Rewiring the Root: Freedom Beyond Addictions

Our habits are rehearsed responses to life’s pressures. By identifying the triggers and rewiring the root, we can experience God’s renewal in our mind, heart, and body.

Most of us don’t realize how much our reactions to life’s pressures are rehearsed. Long before we’re even aware of it, our bodies and minds form a pathway of relief, a learned response we reach for when stress builds.

It can be anything: food, scrolling endlessly online, overworking, escaping into entertainment, or any other substitute for rest. On the surface, these might look harmless. But underneath, they can keep us from facing the real issue. Everything sold as ideas of normal and acceptable to be able to “handle daily life” are things that hold us back, not keep us productive.

The pattern is almost always the same:

Stress (S) → Panic or overwhelm (P) → Reach for release (R) through whatever “comfort” we’ve trained ourselves in.

The stress hasn’t left. It’s just been distracted.

In God’s Kingdom, freedom is never about merely avoiding an action. It’s about transforming the root so the action no longer has power over you. Jesus didn’t just say, “Don’t sin.” He said, “Make the tree good and its fruit will be good” (Matthew 12:33).

Instead of focusing all our energy on not doing the thing, what if we focused on repentance? ….. “ but wait, isn’t repentance not doing the sin thing again?”Nope it’s not. “Repentance isn’t being truly sorry from the heart and ceasing from the behavior….” Nope. John who baptized, told us in great detail what repentance is, when he answered with the right answer for those who have excess, he didn’t tell them to feel sorry for being greedy and to stop collecting more. He said give away all the excess. When he gave the right answer to the soldier it was the same: to correct the wrong by being actively against it. Kingdom work isn’t passive, it isn’t silent. It transforms to perfection.

Recall the situations, thoughts, and circumstances that push you toward that reaction in the first place. Write them down. Face them with honesty.

Then treat each one like a broken part of your house or car: if your roof has holes and winter is coming, you repair it. If your floorboards are cracked, you replace them. You don’t just try to remember to “step over” the danger you remove the danger altogether.

Neuroscience shows that our brains are constantly wiring and rewiring through what’s called neuroplasticity. Every time we respond to stress with the same pattern, we strengthen that pathway. But every time we respond differently, we weaken the old route and strengthen the new.

Scripture says the same thing in spiritual terms: “Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind” (Romans 12:2). Renewal is active, intentional, and repeated until the old mind is replaced.

Physiology also plays a role. Stress responses involve real chemical surges in the body: adrenaline, cortisol, dopamine. These aren’t “evil” in themselves, but they can be trained to serve the wrong master. Through discipline, rest, prayer, and healthy engagement with life, those same systems can be trained to respond in ways that strengthen us instead of enslave us.

This rewiring doesn’t feel dramatic at first. But something changes:
The next time the usual trigger comes, it has less strength. You might even begin the old habit, but suddenly you notice:

“Wait… this doesn’t hold me anymore. That old rush isn’t even here.”

And you stop.

The more this happens, the less room the temptation has. You start to notice you can hold more life more peace, more energy, more presence with others. And then you realize:

“Has this old pattern really been stealing all of this from me?”

You begin to hate what it took, and love what God is giving you in return.
You get excited to search your life for every leftover trigger and remove it, not out of fear, but because you’re finally free enough to see what it cost you.

Old patterns are strongholds, and strongholds are not broken by human effort alone. They come down when our obedience is fulfilled (2 Corinthians 10:4–5). That means inviting the Holy Spirit into the very moment of stress, letting Him teach you to respond in new ways, and obeying His guidance even when it feels unnatural at first.

Freedom isn’t just the absence of a bad habit. It’s the presence of a renewed mind, a healed heart, and a body that now serves the spirit instead of mastering it.

And one day, the pattern is gone.
Because the old path has grown over and you’re too busy walking the new one.

How Your Body Reacts on Autopilot

Most people think their thoughts are coming from their mind…
But what if some of them are just your body reacting on autopilot?

The body remembers pain. It craves comfort.
It avoids discomfort like it’s death.
But discomfort isn’t death.
It’s the beginning of real life.

Scripture says, “The carnal mind is enmity against God.”
That’s not just a verse.
That’s a warning:
If the body leads, the spirit goes silent.

You are not your urges.
You are not your panic.
You are not your flesh.

You are spirit.

And the moment you remember that the healing begins.

Most of us don’t realize that the body has a mind of its own. Not the kind that makes plans or dreams big things but the kind that reacts on autopilot. It remembers pain and craves comfort. It avoids discomfort like it’s death. And that’s a problem, because discomfort isn’t death. It’s the beginning of real life.

Scripture says “the carnal mind is enmity against God” (Romans 8:7). That carnal mind, what we often mistake as our own thoughts is the body’s voice trying to stay in control. And when the body leads, the spirit follows in silence.

But you are not your body.

The real “you” is spirit. “That which is born of the flesh is flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.” (John 3:6). If your life is led by the body’s voice, its fears, its impulses, needs, then the true you, the spirit lives hidden, forgotten, and in darkness. Not because you’re evil. But because the part of you that was made to lead is being smothered under the one that was only made to serve.

And here’s the thing, when people sin, it’s not because they’re wicked at the core, it’s because they’re listening to the wrong leader. The flesh can be noisy. It can be confused for your voice. It can feel like truth. But it’s only reacting to stimuli. That’s why it gets confused by temptation and thinks it’s desire. That’s why it panics at discomfort and as if it’s death. That’s why it runs from the Holy Spirit because it’s terrified of what it can’t control.

But you were never made to be controlled by your impulses.

Even science now confirms what Scripture has always hinted: the mind is not confined to the brain. In quantum biology and neuroscience, researchers like Dr. Karl Pribram and physicist David Bohm proposed models showing that the brain acts more like a receiver than a container. The “holographic brain” theory suggests our thoughts are influenced by fields beyond us. Others like Rupert Sheldrake have explored morphic resonance, explaining how people, even strangers, can sense when they’re being watched or share emotional states across distance. It’s not fantasy it’s how we’re designed.

Ever walked into a crowded room and instantly felt eyes on you then turned and locked eyes with someone you never saw before? That’s not coincidence. That’s resonance. Ever thought of someone, and they called seconds later? That’s not magic. That’s how spirit works. You’re connected.

So when someone struggles with thoughts they can’t explain like impure desires, intrusive temptations, emotional surges, it’s not proof of who they are. It’s proof that their body’s radar is picking up things they were never meant to entertain. The body amplifies those signals. But the spirit has the right to refuse them.

“Walk in the Spirit, and you shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh.” (Galatians 5:16)

This is where healing begins, when you realize that the flesh remembers what comforted it, even if it was toxic… but the Spirit rewrites what the flesh rehearsed. That’s the war over the mind. And it’s a war you don’t win by fighting harder. You win by remembering who you are.

Understanding Intrusive Thoughts: A Christian Perspective

“Why would I even think something like that?”

If you’ve ever asked that question… you’re not alone.

This reflection explores how the mind receives thoughts from the body, the spirit, the environment, and sometimes, forces that aren’t you at all.

You’ll learn how to recognize false thoughts, break emotional agreements, and reclaim authority over your inner world not by fear, but by the renewing of your mind in Christ.

Because not every voice in your head deserves to stay.

Deliverance of the Mind: Recognizing Thoughts That Are Not Your Own : Part 2 

A Christian Metaphysical Series on the Mind, Spirit, and Freedom

There are moments in life when a thought enters our mind that seems completely out of place. It may feel disconnected from who we are, even disturbing or irrational. Maybe it carries anger. Or lust. Or fear. Or shame. Sometimes it makes us wonder, “Why would I even think something like this?”

But what if I told you something I’ve come to understand through deep reflection that not every thought that passes through your mind actually comes from you?

This isn’t just a theory I’m teaching. This is something I’m learning, noticing, and watching unfold in my own life and in the lives of others around me. It’s something spiritual. And it’s something real.

I believe the mind is not the origin of all thought. It’s the interpreter. Like a translator standing between different voices, it receives from the body, the environment, and the spirit. Some thoughts come from our physiology. Some come from what we’ve been exposed to culture, music, media, conversation, pain. Some may come from the spirit our own or even foreign spirits sensed around us. And some thoughts, I believe, don’t belong to us at all, but try to sound like us to slip past our discernment.

That’s why the Bible tells us to “take every thought captive to obey Christ” (2 Corinthians 10:5). Not because all thoughts are evil but because not all are true.

The thoughts we agree with, whether actively or passively, are the ones that begin to settle in. Active agreement is when you accept the thought consciously. You say, “Yes, I believe this.” Passive agreement is more subtle. It’s when something slips through because you don’t challenge it. You just keep letting it repeat until it becomes normal.

And every agreement, over time, increases the emotional power of that thought within you. Each one becomes a kind of seed charged and watered by your environment, your habits, and even by society itself. And soon, it begins to shape how you feel about things. Not just the topic itself, but your entire emotional tone. Like background music you didn’t notice at first but that slowly changed your mood.

That’s how thoughts grow into emotions, and emotions grow into behaviors. This is why Scripture says:

“Each person is tempted when they are dragged away by their own desire and enticed. Then, after desire has conceived, it gives birth to sin; and sin, when it is full-grown, gives birth to death.” James 1:14–15

The Role of Environment

Some of the things that “trigger” intrusive thoughts aren’t even directly bad. It could be a sound. A color. A smell. The rhythm of a beat. A passing phrase. But because they were once anchored to a powerful emotional experience, they now recall that emotion. They act like spiritual QR codes designed to pull you back into old habits.

You may not even realize that you’ve been trained. That what you thought was your opinion was actually conditioned into you by repetition, emotion, and suggestion. I believe this is what the Bible speaks of when it says:

“Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” Romans 12:2

We are being shaped every day by the patterns we allow. Even when we’re unaware.

Imagine a moment in your life that is charged with intense celebration. Anticipation has built for weeks. Your community is excited. The food is ready. The energy is high. The screen lights up. The music swells. Something grand and emotionally impactful plays out in front of you a moment designed not just to entertain you, but to embed something into you.

You may not notice it then, but this moment becomes a calibration point for your emotions. Now, even months later, a small sound, a quick image, a subtle reference triggers that memory and with it, the same emotion. And those who understand this use it to train your mind. To teach you what to desire. What to fear. What to accept. What to reject.

And without knowing it, we begin to use these same cues in our conversations, our social media, our fashion, our goals and we train others in return. That is how systems of control are built. Not through chains, but through emotional agreement.

This is not conspiracy. It’s spiritual warfare. And it’s been known by those in power for centuries.

Nebuchadnezzar, in the book of Daniel, did something similar. He erected a golden image and gave a command:

“At the moment you hear the sound of the horn, flute, zither, lyre, harp, pipe and all kinds of music, you must fall down and worship…” Daniel 3:5

The music wasn’t random. It was a trigger. A way to bind worship to a cue. So that no one would need to think only respond.

And yet, Daniel chose not to participate. He did not allow himself to be emotionally reprogrammed by the culture of Babylon. And neither must we.

The Point Isn’t Fear It’s Freedom

I’m not writing all this to scare you or suggest we must flee from all of society. Few are called to that path. What I’m doing is writing for those who feel something’s off. For those who’ve always suspected that there’s more. That this world isn’t quite right. That the mind is a battlefield and that it matters how we think, feel, and agree.

I want you to know:

You are not doomed.

You are not powerless.

And no giving in is not inevitable.

The Battle Is Real But You’re Not Alone

The enemy uses thoughts to reach us. But God gives us the Spirit to guide us. He equips us to recognize the difference between our voice and the voice of the accuser. Between our emotions and the Spirit’s truth. And when we submit our mind and body to the will of the Spirit, we are no longer ruled by impulse.

“Walk by the Spirit, and you will not gratify the desires of the flesh.” Galatians 5:16

I believe intrusive thoughts are more than random noise. They’re signals. Sometimes spiritual. Sometimes emotional. Sometimes learned. But always meant to be understood.

And the more we see them for what they are not as who we are the more we reclaim authority over our own minds. And eventually, we begin to help others do the same.

This series is only just beginning.

Its purpose is not merely to describe what happens in the mind, but to help equip those who are searching those who feel something isn’t right in the way their thoughts seem to steer them, or who struggle with emotions and urges that don’t reflect who they want to be.

It is for those trapped in the cycles of anxiety, depression, fear, lust, false identity, and addiction not to condemn, but to light a path toward deliverance and inner mastery through Christ.

The journey forward will continue to expose how to reclaim authority over your personal inner environment how to identify, test, and challenge the thoughts that come… and how to realign your life with the voice of the Spirit, not the noise of the world.

Every word in this series seeks to contribute to your becoming your unfolding into the fullness of who you are meant to be in Christ.

Referenced Scripture:

• James 1:14–15

• 2 Corinthians 10:5

• Romans 12:2

• Galatians 5:16

• Daniel 3:5

Referenced Christian Thinkers (Selected):

• Dr. Caroline Leaf (Christian neuroscientist)

• Watchman Nee (Christian metaphysician)

• Andrew Wommack (Christian teacher on identity and thought life)

• Dallas Willard (Christian philosopher and psychologist)