Chase It, Taste It, Then Waste It
I’ve gone through so much in the past 6 months. Too much to even begin to recap on. But one of the many things I’ve gone through was overcoming my addiction to Red Bull. Now, does this compare to a lot of addictions like smoking, harder drugs, alcohol, or anything else in that realm? I’m not sure, but I do know that they caffeine and sugar are super addictive, so from my experience, I can verify this is true… I’ve only beat my addiction to the Red Bull, not the sugar and caffeine yet. Although I’m only having caffeine about 3 times a week now rather than every day and twice in a day. SO, how did I overcome it using awareness and not fighting, struggling or putting pressure on myself to “do better?” I allowed myself to have it. I gave up, I let go, I just accepted that I craved the Red Bulls and allowed myself to drink them, but I observed it and became aware of it. I shed some light on it and I kid you not… For the first time in forever, I don’t crave them now! Before, from the mind, I struggled so much and was so hard on myself and put a constant pressure and stress on my shoulder to “be better” or “do better” and sure enough, from pure willpower, I would quit the energy drinks (mostly Red Bull) but then since it was from forced effort, I still craved them and when I relapsed every time, I always drank so many in that first week back to them (my heart hated me every time 🥲😅) I’m sharing this with all of you because lasting change really does come when we surrender to things and let go and give it to source. I became aware and then didn’t do anything besides meditate and go deeper inside of myself and observe everything that I would like to change in my life. The mind is in disbelief because I’m not sitting here writing about Red Bull and craving one. I had one about a week ago and it tasted so awful to me. A miracle? No, just letting go. I allowed myself to chase the desire, then I tasted and observed my desire, and then I wasted it… I gained the natural strength to can it for good (no pun intended) and I’ll be honest. It doesn’t feel real, and feels too good to be true, but it worked for me. I’m not promising or saying this will work for anyone else, but I will leave this quote here that helped me do it in a more gentle way with a more loving approach. “The stress from trying to be perfect will kill you quicker than your imperfections.” This is only words, but they shook me to my core and made me realize that it’s so true! I’ve always been way to hard on myself and not accepting of my imperfections, and now as I’m getting better and better at coming back to the heart quicker when I get pulled in by the mind, I see that love and light is the way to go.