The Dark Mother: Difficult Ceremony, Deep Healing
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I came to this retreat thinking I was ready. Three years sober, therapy, meditation—I thought I'd done the work. I hadn't.
Two hours into the ceremony, I was on my knees, in physical pain, confronting every way I've hurt people through my addiction. The visions were terrifying—images of the people I'd lied to, stolen from, abandoned. And the presence I felt wasn't the gentle Mother I'd heard about. This was fierce. Uncompromising.
But here's what I realized in the darkest moment: she wasn't rejecting me. She was refusing to let me stay in denial. Every image was true. I had done those things. And rather than letting me bypass that with spiritual bypassing or "forgiveness," she held me in the fullness of what I'd done—and somehow, simultaneously, held me as worthy of redemption.
I don't think I've ever cried that hard. It felt like my chest was breaking open.
When I came back, the facilitator didn't coddle me. She said, "You met the teachings."
The following days were surreal. But something fundamental shifted. I'm not "healed," but I'm honest. Really honest, maybe for the first time. With myself, with the people I've hurt, with my recovery. And underneath the guilt and shame—which hasn't disappeared—there's a weird sense of purpose. Like my path forward isn't about escaping what I've done, but about redeeming it through how I live.
Integration Outcome
Deeper accountability; recommitted to recovery; began repair work with those harmed
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