DavidT wrote on 11 Aug 2023 15:38:
Suppressing or distracting ourselves from negative feelings doesn’t help us move through them, it can actually make them stronger.
One of the keys for real change is called "acceptance". It’s the cornerstone of change. Before you can change something, you must see and accept it for what it is. It’s the necessary precursor to understanding, planning, and taking action towards our desired impact.
To heal, we must feel and validate the weight of our experience, so we can come to terms and begin moving forward mentally, emotionally, and physically.
Acceptance isn’t about avoiding growth or resigning ourselves to the thought that things won’t change. On the contrary, it allows us to see and accept what is, so we can take appropriate and effective actions to meet reality where it is and carve our path forward from there.
I think that there is an important distinction between using escapism to avoid doing work that needs to be done to heal one’s emotional pain and deal with emotional spiritual and psychological challenges and difficult experiences, and the simple desire to escape boredom and the annoying vagaries of life.
Escapism to avoid dealing with internal work that needs to be done stands in the way of healing and recovery. Escape in the latter case isn’t necessary as harmful. But it frequently leads to falling , as has been commented about so much in these forums.
And it leads to a lifestyle where a person is passive and full of avoidance, which is unhealthy, in many ways.
I understood, maybe mistakenly, that Shteeble was asking for tools that can be used to avoid going for mind-numbing escapes from boredom and annoying roadblocks in life.