-
Phobias
-
(Recovery
Area 5)
Being
counter-phobic (repressing fears as a way to create chaos). Acting out of repressed
fear in order to do something (using "repressed" fear, only, as the
motivation or logic for doing something).
- Fear
of feeling afraid.
- Fear of
being liked.
- Fear of germs.
- Fear of parents.
- Fear
of authority figures.
- Fear
of getting dirty (I try to remember that God made dirt so it won't hurt).
- Fear
of not locking doors, turning off lights, turning off electrical equipment.
- Fears
of driving.
- Fears of spending
time alone (Feels like no one is there to feed my addiction).
- Fears
of sharing the same space as another person (Standing in a crowded room, standing
in line at the store, stopped in line at a stop light, etc).
- Fear
of eye contact. Fear of looking at someone.
- Fear
of failure (in sex, work, music, knowledge, gaining approval).
- Fear
of hearing. Using chaos and destructive control behaviors to remain separated
from what someone is saying, instead of using detachment skills.
- Fear
of medications and prescription drugs.
- Fear
of eating or drinking.
- Fear
of making a mess.
- Fear of
mistakes.
- Fear of spilling.
- Fear of anger (or of angry
people).
- Fear of breaking
something.
- Fear of being
embarrassed.
- Fear of losing
control.
- Fear of feeling.
- Fear of asking for needs
to be met.
- Fear of setting
boundaries.
- Fear of being
the natural person that I am.
-
Grieving
the"Loss of Self" in Childhood
-
(Recovery
Area 6)
- Releasing
the terror.
- Releasing
the anger and the hurt.
- Allowing
myself to expel repressed pain, fear, and anger (safely).
- What
was done is done and does not have the ability to travel back in time to redo.
- Learning how to discover
myself.
- Forming
an identity.
-
The
Addictive Behavior
-
(Recovery
Area 7)
The Addictive
Behavior is a coping skill learned in a dysfunctional family where one or more
of the parents were addicts. The behavior is:
The
Looking for Something to feel Better.
-
The "Looking" (or seeking) in the behavior is the anxiety.
-
The "Something" in the behavior is the avenue.
-
The "Feel Better" in the behavior is the result.
"Looking"
may be divided into a multitude of actions. The actions will have destructive
control behaviors attached to them. The "Looking" is the anxiety. Children
raised as objects of addiction will feel anxious most of the time. They will feel
compelled to "Look."
The
"Something" could be, sex, food, drugs, approval, control, alcohol,
work, people, gambling, religion, power, cults, money, etc. Whatever the "Something"
is, it is an avenue to feeling "Better." The vehicle on this avenue
is compulsion.
"Feel
Better" may be divided into several results. "Feel Better" could
be to feel safer, feel happier, feel accepted, feel secure, feel less, or feel
more. Sam's life will feel controlled to him or her by the "Looking"
for "Something."
It
should be noted that the avenues are neither good or bad. They are avenues. Some
may be illegal. Some may be considered to be unhealthy. Some are social taboos.
Sam's recovery will depend in part on not judging the avenue.
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