Using consistent, daily embodied practices to literally rewire neural and muscular patterns, understanding that addiction's grip was built through repetition and can only be undone the same way.
Addiction is not a moral failing or a single bad choice; it is a pattern cemented through thousands of repetitions. The body has been trained so thoroughly that it now demands its substance automatically. Dipa Ma's path to healing honors this reality: recovery also requires thousands of repetitions of new patterns. Daily meditation, consistent breath work, regular movement practice, nightly reflection—these are not optional enhancements but the mechanism of healing. Each morning's sit weakens the old neurological pathways slightly. Each evening's conscious reflection strengthens new ones. Over months and years, the accumulated repetitions add up to genuine transformation. The body literally rewires itself through this accumulated practice. This is neither quick nor dramatic, but it is reliable. Someone who meditates for six months will have a different nervous system than someone who doesn't. Someone who consciously moves through cravings will develop new somatic patterns. Healing through repetition acknowledges addiction's own logic and turns it toward recovery: if addiction could reprogram the body through repetition, so too can conscious practice.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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