Read Clinical Handbook of Mindfulness Online
Authors: Fabrizio Didonna,Jon Kabat-Zinn
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15
Paradise Lost: Mindfulness
and Addictive Behavior
Thomas Bien
Whether the ground beneath our feet is heaven or hell depends entirely
on our way of seeing and walking.
–Thich Nhat Hanh (2001)
In the Beginning was Paradise
According to the stories of many cultures, the human beginning was a time of
ease and wonder, free from hard labor, struggle, strife, and the alienation and
fragmentation we know today. Sometimes this perfection is projected into
the future—a New Jerusalem descending upon the earth, the city of God, or
a heaven we enter after death. Sometimes it is viewed as the possible result
of human effort, a tradition spanning from Plato’s Republic (ca. 360 B.C.E.;
Hamilton and Cairns, 1969)
and Thomas Moore’s
Utopia
(1516), to James Hilton’s Shangri-La, (1933) and B. F. Skinner’s
Walden Two
(1948), among
many others.
In a Buddhist context, paradise is always available, but it cannot be found
in the future or in the past. It is only available in the present moment, in
that brief moment of perception before we split the world into judgments
of pleasure and pain, gain and loss, desire and aversion. With these comes
the sense of I or ego, the feeling that “
I
like this and want more of that
for myself,” or “
I
dislike that, and want to avoid that.” This sense of I is the
flaming sword blocking our return to the garden. It is the sense that we are a
separate, unchanging entity, cut off from everything and everyone else, a bit
of flotsam and jetsam floating haphazardly in a meaningless universe.
In Buddhism, paradise is found the moment we reverse this process. Par-
adise is found when we re-enter the present moment deeply and clearly,
without being caught in either desire or aversion, without the narrow point
of view of the separate and alienated self that wants and wants and wants,
without our habitual mental patterns of judgment or blame. This kind of
perception is called mindfulness. And with mindfulness, paradise is available
here and now. Indeed, it can only be found here and now—not in the mythic
past, not in the eschatological future, and not even as the result of human
social engineering—important as such efforts may be for other reasons.
This human tendency to seek pleasure and avoid pain is neither wrong
nor evil. It even has a certain necessity about it, a certain utility. Life requires
such a capacity. Only, when coupled with our large brains, it becomes a
capacity that can easily run amok. It is impossible that this endless process
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Thomas Bien
of struggle can ever yield peace. For peace is not found by constructing a
world that contains only pleasant experiences and avoids all pain. To find
peace requires wisdom, and wisdom teaches us that the foundation of peace
lies in acceptance of the fundamental nature of human life—that good and
bad, pleasure and pain, gain and loss are both necessary and inevitable. When
we accept this plain fact, avoiding the extremes of either futile struggle or
nihilistic passivity, we can come into the present moment, and be fully alive.
Addiction
as
Avoidance
Addiction in the narrow sense entails the use of substances to create an
altered state of consciousness, and to do so in a way that is both compulsive
and destructive. But in the broadest sense, all human beings are addicted. We
are addicted to compulsive patterns of pleasure seeking and pain avoidance.
When the Buddha said that “all worldlings are deranged”
(Goleman, 1988),
this is exactly what he meant. Our non-acceptance of the nature of reality,
the
suchness
(Sanskrit:
tathata
) of things, yields an endless struggle to create
a world totally free of pain and full of pleasure. The addict just happens to go
about this in particular way—with drugs and alcohol—or by extension, with
behaviors like gambling or sex. This is just one form of the essential human
problem of the aboriginal splitting of the perceptual world into opposites.
The addicted person is someone who hopes to find a simple solution to
this existential dilemma. Life hurts, he feels, and he wants to avoid this pain.
He likes pleasure very much, on the other hand, and wants to find more of it
in an easy, reliable, readily repeatable way. Whatever the drug of choice, the
intention is to avoid pain and increase pleasure.
And it works. Drugs do, at least temporarily and in the short term, provide
pleasure. They also provide a rather complete respite from our worries and