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When Your Mind Feels Like a Prison and You Zone Out to Escape

Mental Prison

“All the suffering, stress, and addiction comes from not realizing you already are what you are looking for.” ~Jon Kabat-Zinn

I’m currently obsessed with Orange is the New Black. As a binge TV watcher, I find dramas at least three seasons long and watch them like a prisoner eating a box of contraband donuts. I’m glued to the iPad in every spare moment, while I cook, exercise, or eat.

Then it’s over. And all I have left are wasted hours and a tidal wave of guilt. I always make the same promise to myself—no more binge watching.

I punish myself. I cook and eat in silence, avoiding the TV. I put myself into the mental equivalent of solitary confinement, criticizing and shaming myself.

But always after the punishment, I’m overwhelmed with the most powerful desire to rebel. I inevitably find myself again lost in the beautiful bliss of screen time, obsessed with yet another show.

I watched the entire 144 episodes of Buffy the Vampire Slayer in a month and a half during one of my worst rebellions.

Whether it’s TV, alcohol, drugs, or food, most of us use something to escape. We take the edge off, relax, and zone out.

But at some point, all of this zoning out can start to become hazardous to our mental and physical health.

I’m addicted to zoning out. Zoning out has trapped me in my own personal mental prison.

And I want out.

My Iron Mind

We get addicted to escaping and zoning out because we create minds worth escaping from. My mental prison is a foggy and grey place.

The leader of my mind runs a very tight ship, full of strict and unrealistic rules. When I inevitably fail, I punish myself.

In my former life as a lawyer I remember not letting myself pee until I finished an email, in punishment for surfing the Internet and wasting 0.2 of a billable hour.

All of this constant punishment and self-criticism then puts me in such a bad place emotionally that the only way out is an escape route. I binge-watch TV, have too many glasses of wine, pot, or an entire German chocolate cake.

The War on Binge TV

The war on drugs tried to teach us that the drugs are the problem. We were told that drugs hijack our brain and force addiction.

But research now proves that it’s actually not the drug’s fault at all. Two different people exposed to the same drug don’t get addicted the same way.

In other words, your propensity to addiction to anything is directly related to the circumstances you are in—your life.

When you live in a mental prison full of punishment and internal criticism, for example, you escape to survive. You escape to not go crazy.

So if you want to stop escaping with food, drugs, alcohol, or OITNB, you must work to make your mind a happier place.

I must find a way to dissolve my internal prison.

Your Inner Bubble Wrap

Now I’m no expert here, obviously. But I have to think that if I created this mental prison, I can let myself out of it.

First, I have to stop doing what I’m doing—stop this never-ending pattern of punish-rebel-punish-rebel.

Whatever your pattern is, try this:

Stop engaging in it. Just accept what has already happened and then cover the whole thing in compassion.

So when I watch too much TV, for example, engaging with my pattern is to punish myself with a crap ton of guilt and shame, and then escape that criticism by watching more TV.

Another way to engage with your pattern is to fight with it. Like for me, arguing with my inner critic to plead my case actually gives it more power.

Inner criticism is particularly mean and tricky. Try too hard to stop criticizing yourself and you will start criticizing yourself for criticizing yourself.

Instead of fleeing or fighting, just accept what happened and accept yourself in spite of what happened. Like, if you drew a circle around all of the behavior that you accept for yourself, draw a bigger one.

I like to look right at my inner critic (in my head) and say, “Yea, so what? So what if I watched too much TV?”

This opens you up to self-compassion. When you accept yourself no matter what you did, you can start to dissolve even the most powerful mental prison-y pattern.

Next, you need to replace the negative pattern with a positive one. Plant a garden of positive feelings in your mind, like gratitude and joy.

I like a “grow” analogy because new thoughts and patterns are like little seeds. At first they may seem small, but if we continue to water them and feed them with our attention, they will grow.

So start finding ways to create a feeling of gratitude and joy.

Every time you can remember to do it, find something you love about your life and acknowledge it. Most of us think of gratitude as “I’m thankful for mommy and the dog.”

But gratitude is so much bigger and more powerful than that. Your mission is to cultivate the ability to find gratitude in any given situation.

Even if the only gratitude you can find is in your breath, find it. Gratitude is about the feeling state that it creates. Gratitude is inextricably tied to joy.

This process won’t necessarily free you overnight. But it will start to wrap you in mental bubble wrap, protecting you from the guilt, punishment, and shame that lead to your pattern.

Strive to become the softest place for you to land. Dream of becoming your own most supportive and accepting friend.

When you can let go of the way you think you must run your mind, you can embrace what is already a perfect system.

Mental prison image via Shutterstock

About Lauren Fire

Lauren Fire is the host of Inspiring Mama, a podcast and blog dedicated to finding solutions to the emotional challenges of motherhood and teaching simple and practical happiness tools to parents. Get her free happiness lesson videos by joining the Treat Yourself Challenge - 10 Days, 10 Ways to Shift from Crappy to Happy.

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Susan Mary Malone

Great post, Lauren! And you really identified one of the big keys to healing any addiction: “When you accept yourself no matter what you did, you can start to dissolve even the most powerful mental prison-y pattern.”
That’s a concept 12-step groups know well. Breaking the cycle of guilt and anger–at yourself–starts you truly on the road to healing.
Thank you for this!

QueenBee

This was one of the best articles I have seen….well done.

Lauren Fire

Thanks Eric! I’m actually reading The Power of Habit right now, for this exact reason! I’m fascinated by the habit loop. I’m having a hard time finding replacement rewards to change bad habits though. But I’m not finished with the book yet! I love to meditate but have a hard time making it a solid habit. I will check out The Willpower Instinct as well, thanks!

Lauren Fire

Thanks Susan! I find this to be the hardest part, but when I can do it, it feels like a total release. Not accepting ourselves feels so normal that it can just start to feel like “us”. So shifting that pattern can be a really powerful way to find what WE truly are underneath it all.

Lauren Fire

Thank you QueenBee!

lv2terp

Really wonderful post! Thank you for sharing this message, and wonderful insight to breaking free!! 🙂 I love when you wrote “But I have to think that if I created this mental prison, I can let myself out of it.” Great attitude/perspective! 🙂

Evelyn Marinoff

Agreed. Engaging in activities such as binge watching TV or binge reading romance novels is a form of escapism. It is a dangerous behaviour. Over the long run, you may start thinking that the fantasy world is better than your real life, and you will want to spend less and less time living your own reality. Very slippery slope. IF you are lucky to become aware of your behavior, you also need to realize that you need a change. Something or things in your life don’t make you happy–this is why you want to escape. Find what it is and face it. Playing an ostrich and pretending problems don’t exist is not a solution for anything. No matter how painful, we need to pull ourselves back to real life. In the end, though, we need to also remember that we do have the power to take control and change what we don’t like. And guess what?- life can be better that the fantasy world after all. Because it will be our own reality and we will be the heroes.

Vishnu

Hi Lauren, thank you for sharing this post here and a more compassionate way to deal with our inner talk and ourselves. Observing and noticing our tendencies and behavior is the first step to turning things around in our lives. I think as a former lawyer too:) that we have more of a tendency to be hard on ourselves because we spend (or spent) so much of our time being difficult with others. Usually we did this because of our clients and for ourclients but in the process, we self-sabotage our own mental and emotional well-beings.

Eric Earle

That’s very cool. do you have the paperback? I’m actually in the back of the book in that version!! Pretty cool.
Yes it’s hard for me to replace bad habits sometimes, too. The sauna helps. So does running. all forms of exercise.
what have you tried?
Thank you for your hard work!
Eric

Nidhi Pandya

Hi…I really can correlate with your post as I have been going through similar stuff… I used to zone out by listening to music and dreaming…I have understood my self defeating patterns and am trying to be compassionate towards myself… it took a lot of time and lost opportunities to realize this… I read your post and felt that I am not alone…I will try to be more loving towards myself and try to be grateful… thanks for sharing your experience

Jeevan/Mirthu/Gupt

“I’m addicted to zoning out. Zoning out has trapped me in my own personal mental prison.” Thank you for sharing your story; I could relate to your story a lot! As a fellow binge TV Watcher & Orange Is The New Black fanatic; highly recommend Game of Thrones & Modern Family… ;-). P.S. Buffy the Vampire Slayer is so over-rated, compared to ANGEL..!! 😛

Jeevan/Mirthu/Gupt

I’m going to take a look at the book(s), “The Power of Habit & The Willpower Instinct…” Thank you sharing your insights! 🙂

Barbara Schaer

Thank you for this ! I really can understand this as I am going through TV watching myself, more movies on the internet. But in between I get a real urge to meditate listening to Singing bowl music, chakra healing music and Tibetan mantras. I can lose myself in it too and hoping it would help me heal and get me out of my own prison. I seem to at the moment get glimpses and ideas what I could do with my life but lack the motivation and energy to get up and go. I make a little step toward changing and than I fail again. It seems a never ending cycle. I have let go of guilt but all I wish is that I would have the motivation and energy to really do the things I actually would like to do.

Bingfa

See, my problem is the opposite. I cannot zone out. TV, games or any form of entertainment is something I actually decide to do proactively, rather than something I’m naturally inclined to. Forget binge watching, I find it difficult to start or keep watching anything. I spend most of my time reading for that reason, since I figure if I’m going to be bored of everything, I might as well be learning something in the process.

FraglichFragend

What an amazing post. Glad I found it. Thank you very much.