As we continue clearing stress related to addiction — with the realization that 100% of us have addiction in some form — we are still on step 2: clearing addiction related to depletion.
Interestingly, depletion came up less as a straight nutrition issue and more related to chronic stress overload, blood sugar, sleep, repetition of healthier routines, and movement.
Go figure.
We wanted another chronic stress overload scan, so boundary strain, fight-or-flight dominance, grief, and overstimulation were all placed in the 24-hour Nei Gong for subtle energetic clearing.
Late yesterday afternoon, we asked for 5 hours to recharge the basal ganglia, amygdala, and prefrontal cortex. This cleared overnight. The regenerative recharge had been completed earlier.
But something else to think about: all the talk about the recent new moon in Aries.
Astrology is not usually my lane, but it does make a certain kind of sense that if we are electrical beings, the movement of larger forces might affect our circuitry now and then.
Friends who follow these things say this recent new moon is a big one — a paradigm shift, an ignition point, a new healing trajectory.
(My daughter — whom I’ve come to refer to as she who knows all — says every new and full moon is supposedly spectacular and that this is all a bunch of nonsense.)
Still, I couldn’t help but wonder: what might happen if our work on clearing addiction were landing in the middle of this kind of reset energy? What if this is one of those rare moments when an old pattern is not just challenged, but truly available to be broken?
Now, for example, we’re focused on stress related to blood sugar.
We already know much of our processed food is loaded with sugar, which does not appear to have served us especially well.
But what if blood sugar is not just about food? What if, at least sometimes, it is also tangled up with the stories people live by and the wounds they have carried for years?
Blood sugar is deeply connected to rhythm, safety, fuel, urgency, and reward, which means it can easily get caught up in survival patterns. A person living with a never enough story, a deprivation wound, chronic disappointment, or the feeling that they always have to keep going may not just think that way emotionally. The body may begin living that story too — bracing, craving, overreaching, crashing, reaching for quick relief, or struggling to settle into a steady signal.
In that sense, blood sugar may be influenced not only by what we eat, but by the stress loops, emotional hunger, and inner narratives the body has been trying to survive inside.
It could be we need to go deeper with this. If you’re a member of the group, give me a call or text and we can do a personal scan to see what story you might be living at this moment in time.
Meanwhile, maybe this is not just another moon with a sales pitch.
It could be a real opening in the circuitry.
P.S. Today we also requested the following cocktails and Grabovoi code, which brought up another question: if addiction lowers voltage, does that make us more susceptible to confusion, coercion, or other forms of non-beneficial influence?
DISABLE NON-BENEFICIAL MIND CONTROL SYSTEMS
Examine preconceived ideas
Type 2 diabetes 747985954

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