Recently, a
young girl reached out to me concerning her struggles with disordered eating;
she informed me she just took up the habit of smoking.
“For what I am doing, I do not understand...”
The Apostle Paul in Romans 7:15
She’s
currently in a facility, being treated for bulimia, a mood disorder and
self-injury behavior. I asked her what her treatment center thought about this
habit. She told me she thought it was a better action than engaging in the
eating disorder and self-injury behaviors.
But, to me,
it smacks of cross- addiction. Indeed, someone afflicted with an addiction,
obsession or disorder can often become convinced if they just switch it for another
passion or behavior, he or she will be fine.
I did this
myself.
Back in
college, when I experienced my infamous intervention with my roommates and the
college’s social services department, I was called out on my own dysfunctional
behavior: calling psychic hotlines.
I am not
joking.
Desperate as
I was for hope, answers and relief, I racked up an enormous phone bill,
spending hours each weekend, dialing these hotlines. I tried to distract myself
from my eating disorders, chaotic emotions and despair.
But nothing
worked. The psychic hotlines could not heal my behaviors, my feelings or my issues. Only complications, more
resentment, anger and frustration resulted from me calling these spend-y phone
numbers.
Substitutes
could not change things; facing and dealing with my truth, via God’s help,
however, did.
“There is a way that
seems right to a man. But its end is
the way of death.”
Proverbs
14:12
Dealing with this
smoking issue is tricky, particularly for those of us who are in recovery. How
many meetings are filled with people chain smoking and drinking endless cups of
coffee? Sometimes, from a recovery vantage point, the smoking vice appears to be
the lesser of two evils. I’ve
personally witnessed how my own family members obsessively cling to cigarettes
and coffee, for fear of drinking again. Every opportunity for a smoke or coffee
break, sometimes, every fifteen minutes, is a must do for them.
It’s hard. I don’t want
to be judge-y here.
But, again, substituting
one addiction for another is not the answer and furthermore, may even be more
of a complication to long term health.
I have had family and friends die of cancer because of their “substitutes.”
There may be a way which seems right, but we need to pay attention to what comes after that “but…”
“…its end is
the way of death.”
Proverbs
14:12
Let’s make every
attempt to choose life, instead.
Copyright © 2016 by
Sheryle Cruse
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