Grateful Heart Monday

Welcome to another Grateful Heart Monday, which for today is a brief entry of heart-felt gratitude to all who have supported my partner Chris and I during this long battle with COVID-19.

Getting COVID-19 has been tough. Really tough actually. My partner and I truly have gone through a pretty big ordeal of sickness in our house where for a good period of time, neither of us were even able to get out of the separate beds we were sleeping in given how sick we felt.

Unlike any sickness we’ve ever had, there have been many moments where it truly seemed as if this virus was never going to start getting better. But, in the midst of it all, I must say it was knowing how many people cared about us that helped us to keep going and keep fighting thus far.

So, to all the people who responded with loving messages to my initial posting where I let everyone know my partner and I had contracted COVID, Thank You.

To all the people who have called us on the phone to see how we are doing. Thank You.

To all the people who have texted or messaged us on social media to see if we were ok. Thank You.

To all the people who went to the grocery store for us and got us some essentials to keep going. Thank You.

And to all those who have simply prayed and sent positive healing energy to us behind the scenes for our well-being. Thank You.

While there are far too many names to mention individually for today’s Grateful Heart Monday, I promise you that each of your names are upon my partner’s heart and my heart in today’s brief entry of thankfulness, for what you have done to help us navigate through this sickness thus far. It seems as if it has gotten us through the worst of it and that we are finally on the mends. So thank you everyone for all the love and light you’ve given Chris and I to make it to this point and for any more of that you send our way as we continue to heal. We love you!

Peace, love, light, and joy,
Andrew Arthur Dawson

Thought For The Day

Quote #1

“All of humanity’s problems stem from man’s inability to sit quietly in a room alone.” (Blaise Pascal)

Quote #2

“The usefulness of a cup is in its emptiness.” (Old Chinese Proverb)

Quote #3

“We hold onto the idea that someone will see our worth. What we are really doing is distracting ourself from sitting with our emptiness. Be willing to sit with yourself to uncover the real cause of why you seek approval outside of yourself.” (Ash Alves)

Bonus Quote

“Addiction begins with the hope that something “out there” can instantly fill up the emptiness inside.” (Jean Kilbourne)

Peace, love, light, and joy,
Andrew Arthur Dawson

Getting COVID Helped Me To See The Void I Was Never Going To Fill In The Ways I Kept Trying…

If there’s one thing COVID-19 gave me a lot of, beyond feeling sick, it was a ton of time laying on my bed pondering my life. Through all that pondering, I realized I’ve been trying to fill a void within me in several unhealthy ways for a few years now and came to the conclusion that I needed to stop those behaviors immediately.

All this started several years ago when I felt God went on radio silence with me. The last time I can officially say I really felt God communicating with me was during the Christmas holidays of 2018 heading into 2019 when my partner and I were visiting my sister’s family. I had a pretty profound God experience during that period of time. But, by the spring of 2019, my pain levels had grown pretty significant and that silence from God felt deafening. But, instead of sitting through that emptiness, I began trying to fill it in temporary ways.

At first, I found myself saying sexual innuendos here and there merely as a way to joke around. But eventually, it led to me flirting with others as well. I initially told myself it was ok because it wasn’t breaking my sober line in my sex and love addiction recovery program. By the fall of 2019 though, I also started inviting a number of new people into my life I found attractive. All of this is what’s referred to as slippery-slope behaviors in the 12 Step Sex and Love Addiction program. By the time the pandemic arrived, flirtation and saying sexual innuendos had become a regular thing for me and I had several new friends that seemed grounded more in mutual physical attraction than in a spiritual connection. At that point, I was also consuming caffeinated beverages on a regular basis, which wasn’t a good thing because the euphoria from it often led me to only doing more of these slippery slope-type behaviors. When I eventually came down with COVID, it really forced me to see all this from a different set of eyes. I realized that the majority of 2019 and 2020 was spent trying to fill a void in my heart, a God-sized void. I’m actually pretty thankful I saw this because I think in time continuing to do all those slippery-slope behaviors would have led to me actually breaking my sober line.

Regardless, there are some pretty significant changes I’ve begun to make now because of all this. Changes that include me no longer spending time with those who were mainly interested in me due to physical attraction, me taking time apart from others for awhile whom I found attractive to focus that energy more at home upon my partner, me ending the use of sexual innuendos with everyone, me no longer flirting with anyone but my partner, and me returning to the consumption of decaffeinated beverages only.

While this may seem like trivial changes to some, for me they are huge because I’ve most definitely relied upon them far too much for ease and comfort over the past few years. I see now I need to sit in this void rather than try to fill it with things that can’t ever fill it other than temporarily. I’ve often wondered if maybe this is one of the reasons why I haven’t felt the presence of God in a long time because I’ve been so busy trying to fill that void with the things I was. I’ve also wondered if the emotional distance I feel with my partner is due to the same behaviors. This is why I need to get right with myself, which means ending all these slippery-slope behaviors immediately.

In all my moments of COVID sickness, I clearly felt convicted over this and while my physical healing from COVID and all my other health issues may be out of my control, what comes out of my mouth, who I hang out with, and what I consume is all within my control. As I take action on this renewed path and pray for the strength to see it fully through, I know it will allow that emptiness to finally be filled with the only thing I want it to be filled with, that being more of God.

Peace, love, light, and joy,
Andrew Arthur Dawson