It will be the interplay between of your intention to improve in your Practice with the psychological mass of your addiction that will allow your Practice to work as a lever.
Because a Practice includes regular work, it mirrors the addictive process by constantly appearing in your day-to-day life, where it must interact and compete with the addictive process for your time and energy.
At first the new practice has no depth, it just rides on the surface tension of your psyche, like a water bug in the currents of a stream.
But in time, and with many repetitions, it develops width and depth, and you can use it to go ‘under’ your familiar surface reactions and behaviors. It is then that it brings back information about the depths of your internal world, not only about the psychological mass of negativity that you’ve developed through addiction, but also about other, deeper aspects of yourself, strengths and skills that have been obscured from your view.
It can ride above, but go below:
It is during this process that your Practice begins to function as a lever, and you can start to move the mass that sits there, if you have enough energy to bring to the task.
The shortest way through to a source of energy that doesn’t have to be bought, developed, taken out on loan, or talked into helping you, is to use the tried and proven method called Projected Word.


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