Exchanging the Addictive Repetitive Mind for a Crystalline One

Mar 31, 2019

Many of us may associate addiction with difficult life circumstances—accidents, challenging relationship issues, loss of a job or of someone we care about, to name a few. In spite of the fact that we may have learned to think of addiction as related to external circumstances, in truth, its origin is not outside but, rather, inside each of us.

 

Although there are many definitions of addiction, for me, it’s reduced to the repetition of patterns of thoughts.

 

While most of us are not consciously aware of this, our reality mirrors our repetitive inner thoughts. For example, our belief system (the unconscious program that drives our life) originates from the repetition of others’ thoughts—thoughts we’ve learned unconsciously from others, who themselves learned those thoughts from others and on and on for many generations back. That unconscious programming—that repetition—runs us. In other words, our repetitive inner thoughts (many of which we’re largely unaware of) guide our behaviors and the way we engage and interact with the circumstances and people in our lives. On a large scale, these same repetitive unconscious thoughts are what drive our world.

 

Seen from this perspective, we could say that we are all addicts— we are addicted to our existing thoughts which originated in the unconscious repeating the thoughts of others. This can take the shape of beliefs and knowledge. We all have settled or regular tendencies we repeat automatically and that are hard to give up. These include memories, habits, routines, learned information we are accustomed to or already know, and what brings us comfort and pleasure. Suffering thoughts are also among these settled tendencies that are hard to give up.

 

As a result, we have repetitive thoughts or become addicted to our beliefs. Those beliefs originate from and relate to family, religion, politics, economics, nation, career, and on and on. We become addicted to habits or specific ways of doing things or running our lives. This may include activities and thoughts around work, money, or becoming successful. We become addicted to things and situations that connect us with pleasure—food, shopping, sex, or social media, to name a few. We become addicted to things we have learned from our society to value, such as idolizing the body, becoming famous, or taking and sharing selfies.

 

But we also can become addicted to suffering. Repetitive thoughts can dim our inner light and contract and obscure our perspectives. For example, when we have repetitive sad thoughts, we become depressed. When we have repetitive thoughts of distrust and fear, we become anxious. When we are constantly aroused by negative thoughts we tend to see the worst aspects of things or believe that the worst will happen. We can find ourselves in cycles of repetition of those thoughts, returning to them even as they increase our depression or anxiety because they are familiar and habitual—because of the repetition.

 

In addition to all this, we can also become addicted in an attempt to avoid suffering due to a lack of ability to tolerate distress. We may find ourselves clinging to alcohol, cigarettes, drugs, and other substances that stimulate the release of dopamine, the “feel-good hormone.” These behaviors, too, can become familiar—habits we do in automatic repeat mode.

 

The real source of our true well-being is not outside but inside each of us, beneath all the layers of repetitive thoughts and behaviors—our crystal blueprint.

 

By crystal blueprint, I am referring not only to our original mind information but also to the mind’s quantum layout.

 

The latest research in the fields of psychology and neuroscience draws on quantum physics to help us understand this. Writing on quantum-cognition theory for Big Think in 2015, Daphne Muller wrote, “By examining our minds at a quantum level, we change them, and by changing them, we change the reality that shapes them.”[i]

 

For good or bad, every repetitive thought generates resonance and manifests the reality you are living right now.

 

If you are not happy with the reality you are resonating with, the first thing you should become aware of is what repetitive thoughts are behind it. It is likely that these repetitive thoughts originated from a circumstance, person, or experience that you are not consciously aware of and also have to find out.

 

Today we know that quartz crystal’s properties, known to science, have the ability to resonate with energy and the crystalline structures of our brain to amplify, transform, and balance energy. Through meditation, crystals’ amplification qualities can help us become aware of our repetitive thoughts and their origin in order to transcend them and reconnect with our crystal blueprint —our true source of wellness.

 

In truth, addiction can be reflecting to us our disconnection from who we really are. It can be a sign that it’s time to reconnect with our transparent self and pursue our authentic path.

 

We don’t have to settle for addiction. Instead, we can let go of the learned patterns that lead to addictive cycles and harness the properties of crystals to develop a crystalline mind and resonate with a new reality. 

Crystal LIFE!

Beatriz

 

[i] Daphne Muller, “Your Brain Isn’t a Computer—It’s a Quantum Field,” Big Think, September 18, 2015, https://bigthink.com/ideafeed/does-the-mind-play-dice-with-reason.

 

IMPORTANT NOTE: Please respect our intellectual property. If you are using beatrizsinger.com copyrighted resources, please reference the source: Beatriz Singer, Journalist and Crystal Healer. Positive resonance begins with us. ;)

Join Our Crystal Community Today and
Receive my Free Gift.

12 Mind Blowing Facts About Crystals that Will Change Your Life!

Close

Do you know what you are resonating with now?

Start identifying your resonance with our FREE Starters Meditation.