Creative
Ways to Transform Challenges:
Dealing
With Feelings
What
are Soft Addictions? Judith
Wright
Excerpted from There Must Be
More Than This: Finding More Life, Love, and Meaning By Overcoming Your Soft
Addictions (Broadway Books,
NY, 2003)
Soft addictions can be habits, compulsive behaviors, or recurring moods or
thought patterns. Their essential defining quality is that they satisfy a
surface want but ignore or block the satisfaction of a deeper need. They numb
us to feelings and spiritual awareness by substituting a superficial high, or a
sense of activity, for genuine feeling or accomplishment.
Many soft addictions
involve necessary behaviors like eating, reading, and sleeping. They become
soft addictions when we overdo them and when they are used for more than their
intended purpose. Soft addictions, unlike hard ones such as drugs and alcohol,
are seductive in their softness. E-mailing, shopping, and
talking on the phone seem like perfectly harmless, pleasurable activities while
we're engaged in them. When we realize how much time and energy we
devote to them, however, we can see how they compromise the quality of our
lives.
Though I'm going to
provide you with a list of common soft addictions, you should understand that
an almost infinite variety exists. A soft addiction can be as idiosyncratic as
any individual personality. While a universal soft addiction might be
television watching, a more personal form might be doodling
geometric figures or counting things for no reason.
Some people have
difficulty differentiating an occasional behavior or fleeting mood from a soft
addiction. If you watch television one hour per day, is it only a harmless
habit, while if you watch three hours per day (the national average), is it a soft addiction?
As a general rule, keep
the following in mind: The motivation and the function of your behavior
determine whether or not it's a soft addiction. For instance, television can be
a window into new worlds, stimulating viewers with new ideas and leading them
into meaningful pursuits -- or it can be a means of escape. I know a woman who
is very selective in what she watches, using television as a tool to learn
about life in foreign cultures and to understand animal behavior. She employs
television watching as a tool to gain knowledge. Another woman I know vegges out in front of the television daily, channel
surfing and letting the programs wash over her. She leads a tough, hectic work
life, and she mistakenly believes her viewing habits relieve her of stress.
Rarely does she have a particular program she wants to watch or a real reason
for watching it.
As you compare the two
television watchers, the differences in motivation and function are clear. The
first woman's motivation revolves around very specific learning goals; the
second woman's motivation is to numb herself. The
first woman uses television to enhance her life; the second woman uses it to
escape from her life.
Sometimes, however, the
line between soft addictions and productive activities is less clear. Here are
a few clues to help you define this line and recognize that your behavior is a
soft addiction:
Zoning
out. One way of identifying a soft
addiction is to ask if you zone out while you're doing it. When we are zoned
out, we are not fully engaged. We may be checked out or have a "nobody's
home" look on our face. Zoning out suggests that the goal of our activity
is numbness. Although we're physically engaged in an activity, our mind is
elsewhere. After the activity, we often don't remember what we've done, seen,
or read. While this often happens when watching television, it can also occur
while shopping, working, having superficial conversations, or doing other
activities.
Avoiding
feelings. Does a given activity or mood
grant you a reprieve from your emotions, especially intense emotions? We avoid
feelings by being numb, enhancing the feelings we like to the exclusion of
others, or even wallowing in one unpleasant feeling to avoid another. Many of
us are uncomfortable with our deepest feelings, whether positive or negative.
We don't know how to deal productively with our sadness or anger (or, in some
instances, with our joy), so we find an activity or a mood that facilitates an
emotion-muting state, leaving us with subdued sadness, low, level anger, or
other unsettled feelings.
Compulsiveness. Does an irresistible urge drive
you to indulge a particular behavior or mood? Do you feel compelled to do,
have, or buy something, even though you know you don't need it? This may be
accompanied by a helpless, powerless feeling. You may be unable to stop or
reduce the amount of time spent on a given activity. Though you may find some
transient pleasure, you often don't feel good about yourself after engaging in
it. You persist in following the routine, saying to yourself, I'll never do
this again. Though you try to stop, you can't.
Denial/Rationalization. If you're defensive or make
excuses for your behavior, chances are it's a soft addiction. Denial is a
refusal to acknowledge and rationalization is an excuse or explanation we use
to justify a compulsive behavior. Both blunt our self-awareness and lower our
expectations of ourselves. To make our actions acceptable, we ignore, conceal,
or gloss over the real motive or cost. Either we maintain that a habit isn't a
problem or we rationalize why it's an acceptable or necessary way to spend our
time. "What's so bad about a few cups of coffee?" is a typical
rationalization. We may deny that the hours spent surfing the Net are a waste
of time and energy. The impulse to deny or rationalize a routine suggests a
soft addiction.
Stinking
thinking.
Related to denial and rationalization, "stinking thinking" is
distorted thinking based on mistaken beliefs. Overgeneralizing,
magnifying, minimizing, justifying, blaming, and emotional reasoning are some
examples. Stinking thinking creates the funny rules and logic of soft
addictions, such as "There are no calories if I eat standing up," or
"I can't possibly work out if I've already showered." Woven
throughout soft addiction routines, this type of thinking is addictive in
itself. The distorted thoughts prompt indulging in a soft addiction in the
first place and later let us justify the indulgence.
Hiding
the behavior. Beware of habits that become
guilty pleasures you seek to hide. Covering up the amount of time you spend on
an activity or lying to others about how you frequently spend your time or your
money are signs of soft addictions. In other words, you feel ashamed of what
you're doing and that's why you want to hide it from others.
Avoiding feelings or
zoning out are perhaps the most telling of these signs. Part of the allure of
soft addictions is that they provide an escape from the pace and pressure of
life. If we've had a tough day, we want to relieve the pressure. The same
impulse that pushes people to have a drink rather than talk out tensions at the
end of a hard day leads them to soft addictions.
Doing this is perfectly
natural. We all need to zone out at times. Zoning out allows our unconscious
mind to sort things out, giving us the downtime we need to regroup. It would be
unusual to find anyone who didn't need to escape from his feelings at certain
moments. The problem, of course, is when this becomes a way of life and soft
addictions become deeply ingrained. We become like football players who have an
injury but anesthetize themselves so they can get back in the game. As a
short-term strategy, this may work. We convince ourselves that if we didn't
have our soft addictions, we couldn't keep going to work, taking care of
the kids, and generally keeping our life together. The danger to the football
player, however, is that the underlying injury never gets treated and can even
worsen. Similarly, we become accustomed to numbing ourselves and never
consciously feeling any pain (or any intense emotion, for that matter). In this
way, we become out of touch with our deeper self. We fail to meet deeper needs
and move farther from our full potential. At certain moments, however, we
glimpse how out of touch we are and ask, "Is this all there is?"
*Endnotes were omitted
Excerpted
from There Must Be More Than This by
Judith Wright Copyright 2003.
Excerpted by permission of Doubleday, a division of Random
House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be
reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Judith Wright is an internationally recognized
author, speaker, educator, life coach, and seminar leader. She founded the Wright
Institute for Lifelong Learning, Inc., with her husband, Bob, after twenty
years of developing innovative, inspirational education and personal growth
programs at the university and private levels. The Chicago-based Wright
Institute helps people fulfill their potential in the areas of Work,
Relationship, Self, and Spirit through seminars, coaching, and in-depth
training programs. Judith has taught workshops on overcoming soft addictions
and creating More for twelve years. You may contact
her through her Web site at www.theremustbemore.com.