Opiate Addiction
-
I was wondering if anyone had any tips on what specific practices, rituals, or techniques are useful in gaining freedom from opiate addiction. Specifically, what can help strengthen the will to stop using, what can minimize cravings, and what can reduce withdrawal symptoms and help someone regain physiological stability again? Are there any particular Libers that would be good to practice or meditate on?
-
As I understand it, devotion to the Spirit of the Kratom can be extremely useful in battling withdrawal symptoms and cravings.
www.sagewisdom.org/kratomguide.html
www.alternet.org/drugs/kratom-better-choice-heroin-pain-pill-user -
Best recommendation I can offer is not to distract yourself in thinking that ritual will do anything until you get the monkey off your back. Meditation practices might help you to find your center which, with something to help get you through the withdrawals, might get you to the other side, but ritual isn't going to be effective until your will is back in control of things.
The poppy's a bitch but, as with anything else, there is no magic bullet (pardon the pun). You just have to decide what version of yourself you want to be and be it, damn the consequences.
-
@Luce said
"Jim, this is what I had emailed you about but I know you weren't willing to communicate via PM. Do you have any tips for me with regard to where opiate addiction falls on the Tree of Life, what planet or tarot card it might be associated with, etc.?"
Not really. I've known a lot of magicians addicted to heroin and they tried all sorts of things except actually getting clean.
I recommend you pursue this through a good medical treatment program.
Of course, there are all sorts of generic things you can do that might help because they are compatible with conventional treatment. Systematic relaxation, rhythmic breathing exercises, and still meditation, for example. Avoid things that are too vivid, to inciting of intense and colorful imagery, so I wouldn't even recommend Tarot card meditations. Whatever you do should be as disciplined as possible, e.g., meditation only for a fixed, predetermined period. But, generally, rely on people who have dedicated their lives to helping people with this kind of problem.
Drink lots and lots of fluids, especially once the projectile diarrhea starts.
-
@Luce said
"Yikes, I really thought I'd be able to assign addiction to some aspect on the Tree or deficit thereof. I wonder why there is no such association. If the Tree is such a perfect picture of human consciousness, and addiction is such a common experience, you'd think it would fit SOMEWHERE. To be honest, I thought every experience could be placed somewhere, however small. Why is addiction the exception? Is it that if is a combination of so many things?"
Addiction should be assigned to Malkuth and Y'sod. Malkuth for the purely physiological effects of addiction and withdrawal, Y'sod for the psychological elements of dependency.
But, unless I misread, you weren't asking for where to assign it to the Tree, but for magical means to overcome it. That's where you hit a roadblock because the addiction fights exactly those parts of yourself that are most needed for magick. You can't (for example) break your leg and heal it by doing a magick dance hopping around the room on that one leg - you just damage yourself more.
Trying to use ceremonial magick to overcome heroin addiction is like trying to fix a broken leg by hopping around the room on the broken leg.
The exception to this is that anything you do that improves your overall health and overall centeredness, and draws you temporarily out of interior worlds into the nuts-and-bolts physical world will help.
-
Opiates can create visions when you're on them, but they also shut down brain centers that normally let people do this, once you're off the drug. It takes a while for them to come back.
I'd have tried a non-addicting drug like classic psychedelics (LSD, 'shrooms, peyote).
-
Even good change is stressful.
One antidote is carefully filling your life with new activities that inherently demand total sobriety. For example, I've been learning Argentine Tango for the last month. It's a fairly sober culture, because being even slightly impaired severely inhibits the ability to do all the things that the dance demands (you have to be socially perceptive to get to dance, you have to have high focus during the dance, etc.) even having your cell phone out severely impacts the experience. Even one drink can make a person a bit sloppy. It's that subtle.
Subtle experiences makes sobriety fun.
-
@Luce said
"I was wondering if anyone had any tips on what specific practices, rituals, or techniques are useful in gaining freedom from opiate addiction. Specifically, what can help strengthen the will to stop using, what can minimize cravings, and what can reduce withdrawal symptoms and help someone regain physiological stability again? Are there any particular Libers that would be good to practice or meditate on?"
Opiates are not fun to part with, though 'crack' is worse. The best way to get rid of them is to get rid of the supply line(s). Then it's just a matter of suffering through the withdrawal phase of craving. Raja Yoga is a good diversion.
-
One of the biggest problems with drugs is that they encourage the belief that the current moments spent on them are "special." From thus comes craving and addiction at the psychological level. Enjoyment informs the brain to form patterns of habit and abuse. The physical feelings and substance of the addiction then play the dual part with the psychological one, creating the dilemma. Yes, near-terminal toxicity requires chemical/mechanical aid that can not be produced by the body and nice wishes. Takamba's advice is well and true.