Posts Tagged ‘Compulsive Behavior’

Understanding Compulsive Hair Pulling

Trichotillomania: The Inside-Outs of Compulsive Hair Pulling

I recently read this from a practitioner who treats trichotillomania sufferers,

“It is not necessary for you to find or know the cause of your hair pulling.”

Whoa! While this sounds good on the surface, there’s a big problem with it.

Also, if you don’t learn the cause of your pulling, how can you be sure that the problem is solved and you will never pull again? You’ll always be powerless with your trichotillomania and with those whom you rely on to help you stop pulling.

[Read the rest of this entry...]

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Is Your Hair Pulling Under Control?

The merciless judgment that you use to control your pulling actually perpetuates your hair pulling.  Surprised?

You are not alone.

Most pullers mistakenly believe that this is what keeps the behavior from going completely out of control.  After 25 years of compulsive hairpulling.  I was not even aware of my mind’s constant judgment of my compulsive behavior.  It was so ingrained, so automatic, that I rarely noticed it going on beneath the surface of my conscious mind.  When I became aware and began to question it, I realized that I had always believed it was this judgment that kept me “in line.”

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Trichotillomania Helps Manage Issues of Power

Violence against women and children is the most prevalent human rights violation
globally — and this violence teaches children it’s OK, even moral, to use force to impose
one’s will.

The core common theme that I see within my hair pulling student’s childhood stories is one of an out of balance (and often out of control) power dynamic within the family. We must begin to understand that the way our culture, and consequently the family, views and handles power is at the very core of the rising numbers of trichotillomania sufferers. [Read the rest of this entry...]

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Want to Stop Trichotillomania? Try Getting Creative!

What can we learn about ending compulsive hair pulling from ancient healing rites?

Long ago in cultures lost to us, “anyone who had suffered loss of health in any way was not treated with external remedies.  In most cases they were taken to the temple and put into a king of sleep.”  The distressed or ill would venture to the nearest temple where priestesses placed them into a deep trance-like sleep and brought on powerful healing.  The symbols of geometry and numerology were used in this work.

So, can art utilizing geometric symbols and numbers and other images help to heal trichotillomania?

Art therapists have long known that art can help us to shift things within the psyche.  Any tool that has the possibility to assist the process and doesn’t harm is worth a try.  Art that you create for yourself can help you to heal by bypassing your rational mind and “interacting” directly with the deeper levels of your being.  This deeper place is where healing must take place to be truly effective.  In simpler words, it can help you break through your stuck places.

The true healing journey is a creative process.

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5 Critical Principles You Need to Heal Your Trichotillomania

In my Pull-Free, At Last! curriculum, I list five over-arching, “Umbrella” principles of healing any type of compulsive behavior, including trichotillomania:

  1. Achieving healing is your responsibility and yours alone. No one else can do this for you.
  2. The goal is to heal the perceptions that keep you in the destructive hair pulling cycle.
  3. Any sincere request to see the truth will drop you into self-healing.
  4. Healing occurs when you complete and release your trapped emotional energy.
  5. After healing, your resolve to remain free may continue to be tested.

Be assured…you have everything inside of you that you need in order to heal.

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Hair Pullers: Secrets Keep You, and Others, From Healing

Secrets not only make people sick, they keep them sick and keep them stuck. One of the goals of my work as a self-healing mentor for those who struggle with compulsive hair pulling and other debilitating compulsive behaviors is to help my students recognize the harm of keeping secrets from themselves, from others and the harm of secrets which have been kept from themby others.

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Magical Things

The world is full of magical things patiently waiting for our wits to grow sharper. -Bertrand Russell

We all struggle at times to see the magic that is right in front of us. It’s time to slow ourselves down and discern where the magic is. Our wits can never grow sharp if we’re buzzing around trying to make it happen. Rather take today to grow your wits a bit and see if you can spot the magic.

This goes double for those who deal on a daily basis with addiction and compulsive behaviors because rather than slowing down they fill their time with mind or emotion numbing things. For those with compulsive hair pulling, for example, it’s more important to find that “perfect pull” than to slow down, feel your feelings and allow them to exist within you. But it’s only in doing so that we begin to spot those magical things that are waiting for us.

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Trichotillomania Sufferers Are Stuck in a Rut

Just because you go down one path earlier in your life, doesn’t mean that you’re stuck in that rut forever.
-Walter Shaw, author and ex-master burglar.

Wow! This is a great quote, don’t you think?

Trichotillomania and other compulsion sufferers are often so stuck in their repetitive ruts that it appears to them that change and a better life are completely impossible. One of the things that I help them to work on is unsticking their minds so that they can vision a better future for themselves. But, while this is a critical step, it often is not enough to get them to move to that better future.

They also need to the tools and support to do the work of healing the underlying issue that continues to fuel the compulsive behavior. For people with compulsive hair pulling and other compulsive disorders, I offer a comprehensive program that moves them through the self-healing framework.

The program is very powerful, but it alone, is not enough. The student must do the work for their own healing is waiting inside of them to be discovered.

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You Were Worth Protecting

Because my work with hair pulling students involves hearing stories of those suffering with compulsive behaviors, I often see patterns from early family climates and our culture as a whole. And that gets me to thinking about all the pain in the world and how to solve it. Occasionally, I come up with an unusually creative idea. Here’s one I’d like to share with you.

What if, beginning tomorrow and from that day on, each and every child popped out of the womb with the words “Worth Protecting” on their foreheads? And what if as that child grew the words grew crisp and clear along with him. Each child would look at the next and remember that another person is worth protecting. Each adult would look at each child and every other adult and know that we are all worth protecting. Until the day when the entire world population would live in the core fundamental conviction that “We are ALL worth protecting!”

Think about it.

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The Power That Heals

“All things are permeated by a power which makes for health. A human being can relate himself to this power, and ally himself with it. He can also separate himself from it in his thoughts.”
-Wallace Wattles

Healing is a natural system (like a internal weather system) that exists inside of us. We are always being invited to heal one thing or another. But most often we (especially those who struggle with addictive and compulsive behaviors like compulsive hair pulling) run from the opportunity. The next time you feel a challenging moment in your life, why not ask yourself if this is your own invitation to heal that has come calling. Then run toward and embrace it for all that you’re worth. Who knows, you might just come out the other side a whole lot lighter and whole.

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