Sacred Desire vs. Addiction: Reclaiming Longing in Recovery
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In this episode of Sober Witch Life, Sunshine explores the powerful and often misunderstood relationship between desire and addiction. Inspired by Valentine’s Day reflections on self-love, she challenges the belief—rooted in both Catholic teachings on the seven deadly sins and traditional recovery culture—that desire itself is dangerous. Drawing on themes from the film Se7en, she reflects on how many “sins” are distortions of desire, not desire itself.
Sunshine distinguishes between impulsive compulsion—driven by trauma and dopamine-seeking—and sacred longing, which unfolds slowly and aligns with purpose. While early recovery requires structure and caution around urges, she argues that long-term healing involves learning to trust aligned desire. Suppressing ambition, visibility, wealth, leadership, pleasure, or partnership can create restlessness that ultimately fuels relapse.
Weaving together psychology, trauma research, spirituality, and the Japanese concept of ikigai (reason for being), she suggests that addiction is often born not from excessive desire, but from shaming it. Alcohol, she shares personally, was a substitute for permission—to be visible, confident, connected, and sovereign. True recovery, she explains, is not about permanent contraction but about stabilizing enough to expand into one’s authentic purpose.
For spiritually wired people—creatives, witches, mystics, and visionaries—desire can function as a compass toward alignment. Mature recovery is not about suppressing longing but learning to interpret it wisely. When desire is honored rather than shamed, life expands, relationships deepen, and purpose becomes clear.
Sunshine closes with an invitation: your longing is not a flaw—it’s guidance. Early recovery teaches you to distrust impulse; mature recovery teaches you to trust aligned desire.
