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I Love Addiction

March 28th, 2009

My name is Lynn Marie Smith, I’m thirty years old, and I am a recovering addict.

I am not a guru, specialist, or expert. I’m just a girl who put down the weapons of mass destruction and decided to look at this “incurable disease” of mine in a new way. After all, if my addiction was in fact something that was never going to go away, a roommate that I was stuck with for the rest of my God-given life, why not try to see it as a friend?  Or as a wise sage who had something to teach me? Why not laugh and crack jokes with the little devil? Why not just invite the big bad beast in for tea and crumpets, rather than try to blow its head off with an Uzi?

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. once said that the only way to convert an enemy into a friend is through love, not hatred or fighting. Today I am completely drug and alcohol free-but it wasn’t until I stopped fighting my addictive nature and started loving myself and everything that I am, that I begin to heal my life. Loving myself meant loving all of me-including my addiction. Yes, that’s right: I LOVE ADDICTION!

Sounds crazy right? It goes against everything we are programmed to believe. We have been taught by our parents, our religions, our politicians, and our social programs that in order to triumph and overcome we must fight, hate, battle, and conquer. Becoming free of our demons means using only those metaphors borrowed from the military or from the school of Jonathan Edwards’ power of the will.  After spending many years trying this approach, playing the poor victim, blaming my alcoholic father, hating myself, fighting my addiction, and getting nowhere but more miserable, I thought there must be another way. It started off as a simple experiment, shifting myself from a state of battle to a state of acceptance, flipping the switch from Mrs. Reagan’s “Just Say No!” to my own “Just Say Yes.” Living in each moment, I chose to see my addiction as a teacher rather than a monkey on my back, and that one choice has transformed my entire life.

When I first went public with my story on MTV’s True Life and The Oprah Winfrey Show, I had such a sense of relief, a feeling of complete freedom washed over me for the first time in my life. I had spent so many years hating and condemning myself, so many years trying to hide my dirty, dark past and all of my perceived failures. And now here I was on national television letting it all hang out: the alcoholic home, the drugs, the psyche wards, the brain damage, and the misery.  I was finally taking the darkest parts of myself and revealing them, embracing them, and it happened to be with Oprah holding my hand. The guilt and the shame that had controlled my life for so long began to dissolve.  At last, I was no longer hiding, but was free to live. Yes, addiction is a part of me, but it is not all of me. I am not damaged or destroyed.  I am not a label, diagnosis, or problem to be solved. I am me, Lynn Marie Smith, just a girl trying to find her way like everybody else.

After the MTV and Oprah shows aired, I began to receive emails, thousands of them, from people all over the world-kids, parents, teachers, inmates-all reaching out, searching, asking for advice. After my first book, Rolling Away: My Agony with Ecstasy (Simon and Schuster, 2006) was published, and after I began to travel the country speaking to audiences about my experiences, the e-mails have continued.

The one question that I am asked the most is, “Lynn, how did you do it, how did you beat addiction?” It has taken me many years to be able to answer that question but now I am able to say, “I didn’t beat my addiction, I loved it.” The War on Drugs is a losing battle, Just Say No and Crack is Whack tried their best; it is a new world and it is time for a new way.

In Letters to a Young Poet, Rainer Maria Rilke says, “…always hold to the difficult, what even now appears most alien to us will become most familiar and loyal. How could we forget those old myths which are to be found in the beginnings of every people; the myths of the dragons which are transformed, at the last moment, into princesses; perhaps all the dragons in our life are princesses, who are only waiting to see us once beautiful and brave. Perhaps everything terrifying is at bottom the helplessness that seeks our help.”

Once I decided to love my addiction, my “dragon” transformed into a princess in whose soulful eyes I could see my own beautiful reflection. I continue to thank my addiction every day for helping me, for teaching me how to love and accept myself, for showing me what I don’t want, and teaching me what I still need to learn. But mostly I love addiction for giving me the gift of compassion, compassion not only for myself, but also for the millions of others out there, who are exactly like me.

This is for them.

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Love Thy Neighbor

March 28th, 2009

Dear Lynn,

I have no problem loving my girlfriend, my mother, my dog, or my favorite TV show, 30 Rock. So why the hell does loving myself feel so painful and frightening?

Scott


“Love thy neighbor as thyself.”

Though the remarkable statement from the religious philosopher Jesus of Nazareth is as beautiful and clear as anyone could hope, somehow its focus has been lost, and the opposite has been taught to us over the centuries. We have been programmed to believe, by our churches, parents, and social thinkers, that it is far better to serve and love others then it is to love and accept ourselves. We have been made afraid of loving ourselves-that kind of love is selfish, narcissistic, indulgent, and ugly. This couldn’t be further from the truth. A person who loves himself respects himself, and a person who love and respects himself respects others, too.

Growing up both Catholic and in an alcoholic home, I truly believed I wasn’t worthy of love, and that I had no right to give such love to myself. So for many years I condemned and hated myself. My priests called me a dirty sinner and told me I was doomed to hell. My father was more concerned with his bottle of booze than with his own daughter. So as I grew, these poisons did too. I hated being with myself. I avoided myself at all costs, fleeing into any kind of escapist fantasy I could discover: drugs, alcohol, sex, mindlessness-anything to get away from me.

Scott, I believe you speak for so many of us who feel frightened of turning that heart light of ours inward. You are afraid to penetrate your deeper layers, your darkness, the ugliness that you think you are. You want to avoid yourself at all costs, hence loving a girlfriend, a mom, a dog, 30 Rock - using anything or anyone as an escape from yourself. Anyone’s company will do, as long as you’re not left in your own company.

Am I right?

I am not judging you here dude, because believe me, I know all too well about the pain and fright you speak of. But here’s the deal - after many many dark nights I finally came to understand that love had to start with me, not my neighbor, boyfriend, or America’s Next Top Model. I began to love myself totally, not just the “good” parts, but all parts. Once I stopped the self-condemnation, and opened myself to the possibility of self-worth, my world transformed. And yours will too.

Just give it a try and watch. Once you are filled up with your own acceptance and love, that love will overflow, and spread. It will go on spreading to everyone and everything that surrounds you; your girlfriend, your family, the trees, the birds…it will have no other choice but to move outward and upward.

So Scott, don’t beat yourself up anymore than you already have. Like me, you just got the Jesus line backward: it is time to start loving yourself. The neighbors (and Alec Baldwin) will just have to wait a minute.

Happy Lovin’,

Lynn

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Les Miserables

March 20th, 2009

Dear Lynn,

Why is it so hard to let go of the things that create misery in our lives?

I know that my choice to abuse alcohol makes me miserable. I know that being engaged to a woman I am no longer in love with brings me misery. So why do I still cling so tightly to them both?

Tom

When I first started out on my journey of recovery from pills and potions over eight years ago, all I talked about with people was the horrible pain I was going through, this wretched disease of mine, the darkness that was my life. Hell, you could tune into any TV talk show and find me sitting next to Oprah, Montel, or Dr. Keith showing off pictures of my poor, little, damaged brain. Years into my sobriety I was either writing about the pain and agony of addiction or I was standing up in front of an audience and talking about it with anybody who would listen.

Through all of this I continued to tell myself that I wanted to heal these wounds. I told myself I was ready for health and recovery. Yet still I went on clinging to my “diseases,” pains, and complaints.

Why oh why?

It has taken my many years to realize this but I was actually enjoying chewing on my pain, every time I told my story, I was reminding myself what a poor little martyr I was. Look at all I have been through. Even though on the surface I was asking, begging, praying to get rid of my illnesses, sadness, pain, and frustration, deep down I was tearing open the wounds over and over again, preventing them from ever healing.

Why oh why?

Well Tom, are you ready for this one? The reason I continued to cling to my disease for so many years, the reason you still continue to cling to your miserable existence is this: if all of your wounds are healed, if all of your misery dissolves, who will be left? Where will you be? How’s that one for a mind fuck? A small simple step but a quantum leap, right? If all of our illnesses and complaints disappear, what will we go on talking about, what will we do with our lives? We have become so identified with our misery that we believe it is who and what we are.

The only reason my pain and agony continued to exist was because I continued to feed them, to support them, to give them energy. All negative emotions and miseries we experience need our energy to thrive and survive. Because after all who would I be if I wasn’t telling my sad sob story. I was the crazy girl with holes in my brain, I was the author of My Agony with Ecstasy. There was so much invested in my pain and sadness, hell my whole damn empire was built on it.

But not anymore.

Today you can still find me speaking inside jails, colleges, and high schools but I am singing a different tune. I am no longer focused on the misery of life but the beauty of life. I no longer slice my wounds open and tell people how awful addiction is, I now talk about how wonderful sobriety is. Yes, I have less and less speaking engagements and television shows booked, because most places want that sad and damaged girl to come in and scare the shit out of people. Yes, it has been much harder to get another book deal with a story of hope, healing, and recovery - a book about LOVING your addictions rather than fighting and hating them.

But oh well… I aint never turning back.

So Tom, ask yourself are you really interested in dropping your misery and solving your problems? Or do you just want to talk about it? Go inward and inquire. And once you are ready to stop feeding your miseries, they will disappear. It is up to you.

Until then enjoy your booze and your broad.

Lynn

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The Answer in the Basement

March 14th, 2009

Dear Lynn,

I have stopped using. I’ve been clean from booze and pills for almost a year. Why do I still feel so empty and alone? Does it get better?

Spencer


Wow, this question has just floated into my inbox and the right time. I know the emptiness and aloneness you speak of Spencer.

In fact I am walking through a pretty dark phase right now myself. Ghosts that I thought were long gone and buried have shown their ugly little ghoulish heads again.I have been battling this black cloud for the last two weeks, sleepless nights, anxiety, all of these old fears surfacing. Am I going crazy again? Will this ever stop? When will I feel normal again? I can’t feel like this.

After all, I am the one who writes the columns, I am the girl who speaks to audiences about healing and recovery, I have all the answers… I AM RECOVERED DAMMIT!!!

I stopped abusing drugs almost nine years ago. You see, I thought after I quit, after I just said “no,” I was done, through will all the icky feelings and rotten “stuff.” Once the drugs and booze were gone I would be just perfect, I should be just perfect, right?

Well it has taken me a while to realize this but rearranging the outside circumstances in your life doesn’t make any difference if you don’t rearrange what is on the inside first.

Let’s just say you have this house. It’s a lovely house but a pipe has burst in the basement. Water is flowing everywhere, it has filled the basement, it has destroyed the floors in the kitchen, the couch is ruined, the paint is peeling off or your walls. You panic, you know you have to do something; you can’t just sit there and do nothing. So you pick up the phone and decide to call an interior designer.You order new carpet, you buy new furniture, and you even repaint all the walls with shiny new colors. This will fix it you say to yourself.

This is what we have been taught; we have been programmed to believe that if we focus on the symptoms, if we change and rearrange what is on the surface, we can make it all go away. We continue to change the furniture, put up new drapes, paint a wall or two but it’s the same house, the broken pipe still remains. Everyone is afraid to go into that dark basement and fix that damn pipe…who knows what else is lurking down there.

Symptoms are being addressed, not causes.

And that is happening with you Spencer. That has been what is happening with so many people out there, including me. These last two weeks I have been focused on banishing the anxiety, the fear, and the insomnia. I have been so focused on ridding myself of the symptoms. If I just soak my bed in lavender spray from Bath and Body Works, load up on my B-Vitamins, and sit in lotus position it will all go away.

I sat outside crying this morning watching the sunrise…tears of fear and pain not tears of joy. But something in that sunrise “awakened” me, nudged me. What is at the root of all of this Lynn? What is the cause of these symptoms? Dig deep.

Going into the basement is not always easy Spencer. In fact in can be frightening as hell. But I have been through enough dark nights to know that I will never find peace by rearranging the outside. The only way to find peace in this world is by realizing who you truly are.

So Spencer it is time for you to get to the root of your issue. Yes you have stopped the booze and pills but now it is time for you to grab a flashlight and put on those rain boots.Yes you might find some yucky little monsters lurking and hiding down in the basement. But there is one thing I know you will surely find down there - yourself.

You can do this Spencer.

Well it’s my turn now. I just bought a new hot-pink raincoat for the occasion.

Lynn

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Tomorrowland

March 7th, 2009

Dear Lynn,

I have a beautiful wife, three amazing kids, two incredible homes; I am able to travel and vacation all over the world. I feel I have fulfilled most all of my dreams and goals in life yet I often feel depressed and gloomy. Some days I find it hard to get out of bed in the morning and I feel unenthused about my future. What is the cause of this depression? What can I do about this?

Jack


Dear Jack,

I went to Disney World with my mother this past weekend. As we strolled around Cinderella’s mammoth mansion, we stumbled into a faraway place called Tomorrowland. Even though I had my heart set on hopping on a rocket ship and soaring through orbit on Space Mountain or grabbing my laser gun and blasting away the evil Emperor Zurg on Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin, the wait time was well over an hour and a half for each ride. Houston, we have a problem . . .

“Come on, let’s just go on this one,” said my mother.

The ride: “The Carousel of Progress.” The wait time: Zero minutes.

I should have taken that as foreshadowing.

We walked into the empty theater and got seated comfortably in our chairs. After a few minutes the lights dimmed and the seats began to move and revolve around the stage in front of us. The story is told via an audio-animatronic family as seen at the turn of the 20th Century, the 1920s, the 1940s, and present day. I know people find these life-like talking robots amazing, I just find them incredibly creepy. Anyway, the father narrates and interacts with the latest technology of that era – gas lamps, washing machine, gramophone, radio, sewing machine, dishwasher, television, etc. At the end of each era the family breaks out into song:

“There’s a great big beautiful tomorrow . . . and tomorrow is just a day away. Man follows his dream with mind and heart and when it becomes a reality it’s a dream come true for you and me. Oh there’s a great big beautiful tomorrow, tomorrow is just a dream away.”

Jack, you might be wondering where I am going with all of this. Just stay with me.

After a little look-see at Wikipedia, I discovered that this attraction was Walt Disney’s favorite and designed by Mr. Disney himself. It also holds the record for the longest running stage show in America. I’m sure I am going to have some unbreakable evil Mickey Mouse curse placed on me or like the cast of Lost be banished to Tom Sawyer’s island for the rest of my God-given life for even uttering these words, but here it goes.

Jack, I believe Walt Disney is the cause of your depression. That’s right, WALT DISNEY CAUSES DEPRESSION. OK, maybe I am being a little too hard on Walt here, it isn’t entirely his fault but he and his little Tomorrowland haven’t really helped matters.

Man has never lived right here and now in the present moment. Our programming has led us to believe that there is a paradise somewhere out there, far way in the future. We can be miserable right now and hold on to the hope that our dreams will all be fulfilled tomorrow. Depression is a contemporary phenomenon, especially here in the West because we “have” so much. You speak for so many out there who are struggling Jack, so many who have everything they have ever longed for. You have reached all of your goals and dreams and now you have lost hope. There is no future, no tomorrow. You asked what the cause of your depression is. The attainment of your goals and dreams is the cause of your depression. One amazing thing about poverty is that it keeps hope alive. It brings enthusiasm and excitement about the betterment of tomorrow.

Depression has reached epidemic proportions in our country because so many have reached a point where they have everything – the homes, the wives, the kids, the cars, the bank accounts – yet inside their being is hallow and dark. Our external wealth has shined a bright light on our inner poverty. And I believe that is where you are at right now, Jack. You are in search of your inner richness; a richness that comes from within and can never be taken away. The beautiful thing about this, Jack, is that the solution to your problem is very simple. Start living in the present moment. Find meaning where you are right now. Don’t push aside any more of your precious life running after cars, homes, dollars, etc. I am not saying renounce your wealth, I am saying put your focus on love, on celebration. Take a walk on the beach with your wife or go on a hike in the woods and see the beauty that surrounds you. Listen to the birds, smell the crisp morning air, soak up a sunset. Look at your children, when is the last time you really looked at them?

So Jack, this is how you will become a truly wealthy human being – by discovering that richness does not lie in the things around you, it lies within you.

Well I have to go now. I am starting a petition to urge Walt to change the name of his favorite attraction from “The Carousel of Progress” to “The Carousel of Depression.”

Has a ring to it don’t ya think?

Lynn

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Burying the Dead

February 27th, 2009

Dear Lynn,

My name is Alex. I recently got kicked out of my house, am couch hopping, and have lost myself in a world of drugs and lies. I have now quit everything cold turkey. I wish I had never used drugs and I hope things will eventually get better. It has only been a few weeks since I quit. I want to be a better person and try harder to achieve something but I am having a hard time. Do you have any pointers as to how to look past the past? That is my biggest problem right now. I look back at all I have done and hate myself for it. I don’t know how to get past it. I know it’s pretty lame that I can admit that but I can’t get past my past. Help.

Alex

Dear Alex,

You are not lame, in fact far from it. I think you are brilliant for understanding and acknowledging what is holding you back. I truly believe you speak for so many of us . . . addicted or not . . . who stay stuck because we are constantly looking backwards, focusing on our history, on the past, on the ghosts that are no longer there. We carry this history with us, chewing on our memories over and over again, replaying them in our minds, thinking, hoping that we can somehow reform the past. THIS CAN NEVER BE DONE. The past is no more and there is no possibility of undoing it, EVER.

My first year of sobriety was pure hell. I was filled with so much pain and misery. I just wanted to make it all go away. I wanted to feel normal, whatever the hell that was. Like you I was so angry at myself for what I had done, past experiences replayed in my mind like a bloody horror film, torturing me, over and over again. I was blaming myself, blaming my past, putting all of my focus on what was. If my Dad wasn’t an alcoholic, if I never used drugs, if I didn’t move to New York City, and on and on. I was exhausted and going nowhere; a dog chasing its own tail. It finally hit me, I could either keep getting sucked backwards, continuing to spiral in a vicious cycle, escaping into the never ending past, feeling miserable and paralyzed or I could try a new way.

Through many dark nights and a hell of a lot of soul searching, I came to understand that focusing on my past was a sheer waste of precious time. Trying to undo what my father, society, or the drugs had done was getting me NOWHERE. If in fact my Dad, society, and the drugs, destroyed many years of my life, why was I letting them destroy even more? Maybe it was being raised Catholic but I know a lot of my guilt and self hatred came from constantly being told I was a dirty little sinner who needed to repent.

In Hebrew the word “sin”, actually means “to miss.” Over the years I have come to understand the only real sin in this world is to miss life, to waste the present time, to throw away the here and now. For many, many years, I allowed my past to destroy my present, but not any more, mister.

Alex, I think it’s time to make peace, not only with your past but also with yourself. You had to go through all of this, all of the pain and trauma, to get you to this point. You had to hit the bottom in order to look up to that higher place where you are now going. Where you are today is just the result of your past actions, it is who you were not who you are.

This wise chap named Jesus Christ once said, “Let the dead bury the dead.” The past is dead, it’s no more; why let your history enslave you any longer? So Alex, you can say Gracias and Adios to your past or you can keep your eyes fixated behind you, on those rotting corpses that have died long ago. The choice is all yours.

Adios my amigo,

Lynn

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Fear and Shredding in Las Vegas

February 21st, 2009

Dear Lynn,

My name is Heather, I am twenty-five years old, and I live in Las Vegas. I have been sober now for two years but I still struggle every day not to go back to that life style. When I feel any pain or fear, my first reaction is to just go and get high. How do you do it every day?

God bless,

Heather

 
Dear Heather,
 
Pain and fear are such powerful emotions. They have the ability to destroy
or transform, and it is up to us to decide which it will be. There have been
many times in my life where I have succumbed to fear and pain. I have
spent days lying in my bed crying paralyzed by depression. Days shaking
uncontrollably, legs trembling, filled with panic. I feared what people thought
of me. I feared that I was a complete failure. I feared that I would be “crazy”
for the rest of my life. I feared being labeled an “addict”.  I feared what the
doctors told me. I feared the news reports.  I feared that I was a phony. I
feared my alcoholic father. I feared.
 
Even though I had: brushed death, been locked in two psychiatric wards,
even though I had been broke, alone, and broken hearted, even after
experiencing and living through all of this and more, what was I still afraid of? 
 
Over time I realized that it wasn’t the darkness that I feared but the light. I
had been through so many hellish experiences and had lived in a nightmare for
so long that I was comfortable with the darkness and misery. Fear and pain
were familiar to me, like a couple of old friends who were always right there
waiting for me to jump back into their arms again. 
 
Heather here is a little exercise that helps me tremendously and I know it will
work wonders for you too.  You will need:
  1. One sheet of blank paper (more blank sheets may be necessary
    depending upon how fearful you are)
  2. One pen
  3. One electric paper shredder
  4. One box of Kleenex
 
Strep One: Take out the pen and write down anything and everything that
is on your mind. Write down everything that has been weighing on your heart.
Write down every fear that is standing in your way. Don’t hold back and
don’t edit yourself. Don’t worry about what anybody else will think; this is for
YOU. If this exercise scares you, that is OK too. Feel the fear and DO IT
ANYWAY.
 
Step Two:  Look at everything you just wrote. Don’t just breeze over
the words; read each sentence and REALLY FEEL these emotions.
Allow yourself to FEEL the hurts, the fears, the frustrations, the
questions, and the anger. Allow yourself to cry, scream, bark, punch
your stuffed animals; do whatever it takes to LET IT OUT.
 
Step Three: Take the paper(s) and only AFTER you have really FELT
everything, each word, each fear, each emotion, I want you to plug the
shredder in and place the page(s) into its lovely mouth. 
 
Step Four: Close your eyes and listen to those loud, beautiful, grumbling
noises as that little liberation machine eats and shreds everything that has
been holding you back from being the beautiful, amazing, wonderful,
loving, creative, and fabulous woman that you are.
 
Repeat Steps One-Four as needed.
 
Some people pay a therapist.  
I bought my therapist at Target for 16.99. 
 
Happy Shredding Heather!
 
Lynn

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I Hate Addiction

February 20th, 2009

Dear Lynn,

I truly don’t understand how you can say “yes” to or love your addiction. It has caused so much pain and despair in my life and I honestly can say that I F&*^ING HATE IT. All I want to do is destroy my addiction and make it disappear forever.

Max


Boy do I smell what you’re steppin’ in Max. I have been exactly where you are.

When it came to my addictions, I grew up thinking that life was a battle to be won not an experience to be lived. I was told by my parents, commercials, drug counselors, priests, and politicians, that in order to reclaim my life, I must conquer, fight, hate, and overcome these ugly evildoers: I must just say no. My programming told me to reject all of the so-called bad things in life, and accept only the bright and shiny good stuff that landed on my doorstep. If I followed Mrs., Reagan’s advice and Just Said No enough times, I could turn everything around. Relying so impossibly upon my will, and believing that parts of myself had to be cut off and tossed into the fire, it took me a quarter of my life to realize: the only way to make a positive life for myself, was to make myself positive toward life.

Did ya catch that?

The only way to make a positive life for yourself, is to make yourself positive toward life.

Someone once told me that if you wanted to be defeated, fight-the metaphor has failure built in. For many years I felt defeated by fighting myself, my addictions, my father, the church, my own personal war on drugs, etc. But my formula needed inverted: the only way to win is to stop fighting; evolution occurs only when the change is accepted. Yes addiction brings pain. Yes addiction brings despair. Yes addiction brings fear, anger, and all those other pesky negative emotions. But I truly believe the only way we can be at peace with our addictions and ourselves is by ACCEPTING the painful, not by rejecting. When we say “NO” we become smaller and smaller and we lose our power and vitality. By rejecting what “is” we enter a constant state of inner war and become completely paralyzed.

Dearest Max, no matter how hard you hate or reject, you will not be able to destroy your addiction. Nothing disappears by being rejected - sooner or later you will have to face the things you have locked away inside the dark basement of your soul. So go on, give it try. Start by accepting your addictions, dig deep, get to the root of them, accept your despair, accept your pain, and in that total acceptance you will find total freedom. Just you watch. You will realize that your addictions are not evildoers trying to kill you. Your addictions can be a vehicle to move you into selfhood-a full, integrated, bad-ass human being…if you allow them to. The choice is yours.

Saying Yes means celebrating all that comes your way, believing each experience is valuable and meaningful. I now face the world with an open hand rather than a clenched fist. The more I say yes, the more I’ve seen my life transform from ordinary to extraordinary. Friends with myself, with existence, and with the future, I’m stumbling happily toward bliss.

Happy Stumbling Max,

Lynn

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The Joneses are Broke

February 19th, 2009

Dear Lynn,

How can I stop comparing myself to others? I look at everyone else around me, and so many of my friends have it all together. They have the right clothes, the cute boyfriends, the perfect bodies, etc. I find myself becoming jealous of everyone around me. I try so hard to be myself but I always end up falling short.

Help.

Kathy

Dear Kathy,

”Be yourself.” Two simple words, with a most elusive meaning. How do you “be yourself” when the very nature of the advertising business that constructs our culture appeals to one’s desire to be somebody else? How can you be yourself when we are taught that in order to be happy we should have what the neighbors have? Next door amazing things are happening. Over there they are thinner, smarter, kinder, healthier, richer, funnier, and prettier. We have been programmed to constantly compare ourselves with others and this comparing creates the jealousy and sense of lack that you are experiencing right now. We are always lacking – it is the message that conditions us. We are not enough, in need of improvement to be complete, imperfect “as is.” That we have everything we need right now, at this very moment, to be happy, that nothing more needs to added – this is the secret truth we rarely learn.

For so many years I was just like you. I felt rootless in my own being, so I clung to anything that offered happiness and security. I constantly looked to the outside to bring me peace and fulfillment. I consumed drugs, alcohol, boys, money, apartments, and friends – all temporary fillers that left me feeling empty and unsatisfied. Once I had more booze, a car, a house, a book deal, the world, I would be happy. And if I got the world? I’d want the moon and Mars. I compared myself to everyone that passed me by and lived in a dark cloud of suffering and misery. It took me many years to discover that if I dropped the comparing, the jealousy and misery I was experiencing would simply vanish into thin air.

You have not allowed your own being to grow and blossom and therefore the jealousy arises. You have not been true to yourself. You look at your friends, see their beautiful “outsides” and feel the emptiness of your inside. If you continue to invite this ugly jealousy disease into your soul, you will start pretending to be someone you are not. You will become a phony, a fake plastic thing. Unless you are centered and at peace with yourself Kathy, nothing will bring you true happiness . . . not the right clothes, the cute boyfriend, or the perfect body.

So begin today, sign your own signature. There has never been anybody like you, and nobody will ever be like you again. The Gods could not resist, they just had to create you. You are not a carbon copy. Stop searching outside for what has been inside you all along. Drop all “shoulds,” all comparisons, and realize that the only person you are meant to be is you, lovely, beautiful you, plain and simple.

And just for the record I bet if you talk to those “perfect” friends of yours, you will discover that they see you as having the snazzy duds, the hot boy, the slammin’ body, etc.

The grass is always greener from far away. That is why I always carry binoculars.

Lynn

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