing distress

  • and emotional pain. Mate notes of a hard drug addict who reported that: “The reason I

  • do drugs is so I don't feel thefeelings I feel when I don't do drugs.” Or as Vincent

  • Felitti explained:

  • Dismissing addictions asbad habitsorself-destructive behaviorcomfortably

  • hides their functionality in the life of the addict.”

  • Vincent Felitti Addictions are not only effective in providing

  • relief from distress and emotional pain, as indulgence can also temporarily lift one out

  • of the monotony or misery of everyday life and into experiences laden with excitement,

  • meaning, and bliss. Thomas de Quincey, a 19th century English writer and self-professed

  • opium addict explained that:

  • The subtle powers lodged in this mighty drug, tranquilize all irritations of the nervous

  • system … sustain through twenty-four hours the else drooping animal energies.…all-conquering

  • opiumThou only givest these gifts to man; and thou hast the keys of Paradise.”

  • Thomas de Quincey, Confessions of an English Opium-Eate

  • The early 20th century psychologist William James elaborates on the powers of alcohol

  • to not only take theedge off”, but also to induce a state which simulates a spiritual

  • experienceat least until the alcohol poisoning catches up with the mind and body,

  • or as he writes:

  • The sway of alcohol over mankind is unquestionably due to its power to stimulate the mystical

  • faculties of human natureSobriety diminishes, discriminates, and says no; drunkenness expands,

  • unites, and says yes. It is in fact the great exciter of the Yes function in manit is

  • part of the deeper mystery and tragedy of life that whiffs and gleams of something that

  • we immediately recognize as excellent should be vouchsafed to so many of us only in the

  • fleeting earlier phases of what in its totality is so degrading a poisoning.”

  • William James, The Varieties of Religious Experience

  • While addictions can work in the short-term, in becoming dependent on shortcuts to emotional

  • relief and bliss a price is paid over time. The longer we persist in an addiction, the

  • more our tolerance grows and the more we become dependent on the substance or activity in

  • order to feel any positive emotions at all. Slowly, but surely, the addiction becomes

  • the focal point of our life, and everything else which could provide lasting fulfillment

  • our health, relationships, creativity, a career, a life purposefades into the

  • periphery.

  • What is more, addiction changes the structure of the brain in ways that undermine our capacity

  • for voluntary control. When caught in the grip of an addiction we often find ourselves

  • in what is calledbrain lock” – our actions follow our addictive cravings all

  • the while one part of our mind watches attentively, yet helplessly, knowing full well we are destroying

  • our mind, body, and potential.

  • The heart of addiction is dependency, excessive dependency, unhealthy dependencyunhealthy

  • in the sense of unwhole, dependency that disintegrates and destroys.”

  • Sam Portaro Given the death-grip of addiction, the vital

  • question arises: what is the possibility of overcoming an addiction? The problem facing

  • any attempt at a renewed, addiction free-life, is that the very apparatus that needs to heal,

  • the brain, is the thing which, in an addiction, is damaged. And as Mate cautions:

  • The worse the addiction is, the greater the brain abnormality and the greater the

  • biological obstacles to opting for health.”

  • Gabor Maté, In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts Luckily, our brains are remarkably resilient.

  • Even well into old age it is possible for the brain to rewire itself in ways that allow

  • one to live, perhaps for the first time, a fulfilling, healthy, and addiction-free life.

  • And in subsequent videos, we are going to dive further into the nature of addiction

  • and explore some insights into how we can facilitate renewal and remove ourselves, once

  • and for all, from the realm of the hungry ghosts.

  • Not every story has a happy endingbut the discoveries of science, the teachings

  • of the heart, and the revelations of the soul all assure us that no human being is ever

  • beyond redemption. The possibility of renewal exists so long as life exists. How to support

  • that possibility in others and in ourselves is the ultimate question.”

  • Gabor Maté, In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts

What is addiction, really? It is a sign, a signal, a symptom of distress. It is a language

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