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.

The Power of Presence: Overcoming Lust and Seeking Love

Lust doesn’t happen in the moment, it happens when we disconnect from it. This reflection explores how practicing presence through the Spirit can lead to healing, clarity, and complete freedom from lust by restoring the soul’s alignment with God’s love.

There’s a deeper question that doesn’t come from the mouth it comes from the soul. And this is one of them.

If we fully practice being present in the moment, can we be healed of lust completely?

I believe we could. Because lust is not born in the present. Lust is the result of fragmentation. It is a pulling away from what is here. It pulls away from what is true. It also diverges from what is now being offered. It’s a distortion that happens when we’re no longer whole inside the moment. When we lose presence, we lose purity.

That’s why you can feel regret after lust. That’s why it feels like a fog lifts afterward. Because your spirit knows it wasn’t real not because the person wasn’t real, but because you weren’t fully there.

Jesus said that whoever looks with lust has already committed adultery in the heart. That wasn’t just a warning. It was a revelation of how inner truth works. Lust doesn’t need physical action to do damage because the damage is spiritual. And it happens before the body even moves.

Lust only exists when we are disconnected from our own spirit. It occurs when we disconnect from the image of the other person. It also happens when we are separated from the presence of God in the moment. Lust isn’t just looking at someone wrongly, it’s looking from somewhere false. It’s the soul’s attempt to reach for something while bypassing honesty.

The body cannot teach us love. It doesn’t know how. The spirit does. We begin to recognize the difference between holy desire and distortion only when we let the spirit take the lead. Love is not a chemical reaction or an emotional high. Love is not the butterflies in your stomach. Love is a spirit and God is love. You can’t learn real love from the body any more than you can hear God through noise.

In Hebrew understanding, love wasn’t just feeling it was a sacred loyalty. The word hesed was used to describe a covenantal love rooted in mercy, truth, and endurance. It didn’t come and go with moods. It anchored. It stayed. It was a presence not a performance. That’s what love is. And that’s why lust can never match it. Because lust doesn’t stay. Lust consumes. Love gives.

And lust is not something that happens in the now. It’s the soul reacting to something it’s already seen, heard, or imagined before. A past encounter you wish you could relive. A fantasy you rehearsed in your mind. A storyline from a song. An ache from being touched but not truly seen. Lust pulls from all of it. It takes whatever is unresolved or unprocessed and replays it through the moment you’re in. Even though your body is present, your spirit is not. You’re watching a memory, acting out a script, longing for something that already passed. That’s why people feel empty afterward. That’s why lust doesn’t satisfy. It’s not because the desire is wrong. It’s because the moment wasn’t real.

But presence changes everything.

You are fully in the moment. You’ve given your attention, your openness, your real self to what is in front of you. When this happens, something changes. The noise goes quiet. The inner voices stop. The pressure lifts. It feels pure, even if it’s simple. It’s what people describe when they say, “I can’t believe it still feels like the first time.” But the beauty isn’t in the person. The beauty is in the fact that you’re really there.

When you are present, you stop trying to control. You stop trying to repeat. You stop trying to create a high. And that’s what makes it holy. It’s holy because it’s real. Because the moment hasn’t been hijacked. Because God is present. Because you’re present.

Hyper sexuality is just the word given to the soul’s panic. It’s a scramble to recreate moments that were never healed. A rerun of experiences that left you with a taste of love but not the substance. You keep reaching out because something wasn’t resolved. But if you were healed, if you were whole, you wouldn’t need to reach back. You’d be free to see what’s in front of you now. You’d stop confusing attention with love, or memory with presence. You’d start to notice things more deeply. And even the smallest gesture could move you more than lust ever did.

Because love doesn’t start in the body. It starts in the moment. And the moment belongs to the spirit.

That’s where the healing begins. Not in trying to fix the outside. Not in trying to resist the urge. But in returning to where the Spirit is. Returning to the now.

Be still and know that he is God.

And in His presence, you are made whole again.